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 |
---|---|
aristotle-on-2836 | Again, why do quadrupeds move their legs criss- cross? |
aristotle-on-2836 | How, it may be said, can they, either when they fly or when they walk, be said to move at four points? |
aristotle-categories-1981 | What could be the contrary of any primary substance, such as the individual man or animal? |
aristotle-history-2659 | In the case of birds, there is mutual enmity between the poecilis, the crested lark, the woodpecker(? |
aristotle-prior-2443 | Does he then maintain after this simply that what he knows, he does not think? |
aristotle-prior-2443 | if the lion is both brave and generous, how shall we know which of the signs which are its proper concomitants is the sign of a particular affection? |
hippocrates-of-2603 | A few had the crisis about the eightieth day, but in most instances it( the disease?) |
hippocrates-of-2603 | Apollonius, in Abdera, bore up( under the fever?) |
hippocrates-airs,-3242 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 20 I Will give you a strong proof of the humidity( laxity?) |
hippocrates-airs,-3242 | Their heads are sound and hard, and they are liable to burstings( of vessels?) |
hippocrates-airs,-3242 | They are flabby and squat at first, because, as in Egypt, they are not swathed(? |
aristotle-poetics-1678 | ''Did he go?'' |
aristotle-poetics-1678 | Again, does the error touch the essentials of the poetic art, or some accident of it? |
aristotle-poetics-1678 | For what were the business of a speaker, if the Thought were revealed quite apart from what he says? |
aristotle-poetics-1678 | What, for example, would be the effect of the Oedipus of Sophocles, if it were cast into a form as long as the Iliad? |
aristotle-on-3077 | And must this necessarily be so also in the case of the universe? |
aristotle-on-3077 | For what is to prevent this coming to pass, unless it be impossible? |
aristotle-on-3077 | Or is this impossible and must it not be looked for rather in those primary causes by which they are set in motion? |
aristotle-on-3077 | To resume, must there be something immovable and at rest outside of what is moved, and no part of it, or not? |
aristotle-on-3077 | sense, imagination, and thought proper) is sometimes followed by action, sometimes not; sometimes by movement, sometimes not? |
hippocrates-on-3024 | How, then, are they not enemies to the gods? |
aristotle-athenian-3090 | When they are examined, they are asked, first,''Who is your father, and of what deme? |
aristotle-athenian-3090 | who is your father''s father? |
aristotle-athenian-3090 | who is your mother''s father, and of what deme?'' |
aristotle-athenian-3090 | who is your mother? |
hippocrates-on-2204 | And if by these means he be freed from the pain, it is enough; but if not, give him the white meconium( Euphorbia peplus? |
hippocrates-on-2204 | When it( the tent?) |
aristotle-on-2668 | And if they are one and the same, which mode of expression forms the contrary? |
aristotle-on-2668 | At the same time it is plain that a question of the form''what is it?'' |
aristotle-on-2668 | For instance, if to the question''Is every man wise?'' |
aristotle-on-2668 | Take the proposition''Homer is so- and- so'', say''a poet''; does it follow that Homer is, or does it not? |
aristotle-on-2668 | Thus, if the question were asked Socrates wise?'' |
aristotle-on-2668 | Which of these two is contrary to the true? |
hippocrates-on-1997 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 12 Emollients(? |
hippocrates-on-1997 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 7 Another:-Sprinkle( on the sore?) |
hippocrates-on-1997 | Another:-The herb with the small leaves, which gets the name of Parthenium parviflorum, and is used for removing thymia( warts?) |
hippocrates-on-1997 | For nerves( tendons?) |
hippocrates-on-1997 | It is this( the blood?) |
hippocrates-on-1997 | from the glans penis, alum, chalcitis, a little crude Melian alum(? |
bacon-new-1645 | And how many sick?" |
bacon-new-1645 | And thereupon the man, whom I before described, stood up, and with a loud voice, in Spanish, asked,"Are ye Christians?" |
bacon-new-1645 | He brought us first into a fair parlour above stairs, and then asked us,"What number of persons we were? |
bacon-new-1645 | So likewise during marriage, is the case much amended, as it ought to be if those things were tolerated only for necessity? |
bacon-new-1645 | We offered him also twenty pistolets; but he smiled, and only said;"What? |
hippocrates-on-3152 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 3 As to the haedrae( dints or marks?) |
hippocrates-on-3152 | And in making the incision you must separate the flesh from the bone where it is united to the membrane( pericranium?) |
hippocrates-on-3152 | But if you use a perforator( trepan? |
hippocrates-on-3152 | It is a bad thing for the flesh( granulations?) |
aristotle-on-2969 | Does, then, configuration and colour constitute the essence of the various animals and of their several parts? |
aristotle-on-2969 | Is then the term hot used in one sense or in many? |
aristotle-on-2969 | The first question to be asked is what are the causes to which these homogeneous parts owe their existence? |
aristotle-on-2969 | What, however, I would ask, are the forces by which the hand or the body was fashioned into its shape? |
aristotle-on-2969 | Why, again, does not the like occur in the case of other animals than man? |
aristotle-on-2969 | Yet a generic differentia must be subdivisible; for otherwise what is there that makes it generic rather than specific? |
hippocrates-on-2449 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 14 The object on which to( the limb?) |
hippocrates-on-2449 | The canal( spout or gutter?) |
hippocrates-on-2449 | The folds of the strings( selvages?) |
hippocrates-on-2449 | The forms of it( the bandage?) |
hippocrates-on-2449 | There are two modes of using each, either to the light, or from the light( to the side?). |
hippocrates-on-2449 | We must deal with parts separated( in a sinus?) |
hippocrates-on-3680 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- APPENDIX PART 36 To persons in coma,( dropsy?) |
hippocrates-on-3680 | Washed spodium( tutty?) |
hippocrates-on-3680 | give to drink meconium( euphorbia peplus?) |
huygens-treatise-2329 | And what will these waves become after the said rays begin to intersect one another? |
huygens-treatise-2329 | That can not be: for if the particles of the metals are soft, how is it that polished silver and mercury reflect light so strongly? |
huygens-treatise-2329 | Whence then, one will say, does their opacity come? |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | ), those which are in motion and in humidity( flabby?) |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 4 The jaw- bone is often slightly displaced( subluxated? |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 7 When partial displacement( sub- luxation?) |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | Another:-Apply your head to the acromion, and your hands to the armpit, separate the head of the humerus( from the side? |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | Articulations which have been oftenest dislocated are the most easily reduced; the cause is the conformation of the nerves( ligaments?) |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | In those who have frequent dislocations outward, without inflammation, the limb is of a more humid( flabby?) |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | Of nerves( ligaments? |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | The head of the humerus is articulated with its( glenoid?) |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | The ribs are united to each vertebra by a small ligament at the place from which the short and broad lateral processes( transverse processes?) |
hippocrates-instruments-3536 | takes place at the elbow, either inside or outside, but the sharp point( olecranon?) |
gibbon-history-5872 | If you truly profess the Christian religion, why do you not restrain the king of the Franks? gibbon-history-5872 What favors,"he warmly exclaimed,"have we refused to this ungrateful man? |
gibbon-history-5872 | At what time, by what means, from what cause, were the eldest of the gods or goddesses produced? |
gibbon-history-5872 | Can I hope that he will respect the engagements of a treaty, who has already violated the duties of a son?" |
gibbon-history-5872 | Do they still continue, or have they ceased, to propagate? |
gibbon-history-5872 | If created, how, or where, could the gods themselves exist before creation? |
gibbon-history-5872 | If eternal, how could they assume the empire of an independent and preexisting world? |
gibbon-history-5872 | Shall I now accept his perfidious friendship? |
gibbon-history-5872 | 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?" |
gibbon-history-5872 | The visible heavens and earth, the whole system of the universe, which may be conceived by the mind, is it created or eternal? |
gibbon-history-5872 | Were my gray hairs reserved for such intolerable disgrace? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | ( Why is it that earth is both''melted''and softened by moisture, while natron is''melted''but not softened? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | Again, how can any distinction be made about the intercepting between this case and that of interception in denser substances such as water? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | Again, waiving the question of quantity, why does not the earth sweat now when it happens to be in process of drying? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | Again, where is the water that is generated and what goes up again as vapour to come from? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | Again, why do earthquakes frequently occur in places which are not excessively subject to drought or rain, as they ought to be on the theory? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | And if more than one, how many are there and what are the bounds of their regions? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | Are we to consider it to be one kind of body or more than one? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | How can the admixture of this earth have such a striking effect in a great quantity of water and not in each river singly? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | How then was it possible for the earth at the beginning when it was moist to sweat as it grew dry? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | If this body of water is the origin and source of all water, why is it salt and not sweet? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | Or is a''star''when it''shoots''a single body that is thrown? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | Since water is generated from air, and air from water, why are clouds not formed in the upper air? |
aristotle-meteorology-2125 | What are we to take its nature to be in the world surrounding the earth? |
kant-metaphysical-3364 | * But how is such an end possible? |
kant-metaphysical-3364 | How, then, can there be further a law for the maxims of actions? |
kant-metaphysical-3364 | What are the Ends which are also Duties? |
kant-metaphysical-3364 | What is a Duty of Virtue? |
kant-metaphysical-3364 | ]- contain a poor sort of wisdom, which has no definite principles; for this mean between two extremes, who will assign it for me? |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Blood discharged upward, whatever be its character, is a bad symptom, but downward it is( more?) |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Erysipelas upon exposure of a bone( is bad?). |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | In a restricted diet, patients who transgress are thereby more hurt( than in any other? |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | In the discharges by the bladder, the belly, and the flesh( the skin?) |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | In the female flux( immoderate menstruation? |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Of natures( temperaments? |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Such women as are immoderately fat, and do not prove with child, in them it is because the epiploon( fat?) |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Those diseases which medicines do not cure, iron( the knife?) |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | We must purge pregnant women, if matters be turgid( in a state of orgasm? |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Whatever piece of bone, cartilage, or nerve( tendon?) |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Women in a state of pregnancy may be purged, if there be any urgent necessity( or, if the humors be in a state of orgasm? |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Women who have the uterus cold and dense( compact?) |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | Women with child who are seized with fevers, and who are greatly emaciated, without any( other?) |
hippocrates-aphorisms-2104 | does not pass outwardly; or, owing to coldness, it is not heated so as to collect in its proper place( seminal vessels? |
lavoisier-elements-2968 | In what ratio does the mercury in the barometer descend in proportion to its elevation? |
lavoisier-elements-2968 | Ought we then to conclude that the oils are the radicals of the vegetable and animal acids? |
lavoisier-elements-2968 | or, what is the same thing, according to what law or ratio do the several strata of the atmosphere decrease in density? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | ( But what does he owe?) |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | Addition. Precisely the same question was proposed to Jesus, when it was asked of him, What should be done to obtain eternal life? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | Beyond this is found the region of particular persons, and the question for the first time comes up, How much do I possess? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | But is it right to make threats? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | But should the man take his own life? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | But the point is, Have I any right to kill myself? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | Does he do his duty? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | Does it depend upon the arbitrary choice of the first producer to reserve to himself the power to reproduce or dispose of the product of his mind? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | Formerly the question was merely, Is this man just? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | Here it is natural to put a second question: Who shall frame the constitution? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | Here the question may be raised, Has man a right to set up for himself ends which are not free, and depend simply on his being a living thing? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | Or, on the other hand, may he count it of no value, and give it freely with each separate copy? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | The other party may of course change his mind after the engagement, but has he any right to do so? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | The question as to the origin of evil may be put better thus: How does the negative enter into the positive? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | The question might also be raised here, Why do we not begin with the highest, i.e., with concrete truth? |
hegel-philosophy-2311 | These three are( what do you think?) |
gibbon-history-5870 | Thracian,said Severus with astonishment,"art thou disposed to wrestle after thy race?" |
gibbon-history-5870 | What reward may we expect for delivering Rome from a monster? |
gibbon-history-5870 | But where was the Roman people to be found? |
gibbon-history-5870 | Can you desire that I should ever find reason to regret the favorable opinion of the senate?" |
gibbon-history-5870 | Can you hope, that the legions will respect a weak old man, whose days have been spent in the shade of peace and retirement? |
gibbon-history-5870 | What was the emperor, except the minister of a violent government, elected for the private benefit of the soldiers? |
gibbon-history-5870 | Why do you cast those anxious looks on each other? |
gibbon-history-5870 | Why hesitate? |
gibbon-history-5870 | [ See Island In The Tiber: Elagabalus was thrown into the Tiber]? |
gibbon-history-5870 | ^61? |
gibbon-history-5870 | fitted to sustain the weight of armor, or to practise the exercises of the camp? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | And what necessity is there for any great remedy for it? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | And with regard to the sick, is it not in those who experience a rigor that the most acute fever is apt to break out? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | But when it( the flatus?) |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | Hot? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | Now, then, which of these figures is the best calculated to suck to itself and attract humidity from another body? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | Since it would be absurd to advise the patient to take something hot, for he would straightway ask what it is? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | To such a discovery and investigation what more suitable name could one give than that of Medicine? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | What do I mean by this? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | What remedy, then, is to be provided for one so situated? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | What then shall we say of the change? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | What, then, shall we say? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | Wherefore, all the other complaints to which man is subject arise from powers( qualities?). |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | Whether what is hollow and expanded, or what is solid and round, or what is hollow, and from broad, gradually turning narrow? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | Whoever pays no attention to these things, or, paying attention, does not comprehend them, how can he understand the diseases which befall a man? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | austere? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | or acid? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | or cold? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | or dry? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | or moist? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | salt? |
hippocrates-ancient-2690 | whether that, as he suffered from cold, these hot things being applied were of use to him, or the contrary? |
gibbon-history-5871 | And who,replied Julian,"will ever be innocent, if it be sufficient to affirm?" |
gibbon-history-5871 | Who will ever be found guilty,exclaimed the vehement Delphidius,"if it be enough to deny?" |
gibbon-history-5871 | After all, to those who believed in the efficacy of baptism, what argument could be more conclusive, than the danger of dying without it? |
gibbon-history-5871 | But I would suggest, did Jerom, as a boy, accompany these savages in any of their hunting expeditions? |
gibbon-history-5871 | Could I abandon the unhappy subjects intrusted to my care? |
gibbon-history-5871 | How are we to reconcile this necessary consequence with what Gibbon has said of the ignorance of Dion Cassius even of the name of the Christians? |
gibbon-history-5871 | How, then, according to this, could he consider the logos as a substance endowed with an independent existence? |
gibbon-history-5871 | If he did not, how could he be an eye- witness of this practice? |
gibbon-history-5871 | Was I not called upon to defend them from the repeated injuries of these unfeeling robbers? |
gibbon-history-5871 | Was not this a law of Constantine? |
gibbon-history-5871 | Were the Huns Finns? |
gibbon-history-5871 | Were they permitted to indulge these cannibal propensities at the expense, not of the flocks, but of the shepherds of the provinces? |
gibbon-history-5871 | With what justice could I pronounce his sentence, if, in the hour of danger, I myself neglected a duty far more sacred and far more important? |
gibbon-history-5871 | [ 11][ Footnote 9: Cur nullas aras habent? |
gibbon-history-5871 | [ 54][ Footnote 47: Quid credidit? |
gibbon-history-5871 | [ Footnote 28: Saturni aurea saecula quis requirat? |
gibbon-history-5871 | [ Footnote 8a: In all this there is doubtless much truth; yet does not the more important difference lie on the surface? |
gibbon-history-5871 | if you are thus weary of your lives, is it so difficult for you to find ropes and precipices?" |
gibbon-history-5871 | interrupted Julian, who justified his cause by indulging his passions:"does the assassin of my family reproach me that I was left an orphan? |
gibbon-history-5871 | nulla nota simulacra!--Unde autem, vel quis ille, aut ubi, Deus unicus, solitarius, desti tutus? |
gibbon-history-5871 | templa nulla? |
hippocrates-on-2318 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 17 But if the other bone( fibula?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 40 The end of the humerus at the, elbow gets displaced( subluxated?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PART 45 In certain cases the process of the ulna( olecranon?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | And if any piece of information be particularly valuable this is; to which of the most important cases in medicine does it not apply? |
hippocrates-on-2318 | To the sore itself a compress, anointed with white cerate, will be sufficient, for if a piece of flesh or nerve( tendon?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | What use, then, is there of the archer''s attitude? |
hippocrates-on-2318 | With regard to the canals( gutters?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | are attached the nerves( ligaments?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | for many other things are removed from their proper place, notwithstanding a great obstacle,- in such a violent displacement the part( olecranon?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | has more to do with the insertion of the ligaments in the arm than the thick bone( radius?). |
hippocrates-on-2318 | prevents the bone of the arm( humerus?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | protrudes, and passes up above the joint, and to it( the olecranon?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | which go downward to the junction of the bones; and the slender bone( ulna?) |
hippocrates-on-2318 | which passes above the prominent part of the bones is large, and the stretching of the nerves( ligaments?) |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''; the second,''Is the conclusion true or false? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''; the third,''Of what kind of premisses does it consist? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''Good means this, or this, does it not?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''Has one thing one contrary or many? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''Is the knowledge of opposites the same or not? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''Is the universe eternal or not?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''Ought one rather to obey one''s parents or the laws, if they disagree? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''What is man?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''Wherein does justice differ from courage, and wisdom from temperance? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | ''Wherein does sensation differ from knowledge? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | Clearly then the first thing to ask in regard to the argument in itself is,''Has it a conclusion? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | For if it be put in this way,"''An animal that walks on two feet"is the definition of man, is it not?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | For in all such cases the question is''to which of the two does the predicate in question happen( accidit) to belong more closely?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | For there too the question is always''Is so and so true or untrue? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | The question,''Is one thing in the same genus as another or in a different one?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | Wherein lies the viciousness of the reasoning? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | [ or''Is"animal"his genus or no?''] |
aristotle-topics-1577 | and''Is the life of virtue or the life of self- indulgence the pleasanter? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | if''beneficial''means''productive of health'', does''beneficially''mean productively of health''and a''benefactor''a''producer of health''? |
aristotle-topics-1577 | or''"Animal"is the genus of man, is it not?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | or''How many meanings has"the good"?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | the result is a proposition: but if thus,''Is"an animal that walks on two feet"a definition of man or no?'' |
aristotle-topics-1577 | to see if it is possible to wrong a god, ask what is''to wrong''? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | Is this king of yours a bad man or a good one? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | Being also blamed for eating very dainty foods, he answered:"Thou dost not spend as much as I do?" |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | CHAPTER XX-- ARE FORTRESSES, AND MANY OTHER THINGS TO WHICH PRINCES OFTEN RESORT, ADVANTAGEOUS OR HURTFUL? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | How should one best advance to meet him, keeping the ranks? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | If we should wish to retreat, how ought we to pursue?" |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | To an envious man who laughed, he said:"Do you laugh because you are successful or because another is unfortunate?" |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | Upon this a question arises: whether it be better to be loved than feared or feared than loved? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | What Italian would refuse him homage? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | What door would be closed to him? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | What envy would hinder him? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | Who would refuse obedience to him? |
machiavelli-prince-1728 | asked Castruccio, and was told that he was a good one, whereupon he said,"Why should you suggest that I should be afraid of a good man?" |
kant-critique-3044 | But how is the consciousness, of that moral law possible? |
kant-critique-3044 | But is any other solution that has been attempted, or that may be attempted, easier and more intelligible? |
kant-critique-3044 | But what name could we more suitably apply to this singular feeling which can not be compared to any pathological feeling? |
kant-critique-3044 | Now, how is the practical use of pure reason here to be reconciled with the theoretical, as to the determination of the limits of its faculty? |
kant-critique-3044 | Quid statis? |
kant-critique-3044 | Thus the question:"How is the summum bonum practically possible?" |
kant-critique-3044 | What, then, is to be done in order to enter on this in a useful manner and one adapted to the loftiness of the subject? |
kant-critique-3044 | Why is this? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | And how does the bourgeoisie get over these crises? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | But does wage labor create any property for the laborer? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | Do you charge us with wanting to stop the exploitation of children by their parents? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | Do you mean the property of the petty artisan and of the small peasant, a form of property that preceded the bourgeois form? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | For how can people, when once they understand their system, fail to see in it the best possible plan of the best possible state of society? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | Has it not preached in the place of these charity and poverty, celibacy and mortification of the flesh, monastic life and Mother Church? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | Has not Christianity declaimed against private property, against marriages, against the State? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | In what relation do the Communists stand to the proletarians as a whole? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | On what foundation is the present family, the bourgeois family, based? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | Or do you mean modern bourgeois private property? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | What does this accusation reduce itself to? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | What else does the history of ideas prove, than that intellectual production changes its character in proportion as material production is changed? |
marx-manifesto-3427 | Where is the party in opposition that has not been decried as Communistic by its opponents in power? |
kant-critique-2412 | Well, what is so wonderful in that? |
kant-critique-2412 | : How are judgements of taste possible? |
kant-critique-2412 | But if the question were: How is it possible to assume a priori that nature is a complex of objects of taste? |
kant-critique-2412 | For how can that which is apprehended as inherently contra- final be noted with an expression of approval? |
kant-critique-2412 | For what is it that, even to the savage, is the object of the greatest admiration? |
kant-critique-2412 | Further, what species of the beautiful admits of an ideal? |
kant-critique-2412 | Has it also got independent a priori principles? |
kant-critique-2412 | Have we reason for presupposing a common sense? |
kant-critique-2412 | If so, are they constitutive, or are they merely regulative, thus indicating no special realm? |
kant-critique-2412 | In order to render the process to some extent intelligible( for who can wrest nature''s whole secret from her? |
kant-critique-2412 | Is it a priori or empirically? |
kant-critique-2412 | Is it aesthetically by sensation and our mere internal sense? |
kant-critique-2412 | Now what do we here mean by"soul"? |
kant-critique-2412 | Now, how do we arrive at such an ideal of beauty? |
kant-critique-2412 | Now, how is this effected? |
kant-critique-2412 | Or is it intellectually by consciousness of our intentional activity in bringing these powers into play? |
kant-critique-2412 | Seeing, then, that the natural endowment of art( as fine art) must furnish the rule, what kind of rule must this be? |
kant-critique-2412 | That deduction enabled us to solve the problem: How are synthetical a priori cognitive judgements possible? |
kant-critique-2412 | What then, is the distinction that makes us hold them in such different esteem? |
kant-critique-2412 | What, then, is the meaning of the assertion that anything is great, or small, or of medium size? |
kant-critique-2412 | final? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | But whence have we the conception of God as the supreme good? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | Does he will riches, how much anxiety, envy, and snares might he not thereby draw upon his shoulders? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | How is a Categorical Imperative Possible? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | I change then the suggestion of self- love into a universal law, and state the question thus:"How would it be if my maxim were a universal law?" |
kant-fundamental-5094 | In what, then, can their worth lie, if it is not to consist in the will and in reference to its expected effect? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | Let the question be, for example: May I when in distress make a promise with the intention not to keep it? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | Now arises the question, how are all these imperatives possible? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | What else then can freedom of the will be but autonomy, that is, the property of the will to be a law to itself? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | What then is it which justifies virtue or the morally good disposition, in making such lofty claims? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | Who can prove by experience the non- existence of a cause when all that experience tells us is that we do not perceive it? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | Would he have long life? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | how often has uneasiness of the body restrained from excesses into which perfect health would have allowed one to fall? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | who guarantees to him that it would not be a long misery? |
kant-fundamental-5094 | would he at least have health? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ''-''So you committed this wickedness?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ''-''Well then, would not you too be justly put to death? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ''Must I be a profligate because I am well- groomed? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ''No'', said Aristophon; and Iphicrates replied,''Very good: if you, who are Aristophon, would not betray the fleet, would I, who am Iphicrates?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ''What has not been proved by me?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ''Why, when is the time?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ''Why,''said Pericles,''how can that be, when you are uninitiated?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ''Would you'', he asked,''take a bribe to betray the fleet?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | ( 2) Is it right that B should thus treat him? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Again, some impression is made upon an audience by a device which speech- writers employ to nauseous excess, when they say''Who does not know this?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Do not the words''thou must not be'',& c., amount to saying that the stranger must not always be strange? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | For what other reason should style be''clear'', and''not mean''but''appropriate''? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Hence Philocrates, being asked by some one, at a time when the public was angry with him,''Why do n''t you defend yourself?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Hence you must ask yourself two distinct questions:( 1) Is it right that A should be thus treated? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Is it lest some of these spectators should see you to- morrow?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Pericles then asked,''Do you know them yourself?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Remember what the man said to the baker who asked whether he was to make the cake hard or soft:''What, ca n''t you make it right?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Such is that given in the Topics:''What sort of motion is the soul? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | The Socrates of Theodectes provides an example:''What temple has he profaned? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | The use of introductions to excite prejudice or to dispel misgivings is universal- My lord, I will not say that eagerly... or Why all this preface? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Thus,''What is the supernatural? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | What gods recognized by the state has he not honoured?'' |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | Will you not give me one now that I have done the deed? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | or a reply to a forensic opponent? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | or an epilogue in closely- reasoned speeches? |
aristotle-rhetoric-1783 | or''What has my opponent proved?'' |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Against such wight, send forth- yet whom? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | CHORUS( chanting) Ah, what is thy desire? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Can I the funeral rite refrain, Nor weep for Polyneices slain? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Did hands meet hands more close than brotherly? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | For why? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | HERALD How? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Hear ye? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Is thy hand set against us, O Ares, in ruin and wrath to o''erwhelm Thine own immemorial land, O god of the golden helm? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS What further woefulness besets our home? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | LEADER Shall thine own brother''s blood be victory''s palm? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Only one sister o''er his bier, To raise the cry and pour the tear- Who can obey such stern decree? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Say on, who holdeth the next gate in ward? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Say- when a ship is strained and deep in brine, Did eer a seaman mend his chance, who left The helm, t''invoke the image at the prow? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Shall I send forth a joyous cry, Hail to the lord of weal renewed? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Shall ye rest with old kings In the place of their pride? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Sure in this faith, I will myself go forth And match me with him; who hath fairer claim? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | THE SPY Have done with questions!-with I- with their lives crushed out- LEADER Lie they out yonder? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | THE SPY The home stands safe- but ah, the princes twain- LEADER Who? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | The fountain of maternal blood outpoured What power can staunck? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | The rush of their feet? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | What need of displeasure herein? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | What now befits it that I do, What meditate, what undergo? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Where not that grace of gods? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Who cleanse pollution, where the ancient bane Rises and reeks again? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Whom wilt thou set against him? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Why should we fawn and flinch away from doom? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | Will not the Fury in her sable pal Pass outward from these halls, what time the gods Welcome a votive offering from our hands? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | and in the selfsame hour? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | clasping gods, yet voicing thy despair? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | grace of burial, to the city''s foe? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | or speak I to unheeding ears? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | the air is distraught with the spears, And whither doth destiny drive us, and where is the goal of our fears? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | to what shrine shall I bow me in terror and pray? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | what man Will front that vaunting figure and not fear? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | what of them? |
aeschylus-seven-2836 | when the gates Of Proetus yield, who can his rush repel? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | But if it were asked: Does God necessarily manifest himself? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | But the next question is: How does Will assume a definite form? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | But the very term freedom supposes a previous bondage; and the question naturally arises: Bondage to what? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | But what is Spirit? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | But what is this peculiarity of character which hindered the attainment of Spiritual Freedom? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | But why did God not appear to the Greeks in the flesh? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | But, if it be allowed that Providence manifests itself in such objects and forms of existence, why not also in Universal History? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | Here then the question presents itself: what is the decisive will to be? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | How then did the Church realize Christ as a definite and present existence? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | If the further question is put, What is the meaning of that practice of yours, that silent meditation which some of your learned men speak of? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | In this complete development of the Church, we may find a deficiency: but what can be felt as a want by it? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | Is she not indispensable to all lands that are rich in corn and herds, in oil and wine to all who wish to traffic either in money or in mind? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | It is a matter of perfect indifference where a thing originated; the only question is: Is it true in and for itself? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | It may be asked: By what were such a disposition and character produced? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | So regarded, the question is asked, What are we to make of his birth, his Father and Mother, his early domestic relations, his miracles, etc.? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | The only question is: Whence are those principles derived? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | The question comes, then, how this distinction originated? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | The question presents itself then, Whence did it emanate? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | The question, then, which we may next put is: What means does this principle of Freedom use for its realization? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | Thus the question would arise: What is the material in which the Ideal of Reason is wrought out? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | Was the English nation too backward in point of culture to apprehend these general principles? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | What is Pure Deed? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | What is Pure Thought? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | What is Pure Word? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | Whence spring those primary beliefs or superstitions, religious and political, that hold society together? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | Xenophon says: Who does not stand in need of Athens? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | Zoroaster asks Ormuzd who he is? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | but to the question, Do you worship the Supreme Being? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | have we not prophesied in thy name, have we not cast out devils in thy name, have we not in thy name done many wonderful deeds? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | i.e., What is he unspiritually regarded? |
hegel-philosophy-2555 | to craftsmen, sophists, philosophers, poets, and all who desire what is worth seeing or hearing in sacred and public matters? |
harvey-on-4652 | And how comes it that spirits and fuliginous vapours can pass hither and thither without admixture or confusion? |
harvey-on-4652 | And how should it be otherwise? |
harvey-on-4652 | And how should the semilunars hinder the regress of spirits from the aorta upon each supervening diastole of the heart? |
harvey-on-4652 | And so also of the blood, wherefore does it precede all the rest? |
harvey-on-4652 | And so of all the other kinds of pulse, what may be the cause and indication of each? |
harvey-on-4652 | And then, wherefore is there neither swelling nor repletion of the veins, nor any sign or symptom of attraction or afflux, above the ligature? |
harvey-on-4652 | But how can parts attract in which the heat and life are almost extinct? |
harvey-on-4652 | But is not the thing rather arranged as it is by the consummate providence of nature? |
harvey-on-4652 | Does the blood accumulate below the ligature coming through the veins, or through the arteries, or passing by certain hidden porosities? |
harvey-on-4652 | If the mitral cuspidate valves do not prevent the egress of fuliginous vapours to the lungs, how should they oppose the escape of air? |
harvey-on-4652 | In the same way, in considering the pulse, why should one kind of pulse indicate death, another recovery? |
harvey-on-4652 | Nay, has not the blood itself or spirit an obscure palpitation inherent in it, which it has even appeared to me to retain after death? |
harvey-on-4652 | Or does this, which occurred in my own case, happen from the same cause? |
harvey-on-4652 | Or wherefore is there a pulse in the pulmonary artery? |
harvey-on-4652 | Seeing, therefore, that the moderately tight ligature renders the veins turgid and distended, and the whole hand full of blood, I ask, whence is this? |
harvey-on-4652 | Why do we always find this vessel full of sluggish blood, never of air, whilst in the lungs we find abundance of air remaining? |
harvey-on-4652 | Why does an artery differ so much from a vein in the thickness and strength of its coats? |
harvey-on-4652 | Why does not the pulmonary vein pulsate, seeing that it is numbered among the arteries? |
harvey-on-4652 | and why was nature reduced to the necessity of adding another ventricle for the sole purpose of nourishing the lungs? |
harvey-on-4652 | how should the mitral valves prevent the regurgitation of air and not of blood? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | Ah, by whose will was it done that o''er the wide ocean they came, Guided by favouring winds, and wafted by sail and by oar? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | And thou-- since true those scales do sway-- Shall thou from justice shrink away? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | But me how biddest, how assurest thou? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | CHORUS Know, then, with these a fair device there is-- THE KING OF ARGOS Speak, then: what utterance doth this foretell? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | CHORUS O land of hill and dale, O holy land, What shall befall us? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | CHORUS True is the word thou spakest of my garb; But speak I unto thee as citizen, Or Hermes''wandbearer, or chieftain king? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | CHORUS Unless to us thou givest pledge secure-- THE KING OF ARGOS What can thy girdles''craft achieve for thee? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | CHORUS What help? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | CHORUS What marvel that we loathe them, scared in soul? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | CHORUS Whom next invoke I, of these other gods? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | Deemest thou this a woman- hearted town? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | HERALD OF AEGYPTUS Wherein? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | O King, wilt thou behold-- Lord of this land, wilt thou behold me torn From altars manifold? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | O wither drift the waves? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | SEMI- CHORUS How should I scan Zeus''mighty will, The depth of counsel undescried? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | SEMI- CHORUS Pray thou no word of omen ill. SEMI- CHORUS What timely warning wouldst thou teach? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | Say, to what issue is the vote made sure, And how prevailed the people''s crowding hands? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | Shall men For women''s sake incarnadine the ground? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS And his stern consort, did she aught thereon? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS And who from her was born unto the race? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS And whom in turn did Epaphus beget? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Hear I aright? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Held Zeus aloof then from the horned beast? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS How issued then this strife of those on high? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS How namest thou this herdsman many- eyed? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Sirrah, what dost thou? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Speak-- of what land are ye? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Still did the goddess vex the beast ill- starred? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Then to Canopus and to Memphis came she? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Thus drave she Io hence, to roam afar? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS To whom of our guest- champions hast appealed? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS What skills it that I tell my name to thee? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Who vaunts him the Zeus- mated creature''s son? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | THE KING OF ARGOS Yea, truth it is, and far this word prevails: Is''t said that Zeus with mortal mingled love? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | This too gives marvel, how unto this land, Unheralded, unfriended, without guide, And without fear, ye came? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | What, clingest to the shrine? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | Who bade the harassed maiden''s peace return? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | Who else had power stern Hera''s craft to stay, Her vengeful curse to loose_? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | Whose hand was laid at last on Io, thus forlorn, With many roamings worn? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | Yet if against your kin, Aegyptus''race, Before our gates I front the doom of war, Will not the city''s loss be sore? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | and who shall loose the pain? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | in what arrogance Darest thou thus insult Pelasgia''s realm? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | our Argive gods are nought? |
aeschylus-suppliant-2642 | whither shall we flee, From Apian land to some dark lair of earth? |
plato-critias-1231 | For will any man of sense deny that you have spoken well? |
plato-critias-1231 | How shall I establish my words? |
plato-critias-1231 | and what part of it can be truly called a remnant of the land that then was? |
aristotle-on-3483 | 12 Why is the uterus always internal, but the testes sometimes internal, sometimes external? |
aristotle-on-3483 | A difficulty may be raised about the growth of the egg; how is it derived from the uterus? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Again, for what reason is a child generally like its ancestors, even the more remote? |
aristotle-on-3483 | And by what else can we define these( I mean loudness and softness of voice) except by the large and small amount of the air put in motion? |
aristotle-on-3483 | And the weasel has a uterus in like manner to the other quadrupeds; by what passage is the embryo to get from it to the mouth? |
aristotle-on-3483 | And what about the generative parts? |
aristotle-on-3483 | And yet how would this be possible if the semen were secreted from all the body? |
aristotle-on-3483 | But here what must be said to correspond to this, and whence comes or what is the moving principle which corresponds to the male? |
aristotle-on-3483 | But how is each part formed? |
aristotle-on-3483 | But this still involves a difficulty; in what way are we to say that their eggs live? |
aristotle-on-3483 | But why is it that one thing becomes and is male, another female? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Does it exist in the body of the embryo as a part of it from the first, mingling with the material which comes from the female? |
aristotle-on-3483 | For after the animal has been produced does this something perish or does it remain in it? |
aristotle-on-3483 | For if animals derive their nutriment through the umbilical cord, through what do eggs derive it? |
aristotle-on-3483 | For why, if new bees come into existence when the germs are transported, should they not do so if the germs are left there? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Further, if the parts of the future animal are separated in the semen, how do they live? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Has the semen soul, or not? |
aristotle-on-3483 | How, then, does it make the other parts? |
aristotle-on-3483 | If it makes some of the parts and then perishes, what is to make the rest of them? |
aristotle-on-3483 | If the semen comes from both, what would be the manner of generation? |
aristotle-on-3483 | If there is anything by which they are attached to the uterus, what becomes of this when the egg is perfected? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Or does the semen communicate nothing to the material body of the embryo but only to the power and movement in it? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Then how can the upper and lower, right and left, front and back parts have been''sundered''? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Then, again, how will these parts that came from all the body of the parent be increased or grow? |
aristotle-on-3483 | What sort of soul will this be? |
aristotle-on-3483 | When and how and whence is a share in reason acquired by those animals that participate in this principle? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Why then does it not perfect the parts and the animal? |
aristotle-on-3483 | Why, then, should we assert this of this part any more than of others? |
aristotle-on-3483 | With what object should they do so? |
aristotle-on-3483 | in the case of wine and water? |
kant-science-1851 | Again:"May one have a thing as his, on a soil of which no one has appropriated any part as his own?" |
kant-science-1851 | And the contradiction becomes more apparent when the question is put:"Who is to be the judge in a controversy between the people and the sovereign?" |
kant-science-1851 | And this second question resolves itself again into a third:"How is a synthetic proposition in right possible a priori?" |
kant-science-1851 | And, on like grounds, conversely, can I be bound at all to take an oath? |
kant-science-1851 | But how is it possible that what at the beginning constituted only goods or wares, at length became money? |
kant-science-1851 | But how then would we render the statement:"If you steal from another, you steal from yourself?" |
kant-science-1851 | But what is that, designated as external, which I acquire by contract? |
kant-science-1851 | But what is the mode and measure of punishment which public justice takes as its principle and standard? |
kant-science-1851 | Further, the question is put,"Is cultivation of the soil, by building, agriculture, drainage, etc., necessary in order to its acquisition?" |
kant-science-1851 | Is this external juridical relation of my will a kind of immediate relation to an external thing? |
kant-science-1851 | Now how is this feeling to be explained? |
kant-science-1851 | The question is put thus:"Why ought I to keep my Promise?" |
kant-science-1851 | The question, then, in this connection, is not merely"What is right in itself?" |
kant-science-1851 | The question,"How is an external mine and thine possible?" |
kant-science-1851 | This question may be said to be about as embarrassing to the jurist as the well- known question,"What is truth?" |
kant-science-1851 | What is Money? |
kant-science-1851 | What is Right? |
kant-science-1851 | What is a Book? |
kant-science-1851 | What is a Real Right? |
kant-science-1851 | What then is the right in both cases as relating to criminal justice? |
kant-science-1851 | in the sense in which every man must determine it by the judgement of reason; but"What is right as applied to this case?" |
kant-science-1851 | resolves itself into this other question:"How is a merely juridical or rational possession possible?" |
kant-science-1851 | that is,"What is right and just as viewed by a court?" |
gibbon-history-5873 | And is it for them,he exclaimed, with honest indignation,"that we have fought and conquered? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Are you ignorant,exclaimed the son of Triarius,"that it is the constant policy of the Romans to destroy the Goths by each other''s swords? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Are you of opinion that the emperor will ratify this treaty? gibbon-history-5873 By what oaths can he bind himself?" |
gibbon-history-5873 | Do you despise your lives? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Do you mean to raise a sedition? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Of forgiveness? |
gibbon-history-5873 | What can ye fear,said a bold conspirator to his associates,"from your bigoted tyrant? |
gibbon-history-5873 | What day,said the messenger,"will you fix for the combat?" |
gibbon-history-5873 | What interest or passion,exclaims Theophilus in the court of Justinian,"can reach the calm and sublime elevation of the monarch? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Where are the officers? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Will he swear by the Gospels, the divine books of the Christians? gibbon-history-5873 Wilt thou govern better?" |
gibbon-history-5873 | Are we strong? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Are you insensible that the victor in this unnatural contest will be exposed, and justly exposed, to their implacable revenge? |
gibbon-history-5873 | But the new monarch was saluted with unanimous acclamations; the flight of Chosroes( yet where could he have fled?) |
gibbon-history-5873 | But their lamentations were soon turned to curses, and their curses to threats: they dared to ask,"Why do we fear? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Did he reduce his passions and appetites under the dominion of reason? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Did he subdue his prejudices, and those of his subjects? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Do you promise to pay me one hundred pieces of gold? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Do you think it a disgrace to be the subject of Justinian? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Has he not usurped, with equal avidity, the city of Bosphorus on the frozen Mæotis, and the vale of palm- trees on the shores of the Red Sea? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Has he not violated the privileges of Armenia, the independence of Colchos, and the wild liberty of the Tzanian mountains? |
gibbon-history-5873 | How could you combat, how could you answer, the Barbarians, who, with hostile or friendly intentions, may approach the royal city? |
gibbon-history-5873 | If he refuses, what consequence will ensue? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Is it for them that we shed our blood, and exhaust the treasures of our people?" |
gibbon-history-5873 | Justinian is a man; he is a prince; does he not dread for himself a similar reverse of fortune? |
gibbon-history-5873 | The conquerors of the Avars solicit our alliance; shall we dread their fugitives and exiles? |
gibbon-history-5873 | The love of freedom and abhorrence of slavery? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Was personal happiness the aim and object of their ambition? |
gibbon-history-5873 | What is your meaning? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Where are those warriors, my kinsmen and thy own, whose widows now lament that their lives were sacrificed to thy rash ambition? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Where is the wealth which thy soldiers possessed when they were first allured from their native homes to enlist under thy standard? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Why will you persist in hopeless obstinacy? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Why will you ruin yourself, your family, and nation? |
gibbon-history-5873 | Will such a war, be just or reasonable? |
gibbon-history-5873 | and"Why will you bruise a broken reed?" |
gibbon-history-5873 | my dearest Gelimer, are you not already the worst of slaves, the slave of the vile nation of the Moors? |
gibbon-history-5873 | we advance and conquer: are we feeble? |
gibbon-history-5873 | why do we obey? |
herodotus-history-2538 | ( a) Of what should we be afraid?--what gathering of numbers, or what resources of money? |
herodotus-history-2538 | 28 Are we not worthy then to have this post by reason of that deed alone? |
herodotus-history-2538 | And why must thou needs run the risk of sea- battles? |
herodotus-history-2538 | Come tell me this:--thou sayest that thou wert thyself king of these men; wilt thou therefore consent forthwith to fight with ten men? |
herodotus-history-2538 | Did not Artaphrenes send thee to obey me, and to sail whithersoever I should order? |
herodotus-history-2538 | Didst thou suppose that thou wouldest escape the notice of the gods for such things as then thou didst devise? |
herodotus-history-2538 | Do ye mean to take away the king of the Spartans, thus delivered up to you by his fellow- citizens? |
herodotus-history-2538 | Dost thou see these Persians who are feasting here, and the army which we left behind encamped upon the river? |
herodotus-history-2538 | For what nation did Xerxes not lead out of Asia against Hellas? |
herodotus-history-2538 | 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? |
herodotus-history-2538 | 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?" |
herodotus-history-2538 | He then when he heard this went out, having first said these words:"Master, thou hast not surely brought ruin upon me?" |
herodotus-history-2538 | How then do these wrong us, since they are conveying provisions for our use?" |
herodotus-history-2538 | Now therefore how thinkest thou that this is well? |
herodotus-history-2538 | This then, I say, is evenly balanced: but how should one who is but man know the course which is safe? |
herodotus-history-2538 | 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? |
herodotus-history-2538 | To this Xerxes said:"Demaratos, in what manner shall we with least labour get the better of these men? |
herodotus-history-2538 | 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? |
herodotus-history-2538 | What if thou shouldest send three hundred ships from thy fleet to attack the Laconian land? |
herodotus-history-2538 | Why dost thou meddle with things which concern thee not?" |
herodotus-history-2538 | and how without thy counsels was anything of this kind done? |
herodotus-history-2538 | and most Editors read{ ti},"what will ye say after this?" |
herodotus-history-2538 | and what water was not exhausted, being drunk by his host, except only the great rivers? |
herodotus-history-2538 | or dost thou think that our fleet will fall short of theirs? |
herodotus-history-2538 | or even that both of these things together will prove true? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | ( internal cavity?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | ), and below the other( coronoid process?). |
hippocrates-on-3074 | ), but they can stand; but if the dislocation be inward they become valgi( their toes are turned outward? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | A ladder, having strong steps, if laid below the bed, will serve the purpose of the threshold and the piece of wood laid along( the foot of the couch? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | Among these parts the joints and nerves( ligaments? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | And if in any instance the bones of the upper articulations( shoulder- joint? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | And when the patient is raised up by the stretching, you should pass a hand through( between the legs?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | And, indeed, in cases of fracture, either from an injury in the leg or thigh, or in paralysis of the nerves( tendons?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | But if in their case the bones do not sphacelate( become carious?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | But if one will strip the point of the shoulder of the fleshy parts, and where the muscle( deltoid?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | But in those cases in which the mucosity is accompanied with inflammation, the inflammation binds( braces?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | But it may be said, these things are foreign to medicine; for what is the use of enlarging upon cases which are already past remedy? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | But perhaps, instead of the board, it might be sufficient to have a person sitting( on the seat of luxation? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | But what use is there for more words? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | But, as formerly stated, the upper bone( sternal fragment?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | Common cords( nerves?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | Dislocation, for the most part, takes place toward the sides( inwardly?). |
hippocrates-on-3074 | From this to the great vertebra( seventh cervical?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | If the large bench were to have raised on it two posts about a foot( in diameter? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | In like manner, when the dislocation is at the anklejoint, if outward they become vari( their toes are turned inward? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | On the opposite side( behind?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | Should not, then, the utmost pains be taken in the whole practice of the art to find out the proper attitude in every case? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | The first( most distant?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | There are certain other nervous cords which decussate, are attached( to the vertebrae? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | There are many other things in the body which have similar connections, both with regard to the contractions of nerves( ligaments? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | This circumstance, however, contributes to dislocation there; of nerves( ligaments?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | This part, in particular, requires a short but complex(?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | Wherefore, on the side turned to the belly( the anterior?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | Wherefore, then, do I write all this? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | With regard, then, to the matter on hand, the jaw- bone is rarely dislocated, but is frequently slackened( partially displaced?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | and the bone behind the ear( temporal?) |
hippocrates-on-3074 | extends, and also lay bare the tendon that goes from the armpit and clavicle to the breast( pectoral muscle? |
hippocrates-on-3074 | is cotyloid and oblong, and in some the socket is glenoid( shallow?). |
hippocrates-on-3074 | shuts up the heads of the under jaw, being above the one( condyloid process? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Am I so dependent on body and senses that I can not exist without these? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | And I ask, from whom do I then derive my existence? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | And in what way can this cause communicate this reality to it, unless it possessed it in itself? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | And what more? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | And yet what do I see from the window but hats and coats which may cover automatic machines? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But finally what shall I say of this mind, that is, of myself, for up to this point I do not admit in myself anything but mind? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But how can I know there is not something different from those things that I have just considered, of which one can not have the slightest doubt? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But how often? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But what am I to conclude from it all in the end? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But what did I clearly[ and distinctly] perceive in them? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But what is a man? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But what is the meaning of flexible and movable? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But what is this piece of wax which can not be understood excepting by the[ understanding or] mind? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But what then am I? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But what, precisely, is it that I imagine when I form such conceptions? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | But why should they not so pertain? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Can I affirm that I possess the least of all those things which I have just said pertain to the nature of body? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Does the same wax remain after this change? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | For what was there in this first perception which was distinct? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | For, pray, whence can the effect derive its reality, if not from its cause? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | I am certain that I am a thing which thinks; but do I not then likewise know what is requisite to render me certain of a truth? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | I am, however, a real thing and really exist; but what thing? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | I myself, am I not at least something? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Is it not also unknown? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Is it not that I imagine that this piece of wax being round is capable of becoming square and of passing from a square to a triangular figure? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Is there likewise any one of these attributes which can be distinguished from my thought, or which might be said to be separated from myself? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Is there not some God, or some other being by whatever name we call it, who puts these reflections into my mind? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Let us pass to the attributes of soul and see if there is any one which is in me? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Shall I say a reasonable animal? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | That is not necessary, for is it not possible that I am capable of producing them myself? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What further objection can then be raised? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What is a thing which thinks? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What now is this extension? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What of nutrition or walking[ the first mentioned]? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What of thinking? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What then did I formerly believe myself to be? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What then did I know so distinctly in this piece of wax? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What then were these things? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What was there which might not as well have been perceived by any of the animals? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | What, then, can be esteemed as true? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Whence then come my errors? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Will it be said that I formerly held many things to be true and certain which I have afterwards recognised to be false? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Will it be said that my nature is such as to cause me to be frequently deceived? |
descartes-meditations-3955 | Yet I hesitate, for what follows from that? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | And if so, what cause can be assigned of so widespread and predominant an error? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | And is not this a direct repugnancy, and altogether inconceivable? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | Are all these but so many chimeras and illusions on the fancy? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | But do not you yourself perceive or think of them all the while? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | But how are we enlightened by being told this is done by attraction? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | But secondly, though we should grant this unknown substance may possibly exist, yet where can it be supposed to be? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | But why should we trouble ourselves any farther, in discussing this material substratum or support of figure and motion, and other sensible qualities? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | But you will say, Hath Nature no share in the production of natural things, and must they be all ascribed to the immediate and sole operation of God? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | But, since one idea can not be the cause of another, to what purpose is that connexion? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | But, you will insist, what if I have no reason to believe the existence of Matter? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | Does it not suppose they have an existence without the mind? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | For example, about the Resurrection, how many scruples and objections have been raised by Socinians and others? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | For how can it be known that the things which are perceived are conformable to those which are not perceived, or exist without the mind? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | For, what are the fore- mentioned objects but the things we perceive by sense? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | If so, why may not the Intelligence do it, without his being at the pains of making the movements and putting them together? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | May we not, for example, be affected with the promise of a good thing, though we have not an idea of what it is? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | Must we suppose the whole world to be mistaken? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | What must we think of Moses''rod? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | What must we think of houses, rivers, mountains, trees, stones; nay, even of our own bodies? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | What therefore becomes of the sun, moon and stars? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | What therefore can be meant by calling matter an occasion? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | Why does not an empty case serve as well as another? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | Would not a man be deservedly laughed at, who should talk after this manner? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | and is it not plainly repugnant that any one of these, or any combination of them, should exist unperceived? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | and is it possible to separate, even in thought, any of these from perception? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | and what do we perceive besides our own ideas or sensations? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | was it not really turned into a serpent; or was there only a change of ideas in the minds of the spectators? |
berkeley-treatise-5826 | what if I can not assign any use to it or explain anything by it, or even conceive what is meant by that word? |
gibbon-history-5874 | And am I not,replied the indignant Caled,"am I not the lieutenant of the commander of the faithful? |
gibbon-history-5874 | And our wives and children? |
gibbon-history-5874 | And what,continued the sultan,"would have been your own behavior, had fortune smiled on your arms?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | And why,said Abrahah,"do you not rather implore my clemency in favor of your temple, which I have threatened to destroy?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | Are you a Christian? |
gibbon-history-5874 | But if we are killed in your service, what,exclaimed the deputies of Medina,"will be our reward?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | But if you are recalled by your country,they asked with a flattering anxiety,"will you not abandon your new allies?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | Do you think,replied he,"to terrify me with death?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | How can he be dead, our witness, our intercessor, our mediator, with God? gibbon-history-5874 How can we with mortal eyes contemplate this image, whose celestial splendor the host of heaven presumes not to behold? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Is it Mahomet,said he to Omar and the multitude,"or the God of Mahomet, whom you worship? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Is the tent a station for the general of the Moslems? |
gibbon-history-5874 | My brethren,said Tarik to his surviving companions,"the enemy is before you, the sea is behind; whither would ye fly? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Of what do you complain? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Was she not old? |
gibbon-history-5874 | What mercy can you expect from the man whom you have wronged? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Ye men of Mecca, will ye be the last to embrace, and the first to abandon, the religion of Islam? |
gibbon-history-5874 | --"And if that number,"continued Mahmud,"should not be sufficient?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | --"But,"said the Gaznevide, dissembling his anxiety,"if I should stand in need of the whole force of your kindred tribes?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | Are we sure of victory? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Are we surprised that a multitude of proselytes should embrace the doctrine and the passions of an eloquent fanatic? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Are you ignorant that the popes are the bond of union, the mediators of peace, between the East and West? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Can we conclude a treaty with the sea? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Did not these valiant Franks, diminished as they were by languor and fatigue, intercept and vanish the three most powerful emirs of the Saracens? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Had they a right to alienate his gift of the Exarchate? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Had they power to abolish his government of Rome? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Has any one been despoiled of his goods? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Has the thirst of riches seduced you from the blessings of peace? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Have I aspersed the reputation of a Mussulman? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Have I not taken the city by storm? |
gibbon-history-5874 | He cast his eyes round the field:"Where,"said he,"is our general?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | If they indulged their hospitable feasts in the face of danger and death, did these feasts abate the vigor of their enterprise? |
gibbon-history-5874 | In this extremity( he interrogates a friend) how must the Sicilians act? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Is it by your fasting that the walls of Bari have been overturned? |
gibbon-history-5874 | On which of these actions did he reflect with the most pleasure, when he was summoned by the angel of death? |
gibbon-history-5874 | We were few in number, and why were we few? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Who among you will be my companion and my vizier?" |
gibbon-history-5874 | Who among you will support my burden? |
gibbon-history-5874 | Would prudence or gratitude allow the pontiffs to renounce their benefactor? |
gibbon-history-5874 | and did not their defeat precipitate the fall of the city? |
gibbon-history-5874 | said Ayesha, with the insolence of a blooming beauty;"has not God given you a better in her place?" |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ( strophe 2) For when misfortune''s fraudful hand Prepares to pour the vengeance of the sky, What mortal shall her force withstand? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ATOSSA From the strong bow wing they the barbed shaft? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ATOSSA Have they sufficient treasures in their houses? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ATOSSA How can they then resist the invading foe? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ATOSSA Send they embattled numbers to the field? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ATOSSA What fortune can be more unfriendly to us Than this? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ATOSSA What monarch reigns, whose power commands their ranks? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ATOSSA Which navy first advanced to the attack? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | ATOSSA Xerxes, astonished, desolate, alone- GHOST OF DARIUS How will this end? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Anchares where, whose high- raised shield Flamed foremost in the embattled field? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | And in the engagement seem''d we not secure Of victory? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | And was riot this the phrensy of the soul? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Ariomardus where, With ev''ry gentle virtue graced? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | But in what manner, tell me, did they perish? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | But tell me, if thou canst, where didst thou leave The ships that happily escaped the wreck? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | CHORUS Are all thy powers In ruin crush''d? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | CHORUS Is all thy glory lost? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | CHORUS The ruin, sayst thou, of thy shattered fleet? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | CHORUS Where are thy valiant friends, thy chieftains where? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | CHORUS Where is Pharnuchus? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | CHORUS Wherefore preserved? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Call to remembrance How many Persian dames, wedded in vain, Hath Athens of their noble husbands widow''d? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS A host so vast what march conducted o''er? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS And reach''d this shore in safety? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS By pestilence, or faction''s furious storms? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS By sea or land dared he this rash attempt? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS Fell all his host beneath the slaught''ring spear? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS How vain the succour, the defence of arms? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS Say, of my sons, which led the forces thither? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS What suffer''d they, for whom your sorrows flow? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | GHOST OF DARIUS Ye faithful Persians, honour''d now in age, Once the companions of my youth, what ills Afflict the state? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Hears the honour''d godlike king? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | How fight for them? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Is he safe? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Is this true? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Why this? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | LEADER What may thy words import? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Lilaeus, that from chiefs renown''d in war His high- descended lineage traced? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Pharnaces, Susas, and the might Of Pelagon, and Dotamas? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Psammis in mailed cuirass dress''d, And Susiscanes''glitt''ring crest? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Say then, with what new ill doth Persia groan? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | The spear Of Agabates bold in fight? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | These barbaric notes of wo, Taught in descant sad to ring, Hears he in the shades below? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | To what fair end are these thy words Directed? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | What leader must we wail? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | What rapid speed the impending fury fly? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | What sceptred chief Dying hath left his troops without a lord? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | What strong- based cities could his might withstand? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Where Cigdadatas and Lythimnas''force, Waving untired his purple spear? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Where rears Sebalces his crown- circled head: Where Tharybis to battles bred, Artembares, Hystaechmes bold, Memphis, Masistress sheath''d in gold? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Where the high leaders of thy mail- clad horse, Daixis and Arsaces where? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Who is not fallen? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Who led to the onset, tell me; the bold Greeks, Or, glorying in his numerous fleet, my son? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Who now falls prostrate at the monarch''s throne? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | Why thy ruin''d empire o''er Swells this double flood of wo? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | XERXES And this ill- furnish''d quiver? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | XERXES Seest thou these poor remains of my rent robes? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | could he chain the mighty Bosphorus? |
aeschylus-persians-1782 | shall not all the host of Persia pass Again from Europe o''er the Hellespont? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | ***** Is, then, the difference between the Just and the Expedient a merely imaginary distinction? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | As it involves the notion of desert, the question arises, what constitutes desert? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | But does the utilitarian doctrine deny that people desire virtue, or maintain that virtue is not a thing to be desired? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | But is this danger confined to the utilitarian morality? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | But is utility the only creed which is able to furnish us with excuses for evil doing, and means of cheating our own conscience? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | But this something, what is it, unless the happiness of others, or some of the requisites of happiness? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | Can an appeal be made to the same faculties on questions of practical ends? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | Does the belief that moral obligation has its seat outside the mind make the feeling of it too strong to be got rid of? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | He says to himself, I feel that I am bound not to rob or murder, betray or deceive; but why am I bound to promote the general happiness? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | How can the will to be virtuous, where it does not exist in sufficient force, be implanted or awakened? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | If my own happiness lies in something else, why may I not give that the preference? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | In a co- operative industrial association, is it just or not that talent or skill should give a title to superior remuneration? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | It is true, the question, What does violate the moral law? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | Or by what other faculty is cognizance taken of them? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | The art of music is good, for the reason, among others, that it produces pleasure; but what proof is it possible to give that pleasure is good? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | The medical art is proved to be good, by its conducing to health; but how is it possible to prove that health is good? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | The question is often asked, and properly so, in regard to any supposed moral standard-- What is its sanction? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | The question, Need I obey my conscience? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | What ought to be required of this doctrine-- what conditions is it requisite that the doctrine should fulfil-- to make good its claim to be believed? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | What, for example, shall we say of the love of money? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | Who shall decide between these appeals to conflicting principles of justice? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | a question which Mr. Carlyle clenches by the addition, What right, a short time ago, hadst thou even_ to be_? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | or more specifically, what is the source of its obligation? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | what are the motives to obey it? |
mill-utilitarianism-1885 | whence does it derive its binding force? |
herodotus-history-2537 | 18[{ kou ge de}:"where then would not a gulf be filled up?"] |
herodotus-history-2537 | 95 Shall we then allow him to sail out unharmed, or shall we first take away from him that which he brought with him?" |
herodotus-history-2537 | 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?" |
herodotus-history-2537 | And Croesus, marvelling at that which he said, asked him earnestly:"In what respect dost thou judge Tellos to be the most happy?" |
herodotus-history-2537 | And now with what face must I appear when I go to and from the market- place of the city? |
herodotus-history-2537 | And she said to him:"Now, therefore, what is it in thy mind to do?" |
herodotus-history-2537 | 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?" |
herodotus-history-2537 | And whom of men or women didst thou slay?" |
herodotus-history-2537 | 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? |
herodotus-history-2537 | But he cried aloud and said:"Master, what word of unwisdom is this which thou dost utter, bidding me look upon my mistress naked? |
herodotus-history-2537 | But this tale I do not admit as true, for how then did they pass over the river as they went back? |
herodotus-history-2537 | Dost thou carry away by force from my temple the suppliants for my protection?" |
herodotus-history-2537 | Finally, to sum up all in a single word, whence arose the liberty which we possess, and who gave it to us? |
herodotus-history-2537 | 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? |
herodotus-history-2537 | How then should it flow from snow, when it flows from the hottest parts to those which are cooler? |
herodotus-history-2537 | How, O thou senseless one, will the enemy surrender to us more quickly, because thou hast maltreated thyself? |
herodotus-history-2537 | 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? |
herodotus-history-2537 | In what manner, then, it will be asked, are they used up? |
herodotus-history-2537 | Now therefore, to what does it seem to you that these things tend?" |
herodotus-history-2537 | On the one hand, if thou shalt overcome them, what wilt thou take away from them, seeing they have nothing? |
herodotus-history-2537 | Was it a gift of the people or of an oligarchy or of a monarch? |
herodotus-history-2537 | 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? |
herodotus-history-2537 | Which of you, I say, will either bring Oroites alive to me or slay him? |
herodotus-history-2537 | With what kind of a husband will she think that she is mated? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ( Addressing ELECTRA) Whence came I hither? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | And why? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | But why need I repeat that hideous tale? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | CHORUS And where wert thou the while? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | CHORUS How is it with him? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | CHORUS Tell me, what end awaits his troubles? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | CHORUS What happened next? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | CHORUS What news, slave of Helen, creature from Ida? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | CHORUS What sayest thou? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | CHORUS Where were those Phrygians in the house to help her then? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | Did ye mark how she cut off her hair only at the ends, careful to preserve its beauty? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | Do ye not heed me, or mark the feathered shaft of my far- shooting bow ready to wing its flight? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | Dost see? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ELECTRA Art forbidden then to go to the tombs of those thou lovest? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ELECTRA Death, death; what else? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ELECTRA Prithee, Helen, why should I speak of that which thine own eyes can see the son of Agamemnon in his misery? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ELECTRA Then why not send thy daughter Hermione? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ELECTRA What is this supposed modesty before the eyes of Mycenae that possesses thee? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ELECTRA Wilt put thy feet upon the ground and take a step at last? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ELECTRA Wouldst have me seek my mother''s tomb? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | FIRST SEMI- CHORUS( chanting) What are we to do? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | For what new family am I henceforth to honour by preference other than that which sprung from a marriage divine, even from Tantalus? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | HELEN How long hath he been laid thus upon his couch? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | HELEN Prithee, maiden, wilt hear me a moment? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | HELEN Wilt go for me to my sister''s tomb? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | How is it I am here? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | How shall I escape alone, reft of brother, sire, and friends? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | Is it weal or woe I am to tell? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS A kingdom- where? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS After slaying Helen, art thou bent on adding another murder? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS And the man who honours his mother? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS Art thou not content with the stain of the mother''s blood which is on thee? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS Art thou too, Pylades, a partner in this bloody work? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS Dost thou deny having slain her, saying this out of wanton insult? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS Otherwise, will ye slay my child? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS Pray, is it just that thou shouldst live? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS What ails thee? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS When did thy fit begin? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | MENELAUS Who would speak to thee? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES And, pray, why not? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Art thou afraid of being turned to a stone, as if it were a Gorgon thou seest? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Did every Phrygian in Troy show the same terror of steel as thou dost? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Go to the Argives and persuade them- MENELAUS To what? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Hast news to tell? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES I suppose that shouting of thine was not for Menelaus to come to the rescue? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES On the day I was heaping the mound o''er my poor mother''s grave, MENELAUS When thou wast in the house, or watching by the pyre? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES The reason being thy refusal to help me then? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Thou fool dost think I could endure to plunge my sword in throat of thine, thou that neither art woman nor amongst men hast any place? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Was it a just fate that overtook the daughter of Tyndareus? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Well, art thou? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Where is he who fled from the palace to escape my sword? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | ORESTES Wouldst question me or hear me speak? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | PHRYGIAN Thou wilt not kill me after all? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | PHRYGIAN Why, surely she deserved it for the havoc she made of Hellas as well as Troy? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | Sister, why weepest thou, thy head wrapped in thy robe? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | What pity will be shown? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | With thee I am resolved to live and die; for''tis the same; if thou diest, what can I, a woman, do? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | Would God- MENELAUS Would God- what? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | Wouldst have me take thee in my arms and lift thy body? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | carry tidings to the town, or hold our peace? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | do ye linger still? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | fled long before in terror? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | for me? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | is he come to cast a ray of light upon our gloom, a man of our own kin who owes our sire a debt of gratitude? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | what can I do? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | what death''s- head greets my sight? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | what do I see? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | what is thy deadly sickness? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | what now? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | what succour can I find, seeing that we have Heaven''s forces set against us? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | which day was it? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | whither have leapt from off my couch? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | why am I raving, panting, gasping? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | wilt slay her? |
euripides-orestes-1679 | wilt thou destroy the home of thy ancestors? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And are we to expect that any one will get the mastery of Jove? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And didst thou chance to advance even beyond this? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And do the creatures of a day now possess bright fire? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And for what offenses art thou paying the penalty? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And has he no refuge from this misfortune? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And how is it that thou art not dismayed blurting out words such as these? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And how not so, I, who through Jupiter am suffering ill? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And how shall it be his good pleasure? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And is no period to thy toils set before thee? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | And yet what is it I am saying? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Ay, but in foresight along with boldness[27] what mischief is there that thou seest to be inherent? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | But why ask its nature? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | By finding what remedy for this malady? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Celestial or mortal? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Come, my friend, own how boonless was the boon; say where is any aid? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Does not then the sovereign of the gods seem to you to be violent alike toward all things? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Dreadest thou not this the rather? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | For in what point doth his fate fall short of insanity? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | From whence utterest thou the name of my father? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Have I not known two monarchs[78] dethroned from it? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Hearest thou the address of the ox- horned maiden? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | How is it that thou urgest me to practice baseness? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | How sayest thou? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | How, when will it be thy destiny to make the haven and see the end of these thy sufferings? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | How, where must a termination of these toils arise? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | I grant it-- but how is it possible to disobey the Sire''s word? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | In what manner? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | In what will mortals be able to alleviate these agonies of thine? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | In what, in what, O son of Saturn, hast thou, having found me transgressing, shackled me in these pangs? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Is Jupiter then less powerful than these? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Is it by a consort that he is to be ejected from his throne? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Is it indeed on charges such as these that Jupiter is both visiting thee with indignities, and in no wise grants thee a respite from thy pains? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Is it that you may contemplate my misfortunes, and as sympathizing with my woes that thou hast come? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Knowest thou not this then, Prometheus, that words are the physicians of a distempered feeling? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | O thou that didst dawn a common benefit upon mortals, wretched Prometheus, as penance for what offense art thou thus suffering? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Of what trespass is the retribution destroying thee? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | ST. Again thou art hanging back, and sighest thou over the enemies of Jupiter? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Sawest thou not the powerless weakness, nought better than a dream, in which the blind race of men is entangled? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Say who it was that bound thee fast in this cleft? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Seem I to thee in aught to be dismayed at, and to crouch beneath the new gods? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Seest thou not that thou didst err? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Shall child of mine release thee from thy ills? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Thou too in thy turn[57] art crying out and moaning: what wilt thou do then, when thou learnest the residue of thy ills? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | What dost thou impute to me also any blame for thy mischances? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | What gain then is it for me to live? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | What hope is there? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | What relief can come from the creatures of a day? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | What with him who hath lately seated himself on the throne that ruleth over all? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Who is there that sympathizes not with thy sufferings, Jove excepted? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Who of the gods is so hard- hearted as that these things should be grateful to him? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Who then is the pilot of necessity? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Who, then, is he that shall liberate thee in despite of Jupiter? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Why art thou delaying and vainly commiserating? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Why at what should I be terrified to whom it is not destined to die? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Why loathest thou not the god that is most hateful to the gods, who has betrayed thy prerogative to mortals? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Why then delayest thou to utter the whole? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Why, art thou not a boy, and yet sillier than one, if thou lookest to obtain any information from me? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Why, what is doomed for Jupiter but to reign for evermore? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | Wilt thou not then accord to me this boon? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | [ 12] ST. Wilt thou not then bestir thyself to cast fetters about this wretch, that the Sire may not espy thee loitering? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | [ 33] And yet who but myself defined completely the prerogative for these same new gods? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | [ 45] What land is this? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | [ 81] What doth it abate from ravings? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | and hast thou too come to be a witness of my pangs? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | but why did I not quickly fling myself from this rough precipice, that dashing on the plain I had rid myself of all my pangs? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | hast thou aught of suffering left to tell to her? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | is it possible that Jupiter should ever fall from his power? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | knowest thou not exactly, extremely intelligent as thou art, that punishment is inflicted on a froward tongue? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | that endure woes such as mine? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | what can this hasty motion of birds be which I again hear hard by me? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | what means this? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | what race? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | what sound, what ineffable odor[17] hath been wafted to me, emanating from a god, or from mortal, or of some intermediate nature? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | whither do my far- roaming wanderings convey me? |
aeschylus-prometheus-2549 | whom shall I say I here behold storm- tossed in rocky fetters? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | And what shall be done to inhibit the multitudes that frequent those houses where drunkenness is sold and harboured? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | And who shall silence all the airs and madrigals that whisper softness in chambers? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | And who shall then stick closest to ye, and excite others? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | As therefore the state of man now is; what wisdom can there be to choose, what continence to forbear without the knowledge of evil? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | But certain, if execution be remiss or blindfold now, and in this particular, what will it be hereafter and in other books? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | But some will say, what though the inventors were bad, the thing for all that may be good? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | For who knows not that Truth is strong, next to the Almighty? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | I know nothing of the licenser, but that I have his own hand here for his arrogance; who shall warrant me his judgment? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | Lastly, who shall forbid and separate all idle resort, all evil company? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | Let her and Falsehood grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse, in a free and open encounter? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | Next, what more national corruption, for which England hears ill abroad, than household gluttony: who shall be the rectors of our daily rioting? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | What but a vain shadow else is the abolition of those ordinances, that hand- writing nailed to the cross? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | What could a man require more from a nation so pliant and so prone to seek after knowledge? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | What else is all that rank of things indifferent, wherein Truth may be on this side or on the other, without being unlike herself? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | What great purchase is this Christian liberty which Paul so often boasts of? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | What need they torture their heads with that which others have taken so strictly and so unalterably into their own purveying? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | What should he do? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | What would ye do then? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | Wherefore did he create passions within us, pleasures round about us, but that these rightly tempered are the very ingredients of virtue? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | Who shall regulate all the mixed conversation of our youth, male and female together, as is the fashion of this country? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | Who shall still appoint what shall be discoursed, what presumed, and no further? |
milton-areopagitica-1852 | should ye suppress all this flowery crop of knowledge and new light sprung up and yet springing daily in this city? |
aristotle-on-3624 | ''what is the cause of the unbroken continuity of coming- to- be? |
aristotle-on-3624 | ( For how can the quality be continuous except in virtue of the continuity of the thing to which it belongs? |
aristotle-on-3624 | A magnitude? |
aristotle-on-3624 | And again, if the primary''reals''are indivisible magnitudes, are these bodies, as Democritus and Leucippus maintain? |
aristotle-on-3624 | And again, is the matter of each different? |
aristotle-on-3624 | And are they motionless or moving? |
aristotle-on-3624 | And how is that possible? |
aristotle-on-3624 | And since this description may be understood in two different ways, in which of these two ways are we to apply it to the process of growth? |
aristotle-on-3624 | And, further, does''combination''exist in fact, or is it false to assert its existence? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Are we to regard the One as his''original real''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Are we to say''Bone comes- to- be if the"elements"be put together in such- and such a manner''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | But how are we to conceive the''sphere''of the change which is growth and diminution? |
aristotle-on-3624 | But what about that which''is''not except with a qualification? |
aristotle-on-3624 | But why should indivisibility as such be the property of small, rather than of large, bodies? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Fire and Earth, and the bodies co- ordinate with these? |
aristotle-on-3624 | For even if we suppose there is some quality, yet how is the wood dissolved into such constituents and how does it come- to- be out of them? |
aristotle-on-3624 | For how will that differ from having no pores at all? |
aristotle-on-3624 | For in what sense is that section divisible? |
aristotle-on-3624 | For up to what limit is it divisible? |
aristotle-on-3624 | For( a) how is the manner of their coming- to- be to be conceived by those who maintain a theory like that of Empedocles? |
aristotle-on-3624 | For( i) if all of them are uniform in substance, what is it that separated one from another? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Hence our first question is this: Do these changes differ from one another solely because of a difference in their respective''spheres''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | How are the soul''s''alterations''to take Place? |
aristotle-on-3624 | How, on their theory, are flesh and bones or any of the other compounds to result from the''elements''taken together? |
aristotle-on-3624 | How, then, do such things come to- be? |
aristotle-on-3624 | If foundations have come- to- be, must a house come- to- be? |
aristotle-on-3624 | In what manner does anything other than, and beside, the''elements''come- to- be out of them? |
aristotle-on-3624 | In what way, then, has the food been modified by the growing thing? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Is it because the passing- away of this is a coming- to- be of something else, and the coming- to- be of this a passing- away of something else? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Is it not rather the''such'', the''so great'', or the''somewhere'', which comes- to- be? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Is it that to which something is added? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Is the matter, out of which growth takes place,( i)''separate''and existing alone by itself, or( ii)''separate''but contained in another body? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Is this, then, the movement that Love sets going? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Moreover, how can their account of''vision through a medium''be correct? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Moreover, where will the points be? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Nevertheless, even so the question remains: What sorts of contrarieties, and how many of them, are to be accounted''originative sources''of body? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Of what things, and under what conditions, is''combination''a property? |
aristotle-on-3624 | On the other hand( ii) if they fall into differing sets, how are these characterized? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Or are they planes, as is asserted in the Timaeus? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Or how are such constituents separated so as to exist apart from one another? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Or is no magnitude indivisible?'' |
aristotle-on-3624 | Or, on the contrary, does what is''include Earth as well as Fire, whereas what is not''is matter- the matter of Earth and Fire alike? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Or, on the contrary, is it absolutely necessary for some of them to come- to- be? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Then are all the things that come- to- be of this contingent character? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Then why have not both''grown''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Then will any predicate belonging to the remaining Categories attach actually to this presupposed substance? |
aristotle-on-3624 | V. Again, what is it which sets them moving? |
aristotle-on-3624 | We must inquire: What is''combination'', and what is that which can''combine''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | What causes their motion? |
aristotle-on-3624 | What is the cause of the perpetuity of coming- to- be? |
aristotle-on-3624 | What is''that which grows''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | What will there be in the body which escapes the division? |
aristotle-on-3624 | What, then, is the cause of this proportional consilience? |
aristotle-on-3624 | What, then, is the''first mover''of the''elements''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | What, then, is there in the wood besides the division? |
aristotle-on-3624 | What, then, will remain? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Why is there always unqualified, as well as partial, coming- to- be? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Why, indeed, should either of them tend to act any more than the other? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Why, on the contrary, does this coming- to- be seem to constitute a rectilinear sequence? |
aristotle-on-3624 | Why, then, is this form of change necessarily ceaseless? |
aristotle-on-3624 | a plenum, and part divided? |
aristotle-on-3624 | any determinate size or quality or position? |
aristotle-on-3624 | contraries out of contraries? |
aristotle-on-3624 | impossible that they should fail to be able to occur? |
aristotle-on-3624 | is the change from being musical to being unmusical, or how is memory or forgetting, to occur? |
aristotle-on-3624 | not the food? |
aristotle-on-3624 | some of them, in their aggregated bulk, were''fiery'', others earthy''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | that foundations must have come- to- be if there is to be a house: clay, if there are to be foundations), is the converse also true? |
aristotle-on-3624 | the light) a''being''? |
aristotle-on-3624 | the place or the quality) is continuous? |
darwin-descent-1852 | ''Why do the women wear these things?'' |
darwin-descent-1852 | ), passes over sexual selection, and asks,"What explanation does the law of natural selection give of such specific varieties as these?" |
darwin-descent-1852 | ); Erithacus(? |
darwin-descent-1852 | ; but who can say at what age this occurs in our young children? |
darwin-descent-1852 | A friend of his asked one of these men,"How is it that every one whom I meet is so fine looking, not only your men but your women?" |
darwin-descent-1852 | Are partridges, as they are now coloured, better protected than if they had resembled quails? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Are we not justified in believing that the female exerts a choice, and that she receives the addresses of the male who pleases her most? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Are we to suppose that these black marks and the crimson colour of the eyes have been preserved or augmented through sexual selection in the males? |
darwin-descent-1852 | At what age does the new- born infant possess the power of abstraction, or become self- conscious, and reflect on its own existence? |
darwin-descent-1852 | But can this be so confidently said of sexual selection? |
darwin-descent-1852 | But what are we to conclude with respect to certain birds in which, for instance, the eyes differ slightly in colour in the two sexes? |
darwin-descent-1852 | But what are we to say about the rudimentary and variable vertebrae of the terminal portion of the tail, forming the os coccyx? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Can it be believed that they would thus act to no purpose during their courtship? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Do the races or species of men, whichever term may be applied, encroach on and replace one another, so that some finally become extinct? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Does the male parade his charms with so much pomp and rivalry for no purpose? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Foetus of an Orang(?). |
darwin-descent-1852 | How are such races distributed over the world; and how, when crossed, do they react on each other in the first and succeeding generations? |
darwin-descent-1852 | How is it that there are birds enough ready to replace immediately a lost mate of either sex? |
darwin-descent-1852 | How often do we see birds which fly easily, gliding and sailing through the air obviously for pleasure? |
darwin-descent-1852 | How then are we to account for male mammals possessing mammae? |
darwin-descent-1852 | How, then, are we to account for the beautiful or even gorgeous colours of many animals in the lowest classes? |
darwin-descent-1852 | It may well be asked, could such artistically shaded ornaments have been formed by means of sexual selection? |
darwin-descent-1852 | It would be no advantage and some loss of power if each sex searched for the other; but why should the male almost always be the seeker? |
darwin-descent-1852 | May we then infer that man became divested of hair from having aboriginally inhabited some tropical land? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Must we attribute all these appendages of hair or skin to mere purposeless variability in the male? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Now do not these actions clearly shew that she had in her mind a general idea or concept that some animal is to be discovered and hunted? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Now, what is the difference between such actions, when performed by an uncultivated man, and by one of the higher animals? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Now, what must we conclude with respect to such sexual differences as these? |
darwin-descent-1852 | On the eastern coast, the negro boys when they saw Burton, cried out,"Look at the white man; does he not look like a white ape?" |
darwin-descent-1852 | On the west coast of Africa the little black- weavers( Ploceus?) |
darwin-descent-1852 | Or are we to suppose that the females of these several species especially require spurs for their defence? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Or does she exert a choice, and prefer certain males? |
darwin-descent-1852 | We are naturally led to enquire, where was the birthplace of man at that stage of descent when our progenitors diverged from the Catarrhine stock? |
darwin-descent-1852 | What ancient nation, as the same author asks, can be named that was originally monogamous? |
darwin-descent-1852 | What is this but energy and perseverance?) |
darwin-descent-1852 | What kind of a person would she be without the pelele? |
darwin-descent-1852 | What then are we to conclude from these facts and considerations? |
darwin-descent-1852 | What, then, are we to conclude in regard to the many fishes, both sexes of which are splendidly coloured? |
darwin-descent-1852 | When I say to my terrier, in an eager voice( and I have made the trial many times),"Hi, hi, where is it?" |
darwin-descent-1852 | Who can doubt that the refusal to fight a duel through fear has caused many men an agony of shame? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Why do not such spare birds immediately pair together? |
darwin-descent-1852 | Why should a man feel that he ought to obey one instinctive desire rather than another? |
darwin-descent-1852 | or why does he regret having stolen food from hunger? |
darwin-descent-1852 | who after asking, does man originate in a different way from a dog, bird, frog or fish? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | '', and then again,''Well, but is not he Coriscus?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''-as follows,''Is the answer"No"in one sense, but"Yes"in another?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''; and to secure that''A number multiplied by a large number is a large number'', ask''Should one agree that it is a large number or a small one?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''And is A a child?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Are the units in four equal to the twos? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Can the same man at the same time both obey and disobey the same man?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Could a man give what he has not got? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Do you know this?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Do you know what I am going to ask you? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Does a man who knows A to be A, know the thing called A?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Does the earth consist of sea, or the sky?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''If something be in writing did some one write it?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is A yours?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is health, or political power, a good thing?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is it just that each should have his own?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is it true to say that this object is what you call it by name?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is ou katalueis a house?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is that which the prudent man would not wish, an evil?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is the just preferable to the unjust, and what takes place justly to what takes place unjustly? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is the product of a small number with a small number a small number?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is the statue your work of art?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Is then ou katalueis the negation of katalueis?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Neither, but both behind;''and''Is the North wind clear?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''Ought one to obey the wise or one''s father?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''The man got the cart down from the stand''; and''Where are you bound?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''To the yard arm''; and''Which cow will calve afore?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''What is this?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | ''When you have understanding of anything, do you understand it?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Again,''Could you do what you can, and as you can?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Again,''Is any mode of passivity a mode of activity?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Again,''Is it true to say in the present moment that you are born?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Again,''Is what a learner learns what he learns?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Again,''Things the knowledge of which is good, are good things to learn, are n''t they?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | All arguments of the following kind have this feature:''Is it possible for what is- not to be? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Also''desire is of the pleasant, is n''t it?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Also, in cases which contain the ambiguity in their premisses, one should reply in like manner:''Do people- then not understand what they know? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Also, should one decide in favour of him who says what is unjust?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Also,''Does a man tread upon what he walks through? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Also,''Is it either by learning or by discovery that a man knows what he knows?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Also,''Is the knowledge of contraries one or not? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | But observe; man belongs to the animal kingdom, does n''t he?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | But, to return to the point whence our argument digressed, are mathematical reasonings directed against the thought, or not? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Does a man know either by learning or by discovery each thing that he knows, singly? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | For example,''Is what belongs to Athenians the property of Athenians?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | For this is exactly as though he had asked''Are Coriscus and Callias at home or not at home? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | For this reason, also, no solecism is incurred, suppose any one asks,''Is a thing what you say it to be?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | For what is the difference between asking''Are Callias and Themistocles musical?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | For what is there to prevent the same thing also happening to us in cases where there is no double meaning? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | If, however, the ambiguity escapes one, one should correct it at the end by making an addition to the question:''Is speaking of the silent possible?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | If, then, any one were to ask,''Is a stone him whom you truly call him?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Is a thing four cubits long greater than a thing three cubits long?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Is he a Good enough- King?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Is health, or wealth, a good thing?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Is it possible for the same man at the same time to be a keeper and a breaker of his oath?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | It is therefore just as if he had asked''Could a man give what he has not got?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Likewise also in the case of''Coriscus''and''Coriscus the musician''there is the problem, Are they the same or different?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | No: rather''this''has not the same meaning in''Do you know this?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Now suppose some one were to ask,''Can"he"be a she"( a female)? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Or again, where part is good and part bad,''is the whole good or bad?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Or how else ought he to put his question except by suggesting a distinction- suppose one''s question to be speaking of the silent possible or not? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Or is n''t it the case that being something in particular and Being are not the same? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Solecism is the result aimed at in all arguments of the following kind:''Is a thing truly that which you truly call it?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Thus''Is A and is B a man?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | To counter those who demand''Against what are you directing your effort? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | Well, nor did the simple name in the former case: so where is the difference? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | and in the same way,''is one who is ignorant that A is A ignorant of the thing called A?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | and what one might have asked if they, being different, had had one name? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | and''Did you see him being beaten with that with which he was being beaten?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | and''Is it preferable to suffer injustice or to do an injury?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | and''Ought one to do what is expedient or what is just?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | he would be generally thought not to be speaking good Greek, any more than if he were to ask,''Is he what you call her?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | if a thing is half white and half black, is it white or black? |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | in the following argument:''Is it possible to be doing and to have done the same thing at the same time?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | or''Is the dog your father?'' |
aristotle-sophistical-3310 | you know the man who is approaching'', or''the man in the mask''? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | '', and when we have learnt that there is, our next question is,''What, then, is this cause? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | '', or''does the moon wax? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | ''; and when we find that it is commensurate, we ask''What, then, is their ratio?''. |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | ''Are the high and the low note concordant?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | ''But'', it will be asked,''does this attribute belong to the subject of which it has been demonstrated qua triangle or qua isosceles? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | ''Is every circle a figure?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | ''The quenching of fire in cloud'', and( 2)''Why does it thunder?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | ''Then what is the first?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | ( c)''Why did the Athenians become involved in the Persian war?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | 17 Can the cause of an identical effect be not identical in every instance of the effect but different? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | 7 How then by definition shall we prove substance or essential nature? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | A commensurate numerical ratio of a high and a low note'', we may substitute''What ratio makes a high and a low note concordant? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | A diagram shows that this is so, but the minor premiss''Are epics circles?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | A man is asked,''Do you, or do you not, know that every pair is even?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | A third question is, if the extreme terms are fixed, can there be an infinity of middles? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Again, for''What is a concord? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | And if any one chooses to maintain that all that he knows he can also opine, why should not opinion be knowledge? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | But further, if definition can prove what is the essential nature of a thing, can it also prove that it exists? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | But if the definable and the demonstrable are not wholly the same, may they yet be partially the same? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | But what of cases where they are not simultaneous? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Can everything definable be demonstrated, or not? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | For example, the question''Why does not a wall breathe?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | For example: Why does the Nile rise towards the end of the month? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | For in all these examples it is clear that the nature of the thing and the reason of the fact are identical: the question''What is eclipse?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | For why should not the whole of this formula be true of man, and yet not exhibit his essential nature or definable form? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | I mean how can there fail to be some special cause of A''s inherence in E, as there was of A''s inherence in all the species of D? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | If on the other hand we acquire them and do not previously possess them, how could we apprehend and learn without a basis of pre- existent knowledge? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | In what sense, then, can the same thing be the object of both opinion and knowledge? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | On the other hand, can a single effect have more than one cause? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | On the other hand, when we have ascertained the thing''s existence, we inquire as to its nature, asking, for instance,''what, then, is God?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Or do ultimate subject and primary attribute limit one another? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Or is that impossible, because there can be no demonstration of the definable? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Or is that impossible? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Or is the truth that, since proof must be through the middle term, the definable form is once more assumed in this minor premiss too? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Since there are''geometrical''questions, does it follow that there are also distinctively''ungeometrical''questions? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | The definer asks''Is man animal or inanimate?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | The first question is, must this series terminate, or can it proceed to infinity? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | The second is the problem whether one can start from that which is a predicate but not itself a subject of predicates, and descend to infinity? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Then are the species of E, too, united by possessing some common cause? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Thus to the question''What is the essential nature of man?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Thus,''Does the moon suffer eclipse?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Thus,( 1)''What is thunder?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Thus:''Why did he come?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | To put it another way: how shall we by definition prove essential nature? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Triangle? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | What is it, then, that we shall prove in defining essential nature? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | What then? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | What, then, is the cause through which A, the final cause, inheres in C? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | When, then, does our knowledge fail of commensurate universality, and when it is unqualified knowledge? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Why does a house exist? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Why is B the cause of A''s belonging to C? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Why is the angle in a semicircle a right angle?-or from what assumption does it follow that it is a right angle? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Why is the month more stormy towards its close? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Why, in other words, should this be the formula defining circle? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | Would not the result be the same if one asked any questions whatever and then merely stated one''s conclusion? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | is equivalent to''Is their ratio commensurate? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | is everything demonstrable? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | means''Is there or is there not a cause producing eclipse of the moon? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | means''What cause originated the waging of war against the Athenians?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | or''Why does the moon suffer eclipse?'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | or''what is man?''. |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | the divider replies''Animal, mortal, footed, biped, wingless''; and when at each step he is asked''Why? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | to what subject can it be demonstrated as belonging commensurately and universally?)'' |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | to which it belongs is primary? |
aristotle-posterior-2886 | why does one take a walk after supper? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Yea, but,saith Diagoras,"where are they painted that are drowned?" |
bacon-advancement-2670 | ? ta pa?t?? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | ? ta pa?t?? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | ? ta pa?t?? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | ?,? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | ?,? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | And in another place, Nunquid conjungere valebis micantes stellas Pleiadas, aut gyrum Arcturi poteris dissipare? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | And what followeth? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | And will you hearken to the Hebrew rabbins? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Answer, Blaesus, what is done with his body? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | As we see in the proceeding of Lucius Brutus against his own sons, which was so much extolled, yet what was said? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Did not one of the fathers in great indignation call poesy vinum daemonum, because it increaseth temptations, perturbations, and vain opinions? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Doth any give the reason why some things in nature are so common, and in so great mass, and others so rare, and in so small quantity? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For as Plato saith,"Whosoever seeketh, knoweth that which he seeketh for in a general notion; else how shall he know it when he hath found it?" |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For certainty there must be somewhat left to practice; but how much is worthy the inquiry? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For doth any of them, in handling quantity, speak of the force of union, how and how far it multiplieth virtue? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For example: Is not the rule, Si inoequalibus aequalia addas, omnia erunt inaequalia, an axiom as well of justice as of the mathematics? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For herein Ramus merited better a great deal in reviving the good rules of propositions--?a????? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For herein Ramus merited better a great deal in reviving the good rules of propositions--?a????? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For herein Ramus merited better a great deal in reviving the good rules of propositions--?a????? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For herein Ramus merited better a great deal in reviving the good rules of propositions--?a????? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For herein Ramus merited better a great deal in reviving the good rules of propositions--?a????? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | For who can take upon him to write of the proper duty, virtue, challenge, and right of every several vocation, profession, and place? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | In which error it seemeth Pompey was, of whom Cicero saith that he was wo nt often to say, Sylla potuit, ego non potero? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Is not the delight of the quavering upon a stop in music the same with the playing of light upon the water? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Is not the observation, Omnia mutantur, nil interit, a contemplation in philosophy thus, that the quantum of nature is eternal? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Is not the precept of a musician, to fall from a discord or harsh accord upon a concord or sweet accord, alike true in affection? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Is not the trope of music, to avoid or slide from the close or cadence, common with the trope of rhetoric of deceiving expectation? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Matter of generation: Annon sicut lac mulsisti me, et sicut caseum coagulasti me? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Not but that physic doth make inquiry and take consideration of the same natures; but how? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | The draughts and first laws of the game are positive, but how? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | The former extendeth to the mysteries themselves; but how? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | The one giveth rule how far one knowledge ought to intermeddle within the province of another, which is the rule they call? a?a?t? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | The one giveth rule how far one knowledge ought to intermeddle within the province of another, which is the rule they call? a?a?t? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | The other sort into the error of the disciples, which were scandalised at a show of contradiction, Quid est hoc quod dicit nobis? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Vidisti virum velocem in opere suo? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Was not the Persian magic a reduction or correspondence of the principles and architectures of nature to the rules and policy of governments? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | We see Moses when he saw the Israelite and the Egyptian fight, he did not say,"Why strive you?" |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Who taught the ant to bite every grain of corn that she burieth in her hill, lest it should take root and grow? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Who taught the bee to sail through such a vast sea or air, and to find the way from a field in a flower a great way off to her hive? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Who taught the raven in a drought to throw pebbles into a hollow tree, where she spied water, that the water might rise so as she might come to it? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | Why in all diversities of things there should be certain participles in nature which are almost ambiguous to which kind they should be referred? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | and is there not a true coincidence between commutative and distributive justice, and arithmetical and geometrical proportion? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | and must not of consequence the pleasures of the intellect or understanding exceed the pleasures of the affections? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | but drew his sword and slew the Egyptian; but when he saw the two Israelites fight, he said,"You are brethren, why strive you?" |
bacon-advancement-2670 | in natural theology thus, that it requireth the same omnipotency to make somewhat nothing, which at the first made nothing somewhat? |
bacon-advancement-2670 | or,"Did you ever hear the like?" |
bacon-advancement-2670 | p??t? |
plato-seventh-1901 | Do you agree to this?" |
plato-seventh-1901 | Theodotes said,"Plato, you were present yesterday during the promises made by Dionysios to me and to you about Heracleides?" |
plato-seventh-1901 | To reproaches of this kind what creditable reply could I have made? |
plato-seventh-1901 | What do I mean by saying that my arrival in Sicily at that movement proved to be the foundation on which all the sequel rests? |
plato-seventh-1901 | What were the facts about this attachment? |
mill-on-1350 | ( it may be asked) Is the absence of unanimity an indispensable condition of true knowledge? |
mill-on-1350 | * Would it be a legitimate exercise of the moral authority of public opinion? |
mill-on-1350 | A people, it appears, may be progressive for a certain length of time, and then stop: when does it stop? |
mill-on-1350 | As soon as mankind have unanimously accepted a truth, does the truth perish within them? |
mill-on-1350 | Because it may be used erroneously, are men to be told that they ought not to use it at all? |
mill-on-1350 | But what will be his comparative worth as a human being? |
mill-on-1350 | But where has there been seen a public which set any such limit to its censorship? |
mill-on-1350 | Do the fruits of conquest perish by the very completeness of the victory? |
mill-on-1350 | Fornication, for example, must be tolerated, and so must gambling; but should a person be free to be a pimp, or to keep a gambling- house? |
mill-on-1350 | How much of human life should be assigned to individuality, and how much to society? |
mill-on-1350 | How( it may be asked) can any part of the conduct of a member of society be a matter of indifference to the other members? |
mill-on-1350 | If there were nothing new to be done, would human intellect cease to be necessary? |
mill-on-1350 | In the case of any person whose judgment is really deserving of confidence, how has it become so? |
mill-on-1350 | Is it necessary that some part of mankind should persist in error to enable any to realise the truth? |
mill-on-1350 | Is the belief in a God one of the opinions to feel sure of which you hold to be assuming infallibility? |
mill-on-1350 | Not only in what concerns others, but in what concerns only themselves, the individual or the family do not ask themselves- what do I prefer? |
mill-on-1350 | Now is this, or is it not, the desirable condition of human nature? |
mill-on-1350 | Ought this to be interfered with, or not? |
mill-on-1350 | Ought we therefore to lay on no taxes, and, under whatever provocation, make no wars? |
mill-on-1350 | They ask themselves, what is suitable to my position? |
mill-on-1350 | They can not see what it is to do for them: how should they? |
mill-on-1350 | WHAT, THEN, is the rightful limit to the sovereignty of the individual over himself? |
mill-on-1350 | What are they now? |
mill-on-1350 | What do Protestants think of these perfectly sincere feelings, and of the attempt to enforce them against non- Catholics? |
mill-on-1350 | What has made the European family of nations an improving, instead of a stationary portion of mankind? |
mill-on-1350 | What is it that has hitherto preserved Europe from this lot? |
mill-on-1350 | Where does the authority of society begin? |
mill-on-1350 | Who, after this imbecile display, can indulge the illusion that religious persecution has passed away, never to return? |
mill-on-1350 | Why is it, then, that there is on the whole a preponderance among mankind of rational opinions and rational conduct? |
mill-on-1350 | Would it be a reason why those who do the old things should forget why they are done, and do them like cattle, not like human beings? |
mill-on-1350 | Would they not, with considerable peremptoriness, desire these intrusively pious members of society to mind their own business? |
mill-on-1350 | Yet who is there that is not afraid to recognise and assert this truth? |
mill-on-1350 | and if not, why not? |
mill-on-1350 | or how can the answer be known to be satisfactory, if the objectors have no opportunity of showing that it is unsatisfactory? |
mill-on-1350 | or what worse can be said of any obstruction to good than that it prevents this? |
mill-on-1350 | or when does the public trouble itself about universal experience? |
mill-on-1350 | or who can blame people for desiring to suppress what they regard as a scandal in the sight of God and man? |
mill-on-1350 | or( worse still) what is usually done by persons of a station and circumstances superior to mine? |
mill-on-1350 | or, what would allow the best and highest in me to have fair play, and enable it to grow and thrive? |
mill-on-1350 | or, what would suit my character and disposition? |
mill-on-1350 | what is usually done by persons of my station and pecuniary circumstances? |
locke-letter-3269 | Against his will, do you say? |
locke-letter-3269 | All men know and acknowledge that God ought to be publicly worshipped; why otherwise do they compel one another unto the public assemblies? |
locke-letter-3269 | And if he does it not in order to save them, why is he so solicitous about the articles of faith as to enact them by a law? |
locke-letter-3269 | And why is a dog so abominable? |
locke-letter-3269 | Because there is but one way for me to escape death, will it therefore be safe for me to do whatsoever the magistrate ordains? |
locke-letter-3269 | But What shall be done in the meanwhile? |
locke-letter-3269 | But if one of these churches hath this power of treating the other ill, I ask which of them it is to whom that power belongs, and by what right? |
locke-letter-3269 | But some may ask:"What if the magistrate should enjoin anything by his authority that appears unlawful to the conscience of a private person?" |
locke-letter-3269 | But what if he neglect the care of his soul? |
locke-letter-3269 | But what if the magistrate believe such a law as this to be for the public good? |
locke-letter-3269 | But what if the magistrate believe that he has a right to make such laws and that they are for the public good, and his subjects believe the contrary? |
locke-letter-3269 | But, it may be asked, by what means then shall ecclesiastical laws be established, if they must be thus destitute of all compulsive power? |
locke-letter-3269 | Can you allow of the Presbyterian discipline? |
locke-letter-3269 | Does it therefore belong unto the magistrate to prescribe me a remedy, because there is but one, and because it is unknown? |
locke-letter-3269 | For if it were so, how could it come to pass that the lords of the earth should differ so vastly as they do in religious matters? |
locke-letter-3269 | For if that had been the reason, why were the Moabites and other nations to be spared? |
locke-letter-3269 | For what hinders but a Christian magistrate may have subjects that are Jews? |
locke-letter-3269 | I answer: If this be so, why are there daily such numerous meetings in markets and Courts of Judicature? |
locke-letter-3269 | I answer: Is this the fault of the Christian religion? |
locke-letter-3269 | I answer: Why, I pray, against his will? |
locke-letter-3269 | If civil jurisdiction extend thus far, what might not lawfully be introduced into religion? |
locke-letter-3269 | If he should bid you follow merchandise for your livelihood, would you decline that course for fear it should not succeed? |
locke-letter-3269 | If we allow the Jews to have private houses and dwellings amongst us, why should we not allow them to have synagogues? |
locke-letter-3269 | Is it not both lawful and necessary that they should meet? |
locke-letter-3269 | Is it permitted to speak Latin in the market- place? |
locke-letter-3269 | Is it permitted to worship God in the Roman manner? |
locke-letter-3269 | It may be said:"What if a Church be idolatrous, is that also to be tolerated by the magistrate?" |
locke-letter-3269 | Nor, when an incensed Deity shall ask us,"Who has required these, or such- like things at your hands?" |
locke-letter-3269 | Of what Church, I beseech you? |
locke-letter-3269 | Or, shall everyone turn victualler, or smith, because there are some that maintain their families plentifully and grow rich in those professions? |
locke-letter-3269 | Or, to make these subjects rich, shall they all be obliged by law to become merchants or musicians? |
locke-letter-3269 | Shall it be provided by law that they must consult none but Roman physicians, and shall everyone be bound to live according to their prescriptions? |
locke-letter-3269 | Shall we suffer a Pagan to deal and trade with us, and shall we not suffer him to pray unto and worship God? |
locke-letter-3269 | These are allowed to people of some one persuasion; why not to all? |
locke-letter-3269 | What can be the meaning of their asserting that kings excommunicated forfeit their crowns and kingdoms? |
locke-letter-3269 | What difference is there whether he lead me himself, or deliver me over to be led by others? |
locke-letter-3269 | What else do they mean who teach that faith is not to be kept with heretics? |
locke-letter-3269 | What security can be given for the Kingdom of Heaven? |
locke-letter-3269 | What shall we conclude from thence? |
locke-letter-3269 | What, shall no potion, no broth, be taken, but what is prepared either in the Vatican, suppose, or in a Geneva shop? |
locke-letter-3269 | Who shall be judge between them? |
locke-letter-3269 | Why are assemblies less sufferable in a church than in a theatre or market? |
locke-letter-3269 | Why are crowds upon the Exchange and a concourse of people in cities suffered? |
locke-letter-3269 | Why not the sprinkling of the blood of beasts in churches, and expiations by water or fire, and abundance more of this kind? |
locke-letter-3269 | Why should not the Episcopal also have what they like? |
locke-letter-3269 | Will any man say that any right can be derived unto a Christian church over its brethren from a Turkish emperor? |
locke-letter-3269 | Will the magistrate provide by an express law that such a one shall not become poor or sick? |
locke-letter-3269 | You will say"What, will you have people to meet at divine service against the magistrate''s will?" |
locke-letter-3269 | You will say:"What then?" |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ''Tis not in quest of the yon king comes marching hither; what would Eurystheus gain by the death of one so old? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA And what if thou art slain? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA Art come, thou hateful wretch? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA Did Hyllus uphold this decision? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA How so? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA I know not what it means; who is this? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA Suppose he die, and yet I obey the city? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA Suppose they meet with some reverse? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA The old man Iolaus,-is he yet alive? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA What means that shout, that echoes throughout the house? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA What means this mad resolve to leave me with my children undefended here? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA Why then didst raise a cry, fear''s harbinger? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA Why, what is this? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | ALCMENA Why, why delay to kill this man, after hearing this, since this is needed to secure the safety of your city and your children? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Are they anxious, tell me, to obtain an audience of the state? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Are they coming, are they here, or what thy tidings? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Art thou the man- for this I fain would learn- who didst presume to heap thy insults on my son, who now is where he is, thou miscreant? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | But say, what law forbids his death? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | But there still remains one anxious thought thou dost not free me from;-a thought of fear;-are those, whose lives I cherish, spared to me? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | But why is he not here, where is he? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | CHORUS( chanting) From what land, old stranger, art thou come to this confederate state of four cities? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | CHORUS( chanting) What do they call thee, aged sir, those folk in Mycenae? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | CHORUS( chanting) What is their quest? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | CHORUS( chanting) Yea, I have heard of him in bygone days; but tell me, whose are the tender boys thou bearest in thine arms? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | COPREUS Not even if I have right upon my side and prove my case? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | COPREUS Who is monarch of this land and state? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | COPREUS Wilt give me the trouble of laying hands on thee? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Come now, put argument against argument: what will be thy gain, suppose thou admit them to thy land, or let us take them hence? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | DEMOPHON How can it be right to drag the suppliant away by force? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | DEMOPHON Why should this event have called for cries of pain? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Did he perform some deed of prowess? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Do they not approve of slaying enemies? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | For whom will they have fallen whom thou buriest? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Hast thou news of the enemy? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Hath justice caught thee then at last? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Hath there come yet a herald from Argos, O Iolaus, and is he treating thee with violence? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | How can such conduct count as honourable, at least in wise men''s judgment? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS About how many allies has he with him? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS About what distance is the Argive host from us? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS Best of friends, art thou come to save us twain from hurt? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS Dost not mark how swift my steps are hasting? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS Is then the host already armed for battle? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS My son, why, prithee, art thou returned with that anxious look? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS The leaders of the Athenians know this, I suppose? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS What is he about? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS Who art thou? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | IOLAUS Why, can not I smite even through their shields? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | LEADER Ah, what shall I say on hearing the maid''s brave words, she that is ready to die for her brothers? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Can it be that heaven forbids this city to help strangers, when it hath the will and longing so to do? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | LEADER That would be best of all; but how can this be? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | LEADER Who can decide a cause or ascertain its merits, till from both sides he clearly learn what they would say? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | LEADER Who threw thee down thus pitiably? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | MACARIA Are these indeed the terms on which our safety depends? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Of what domains art thou robbed that thou shouldst take and wage war with the Tirynthian Argives? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Or do ye claim that every exile from Argos is exiled from the bounds of Hellas? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | SERVANT Am I to lead this warrior like a child? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | SERVANT How shalt thou show thyself before the troops unarmed? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | SERVANT I am a vassal of Hyllus; dost not recognize me now? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | SERVANT What shall I see thee do? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | SERVANT What then wouldst thou learn of these events? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | SERVANT Why dost thou lie there? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Shall I not feel shame then, when someone says, as say they will,"Why are ye come hither with suppliant boughs, loving your lives too well? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Shall I wander as an exile from this land? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Suppose thyself hadst had my lot, wouldst not thou have set to harassing the lion''s angry whelps, instead of letting them dwell at Argos undisturbed? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Then cried he,"Captain, who art come from Argos, why can not we leave this land alone? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Thou that didst make him go down alive even to Hades, and wouldst send him with an order to slay hydras and lions? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | What cry is this that rises near the altar? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | What hath happened to keep him from coming hither with thee, to cheer my heart? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | What kind of allies art thou aiding? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | What outrage didst thou abstain from putting upon him? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | What pretext wilt thou urge? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Where among the brave is such conduct seen? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Where have I met thee? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Where is aged Iolaus? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Whither shall we turn? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Who can speak more noble words or do more noble deeds henceforth for ever? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Why that downcast look? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Why then came I hither, if I knew all this, instead of regarding the god''s oracle? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Why toil to no purpose? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | Why, cruel hope, didst thou then cheer my heart, though thou didst not mean to make the boon complete? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | am I not lord of this domain? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | for what god''s altar have we left uncrowned? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | marshalling the enemy''s line? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | or have ye left Euboea''s cliffs, and, with the oar that sweeps the sea, put in here from across the firth? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | to what fenced city have we failed to go? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | what safety shall I find? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | where the mother of your''sire, absent from their place at this altar? |
euripides-heracleidae-2033 | why take this trouble? |
aristotle-on-1912 | A part merely distinguishable by definition or a part distinct in local situation as well? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Again it might be asked, is mind a possible object of thought to itself? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Again, which ought we to investigate first, these parts or their functions, mind or thinking, the faculty or the act of sensation, and so on? |
aristotle-on-1912 | And if a part, a part in what sense? |
aristotle-on-1912 | And what is the mode of composition which constitutes each of them? |
aristotle-on-1912 | And yet, if there can be two, why can not there be an infinite number? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Because it were better so either for the body or for the soul? |
aristotle-on-1912 | But how can they have imagination? |
aristotle-on-1912 | But how is it possible for one of the units to fulfil this function of originating movement? |
aristotle-on-1912 | But smelling is more than such an affection by what is odorous- what more? |
aristotle-on-1912 | But, if this is so, how or in virtue of what cause can it know? |
aristotle-on-1912 | By what agency? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Can they have imagination or not? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Does it depend on one of the parts of soul? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Does the soul consist of all of these or not? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Further, does soul belong to the class of potential existents, or is it not rather an actuality? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Further, how could what has no parts think what has parts, or what has parts think what has none? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Further, how is it possible for these points to be isolated or separated from their bodies, seeing that lines can not be resolved into points? |
aristotle-on-1912 | How we to imagine a unit being moved? |
aristotle-on-1912 | How, indeed, if it were a spatial magnitude, could mind possibly think? |
aristotle-on-1912 | If it has parts, once more the question must be put: What holds its parts together, and so ad infinitum? |
aristotle-on-1912 | If it is a part, is that part different from those usually distinguished or already mentioned by us, or is it one of them? |
aristotle-on-1912 | If it is one, why not at once admit that''the soul''is one? |
aristotle-on-1912 | If the circular movement is eternal, there must be something which mind is always thinking- what can this be? |
aristotle-on-1912 | If this is so, how are we to characterize the other two? |
aristotle-on-1912 | If, then, its nature admits of its being divided, what can it be that holds the parts together? |
aristotle-on-1912 | In what will the primary concepts differ from images? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Is each of these a soul or a part of a soul? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Is it a single part of the soul separate either spatially or in definition? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Is it not rather the one who combines both in a single formula? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Is it the case then that what discriminates, though both numerically one and indivisible, is at the same time divided in its being? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Is love the cause of any and every mixture, or only of those that are in the right ratio? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Is love this ratio itself, or is love something over and above this? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Is not the answer''it is both, but each in a different way''? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Is the soul formed out of those elements alone which enter into substances? |
aristotle-on-1912 | It is also a problem, what is the organ of touch; is it or is it not the flesh( including what in certain animals is homologous with flesh)? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Must not we say that, as their movements are indefinite, they have imagination and desire, but indefinitely? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Must we not say that neither these nor even our other concepts are images, though they necessarily involve them? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Must we not, then, admit that the objects of the other senses also may affect them? |
aristotle-on-1912 | On the other hand, if contact with the whole circle is necessary, what meaning can be given to the contact of the parts? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Or has it some quite other cause? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Or is it dependent on more than one? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Or is it the soul as a whole? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Or on all? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Since we also discriminate white from sweet, and indeed each sensible quality from every other, with what do we perceive that they are different? |
aristotle-on-1912 | The impossibility of this needs no pointing out; for who would suggest that stone or man could enter into the constitution of the soul? |
aristotle-on-1912 | The one who confines himself to the material, or the one who restricts himself to the formulable essence alone? |
aristotle-on-1912 | The problem might also be raised, What is that which unifies the elements into a soul? |
aristotle-on-1912 | The problem might be raised: Can what can not smell be said to be affected by smells or what can not see by colours, and so on? |
aristotle-on-1912 | The question might also be raised about the parts of the soul: What is the separate role of each in relation to the body? |
aristotle-on-1912 | What difference does it make whether we speak of small spheres or of large units, or, quite simply, of units in movement? |
aristotle-on-1912 | What is squaring? |
aristotle-on-1912 | What is the soul of plant, animal, man? |
aristotle-on-1912 | What sort of movement can be attributed to what is without parts or internal differences? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Which is it that''sounds'', the striking body or the struck? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Which, then, among these is entitled to be regarded as the genuine physicist? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Why should it not have sensation? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Will it be said that each kind of thing has elements or principles of its own, and that the soul is formed out of the whole of these? |
aristotle-on-1912 | Will it think with any one indifferently of its parts? |
aristotle-on-1912 | altered in quality? |
aristotle-on-1912 | is not this impossible? |
aristotle-on-1912 | movement, magnitude, and number, which go along with the special sensibles? |
aristotle-on-1912 | of sense or thought? |
aristotle-on-1912 | or desire? |
aristotle-on-1912 | so how will it be able to know each of the other kinds of thing? |
aristotle-on-1912 | taste and touch requiring contact( as they are commonly thought to do), while all other senses perceive over a distance? |
aristotle-on-1912 | the question''What is it? |
aristotle-on-1912 | what God, man, flesh, bone( or any other compound) is? |
aristotle-on-1912 | white and black?). |
cervantes-don-2011 | And the nose? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Are you not the daughter of the rich Clenardo? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Do you not hear the neighing of the steeds, the braying of the trumpets, the roll of the drums? |
cervantes-don-2011 | If I were to show her to you,he replied,"what merit would you have in confessing a truth so manifest? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Is thy Teresa so bad then, Sancho? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Sancho,said he,"all that is true; but what art thou driving at?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | She died, no doubt? |
cervantes-don-2011 | So then there_ is_ a history of me-- and written by a Moor and a sage? |
cervantes-don-2011 | The author looks for money and profit, does he? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Then this is an inn? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What giants? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What has mauling my face got to with the resurrection of this damsel? cervantes-don-2011 Where hast thou ever heard of castles and royal palaces being built in alleys?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | Where is he breaking out? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Why, how so? |
cervantes-don-2011 | And as to his son, he should, of course, as was the custom, follow his father''s trade; so what was he to do but be a ruler? |
cervantes-don-2011 | And then his lord and master asked:"Didst thou not mistake the surname of this''Cid,''which means in Arabic''lord,''Sancho?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | And why should he have wanted to rob her of them? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Are you mad? |
cervantes-don-2011 | As he was standing there, along came two men; and one of them was heard to say:"Is not that Sancho Panza?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | But look here, Sancho: when wilt thou begin the scourging? |
cervantes-don-2011 | But what have the Panzas to do with the Quixotes? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Did not the enchanter know that it cost money to shave? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Do you fancy, then, Don Vanquished, Don Cudgeled, that I died for_ your_ sake? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Do you think I do not know you? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Do you want to drown yourselves, or dash yourselves to pieces among these wheels?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | Dost thou revolt against thy master and natural lord? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Dost thou rise against him who gives thee his bread?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | For not loving him? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Had he not promised them to refer the Biscayan''s punishment to the court of his Dulcinea? |
cervantes-don-2011 | He called out to the driver and a man on mule- back, who were the only attendants:"Whither are you going, brothers? |
cervantes-don-2011 | He had never heard that there were people living in the air, and did he not hear voices quite close to his ears? |
cervantes-don-2011 | How could he possibly establish a precedent now? |
cervantes-don-2011 | How could his master expect him to sit on a hard wooden horse while he was all bruised and sore from the lashes? |
cervantes-don-2011 | How could they be Catholics when they were devils, made of no substance whatever, nothing but air? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Is it possible that such an honorable company can say that this is not a basin but a helmet? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Sancho was frantic, and cried after him:"Where are you going, Señor Don Quixote? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Scarcely had Sancho spoken these words, when Rocinante commenced to neigh; and how could this be interpreted to be anything else than a good omen? |
cervantes-don-2011 | She threw her arms around Dorothea and cried:"Why, oh, why did you wake me, dear lady? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Should she have forced herself to give that up because any man chose to say,"I love you,"while she did not love him? |
cervantes-don-2011 | The men were all the time crying out, unable to fathom such dare- deviltry or folly:"Devils of men, where are you going to? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Then why do they want me to believe that he is enchanted? |
cervantes-don-2011 | This his master thought only natural; for when had the world ever given full recognition to a genius or a great hero until after he was dead? |
cervantes-don-2011 | This impertinence was rewarded by the knight''s demanding of him:"Well, how long is it, Sancho, since I promised thee an island?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | To the music of brays what harmonies couldst thou expect to get but cudgels?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | Was that not the great mission he had undertaken in the world-- to revive the spirit of chivalry? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What can those wretches have done to be whipped in that way; and how does that one man who goes along there whistling dare to whip so many? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What cart is this? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What could this be except a plot of scheming magicians to steal away some princess? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What devils have possessed you to set you against our Catholic faith? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What does this mean? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What father or mother will pity her? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What flags are those?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | What have you got in it? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What more need one know to be inclined to think he might be mischievous? |
cervantes-don-2011 | What palace am I to lead to, when what I saw Her Highness in was only a very little house?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | What would the princess care, if he_ were_ a water- carrier''s son? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Where hast thou learned that it is well done to mention the rope in the house of the man that has been hanged? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Who could? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Who will help her? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Will my squire Sancho''s whipping be accomplished without fail? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Will the disenchantment of Dulcinea be brought about?" |
cervantes-don-2011 | Would not that have been to pawn her modesty and her womanly honor and virtue? |
cervantes-don-2011 | Yet he decided not to trouble too much about that; for were there not two kinds of lineages in the world? |
cervantes-don-2011 | asked Don Quixote;"hast thou come upon aught?" |
locke-concerning-3152 | And is it not rather their fault who put things in such a posture that they would not have them thought as they are? |
locke-concerning-3152 | And what will become of this paternal power in that part of the world where one woman hath more than one husband at a time? |
locke-concerning-3152 | And where else could this be so well placed as in his hands who was entrusted with the execution of the laws for the same end? |
locke-concerning-3152 | And will any one say he had no right to those acorns or apples he thus appropriated because he had not the consent of all mankind to make them his? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Are the people to be blamed if they have the sense of rational creatures, and can think of things no otherwise than as they find and feel them? |
locke-concerning-3152 | But how far has He given it us-"to enjoy"? |
locke-concerning-3152 | But, farther, this question, Who shall be judge? |
locke-concerning-3152 | By the same reason may a man in the state of Nature punish the lesser breaches of that law, it will, perhaps, be demanded, with death? |
locke-concerning-3152 | For of such things, who can tell what the end will be? |
locke-concerning-3152 | For what appearance would there be of any compact? |
locke-concerning-3152 | For what compact can be made with a man that is not master of his own life? |
locke-concerning-3152 | For what property have I in that which another may by right take when he pleases to himself? |
locke-concerning-3152 | For who could be free, when every other man''s humour might domineer over him? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Has not the one of these a right to his thousand acres for ever, and the other during his life, paying the said rent? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Here it is like the common question will be made: Who shall be judge whether the prince or legislative act contrary to their trust? |
locke-concerning-3152 | His words are these:"Quod siquis dicat, Ergone populus tyrannicae crudelitati et furori jugulum semper praebebit? |
locke-concerning-3152 | I ask, then, when did they begin to be his? |
locke-concerning-3152 | If a subject of England have a child by an Englishwoman in France, whose subject is he? |
locke-concerning-3152 | If this argument be good, I ask, How came so many lawful monarchies into the world? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Is a man under the law of England? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Is a man under the law of Nature? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Is the voice of reason confirmed by inspiration? |
locke-concerning-3152 | It is often asked as a mighty objection, where are, or ever were, there any men in such a state of Nature? |
locke-concerning-3152 | May he be resisted, as often as any one shall find himself aggrieved, and but imagine he has not right done him? |
locke-concerning-3152 | May the commands, then, of a prince be opposed? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Or, can he take away from either the goods or money they have got upon the said land at his pleasure? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Should a robber break into my house, and, with a dagger at my throat, make me seal deeds to convey my estate to him, would this give him any title? |
locke-concerning-3152 | The old question will be asked in this matter of prerogative,"But who shall be judge when this power is made a right use of?" |
locke-concerning-3152 | Though the water running in the fountain be every one''s, yet who can doubt but that in the pitcher is his only who drew it out? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Was it a robbery thus to assume to himself what belonged to all in common? |
locke-concerning-3152 | What condition can he perform? |
locke-concerning-3152 | What is my remedy against a robber that so broke into my house? |
locke-concerning-3152 | What made him free of that law? |
locke-concerning-3152 | What must be done in the case? |
locke-concerning-3152 | What new engagement if he were no farther tied by any decrees of the society than he himself thought fit and did actually consent to? |
locke-concerning-3152 | Who can help it if they, who might avoid it, bring themselves into this suspicion? |
locke-concerning-3152 | and in whatsoever he doth, whether led by reason, mistake, or passion, must be submitted to? |
locke-concerning-3152 | and who had a tenderness for them all? |
locke-concerning-3152 | or when he ate? |
locke-concerning-3152 | or when he boiled? |
locke-concerning-3152 | or when he brought them home? |
locke-concerning-3152 | or when he picked them up? |
locke-concerning-3152 | vim vi repellant, seseque ab injuria tueantur? |
locke-concerning-3152 | what gave him a free disposing of his property, according to his own will, within the compass of that law? |
locke-concerning-3152 | when he digested? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ( Staggering to the entrance) LEADER Why dost thou cry out, Cyclops? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ( To SILENUS) But prithee, why such haste, father? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CHORUS( singing, strophe) Offspring of well- bred sires and dams, pray whither wilt thou be gone from me to the rocks? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS And who is Bacchus? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Are ye the men who visited on Ilium, that bordereth on Scamander''s wave, the rape of Helen, worst of women? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Are, the bowls too full of milk? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS But how does a god like being housed in a wine- skin? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS By whom? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Did they not know I was a god and sprung from gods? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Is my breakfast quite ready? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Must I not give my brethren a share in this liquor? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS On which side? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Sheep''s milk or cows''milk or a mixture of both? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Tell me, I adjure thee, have they escaped or are they still within? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS This way, was it not? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Thou mockest me; but where is this Noman? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS What shall we do, Silenus? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Where? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS Which then? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | CYCLOPS( sitting down) There then Why art thou putting the mixing- bowl behind me? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Come, though, let me see; must I confess''twas all a dream? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Cyclops, am I Ganymede, Zeus''s minion? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Hast caught them? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Hast thou not here a gentle breeze, and grass to browse, and water from the eddying stream set near the cave in troughs? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | How now? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Is the full amount of milk for cheeses milked out in baskets of rushes? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER After capturing your blooming prize, were all of you in turn her lovers? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER Because I feel for my back and spine, and express no wish to have my teeth knocked out, I am a coward, am I? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER Did you take Troy and capture the famous Helen? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER Didst fall among the coals in a drunken fit? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER How went it with you then, poor wretch? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER How, pray, could no man have made thee blind? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Dost find fault with thy lover? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS What news, Odysseus? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER Well, can I too lay hold of the blinding brand, as though the god''s libation had been poured? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | LEADER What then? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Maron whom once I dandled in these arms? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Are they hospitable and reverent towards strangers? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS But where are the city- walls and ramparts? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Did it not gurgle finely down thy throttle? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Do they sow Demeter''s grain, or on what do they live? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Dost know then what to do, that we may be gone from the land? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Have they the drink of Bromius, the juice of the vine? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Obedient unto whom? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Shall I let thee taste the wine unmixed, to start with? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Sprained thy ankle, standing still? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS What land is this and who are its inhabitants? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS What of that, provided he please thee? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS What, do they delight in killing men and eating them? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Where is the Cyclops himself? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Who then possess the land? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | ODYSSEUS Why, wert thou too drifted hither against thy will? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Pray, how is it with my newly- born lambs in the caves? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | SILENUS But tell me, how much gold wilt thou give me in exchange? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | SILENUS How was that? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | SILENUS I? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | SILENUS Is it inside the ship, or hast thou it with thee? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | SILENUS That I am; for what need have we of others to share our drink, Cyclops? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | SILENUS Whence hast thou sailed hither to Sicily? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Shall not I then purchase so rare a drink, bidding the senseless Cyclops and his central eye go hang? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | What boon shall I receive of thee to earn my thanks? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | What means this? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Whence sailed ye, strangers? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Why hast thou put forward these arguments? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | Why, what is this? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | and are not thy young ones bleating for thee? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | are they at the teat, running close to the side of their dams? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | art minded to stay? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | didst thou not know the passage to thy native land? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | didst thou see it? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | does the leather hurt thee? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | dost scorn him in his cups? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | has the Cyclops, most godless monster, been feasting on thy dear comrades? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | hast changed thine? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | how is it mixed? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | inside his dwelling? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | of what country are you? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | or is the power in the people''s hands? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | shall I ever come to that? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | some reputed god? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | taking a stealthy pull at the wine? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | the race of wild creatures? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | what art thou about? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | what can I say after the hideous sights I have seen inside the cave, things past belief, resembling more the tales men tell than aught they do? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | what city was it nursed your childhood? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | what is this crowd I see near the folds? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | what is this? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | what means this idleness, your Bacchic revelry? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | what next? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | what say you? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | where art thou? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | whither must we fly? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | who can they be? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | who has been pounding thy head, old sirrah? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | who will ope the door for me?" |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | wilt thou not browse here, here on the dewy slope? |
euripides-cyclops-1671 | yonder comes the Cyclops; what shall we do? |
milton-minor-1692 | 280_ Comus._ By falsehood, or discourtesy, or why? |
milton-minor-1692 | 350 Where may she wander now, whither betake her From the chill dew, amongst rude burs and thistles? |
milton-minor-1692 | 665_ Comus._ Why are you vexed, Lady? |
milton-minor-1692 | 90 He asked the waves, and asked the felon winds, What hard mishap hath doomed this gentle swain? |
milton-minor-1692 | And wouldst thou seek again to trap me here With liquorish baits, fit to ensnare a brute? |
milton-minor-1692 | Bro._ Methought so too; what should it be? |
milton-minor-1692 | Bro._ What fears, good Thyrsis? |
milton-minor-1692 | Bro._ What hidden strength, Unless the strength of Heaven, if you mean that? |
milton-minor-1692 | Bro._ Why, prithee, Shepherd, 615 How durst thou then thyself approach so near As to make this relation? |
milton-minor-1692 | Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, 5 What need''st thou such weak witness of thy name? |
milton-minor-1692 | Do ye believe me yet, or shall I call Antiquity from the old schools of Greece To testify the arms of chastity? |
milton-minor-1692 | Hast thou betrayed my credulous innocence With vizored falsehood and base forgery? |
milton-minor-1692 | Hath any ram Slipped from the fold, or young kid lost his dam, Or straggling wether the pent flock forsook? |
milton-minor-1692 | How camest thou here, good swain? |
milton-minor-1692 | How chance she is not in your company? |
milton-minor-1692 | How could''st thou find this dark sequestered nook? |
milton-minor-1692 | I fondly dream"Had ye been there,"... for what could that have done? |
milton-minor-1692 | Is this the confidence You gave me, brother? |
milton-minor-1692 | Juno dares not give her odds: Who had thought this clime had held A deity so unparalleled? |
milton-minor-1692 | Might she the wise Latona be, 20 Or the towered Cybele, Mother of a hundred gods? |
milton-minor-1692 | O yet a nobler task awaits thy hand( For what can war but endless war still breed?) |
milton-minor-1692 | Or have I said enow? |
milton-minor-1692 | Or that his hallowed reliques should be hid Under a star- ypointing pyramid? |
milton-minor-1692 | Say, Heavenly Muse, shall not thy sacred vein 15 Afford a present to the Infant God? |
milton-minor-1692 | Shall I go on? |
milton-minor-1692 | Was this the cottage and the safe abode Thou told''st me of? |
milton-minor-1692 | Were it not better done, as others use, To sport with Amaryllis in the shade, Or with the tangles of Neæra''s hair? |
milton-minor-1692 | What are you? |
milton-minor-1692 | What grim aspects are these, These oughly- headed monsters? |
milton-minor-1692 | What might this be? |
milton-minor-1692 | What need a vermeil- tinctured lip for that, Love- darting eyes, or tresses like the morn? |
milton-minor-1692 | What need they? |
milton-minor-1692 | What needs my Shakespeare for his honored bones The labor of an age in piled stones? |
milton-minor-1692 | What recks it them? |
milton-minor-1692 | What sudden blaze of majesty Is that which we from hence descry, Too divine to be mistook? |
milton-minor-1692 | What supports me, dost thou ask? |
milton-minor-1692 | Where were ye, Nymphs, when the remorseless deep 50 Closed o''er the head of your loved Lycidas? |
milton-minor-1692 | Who would not sing for Lycidas? |
milton-minor-1692 | Why should you be so cruel to yourself, And to those dainty limbs, which Nature lent 680 For gentle usage and soft delicacy? |
milton-minor-1692 | _ Comus._ And left your fair side all unguarded, Lady? |
milton-minor-1692 | _ Comus._ Can any mortal mixture of earth''s mould Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment? |
milton-minor-1692 | _ Comus._ Could that divide you from near- ushering guides? |
milton-minor-1692 | _ Comus._ Imports their loss, beside the present need? |
milton-minor-1692 | _ Comus._ Were they of manly prime, or youthful bloom? |
milton-minor-1692 | _ Comus._ What chance, good Lady, hath bereft you thus? |
milton-minor-1692 | _ Lady._ Gentle villager, What readiest way would bring me to that place? |
milton-minor-1692 | _ Spir._ What voice is that? |
milton-minor-1692 | have you let the false enchanter scape? |
milton-minor-1692 | my virgin Lady, where is she? |
milton-minor-1692 | my young lord? |
milton-minor-1692 | what boots it with uncessant care To tend the homely, slighted, shepherd''s trade, 65 And strictly meditate the thankless Muse? |
milton-minor-1692 | where else Shall I inform my unacquainted feet 180 In the blind mazes of this tangled wood? |
milton-minor-1692 | who hath reft,"quoth he,"my dearest pledge?" |
milton-minor-1692 | why do you frown? |
mill-considerations-4710 | After how long a term should members of Parliament be subject to re- election? |
mill-considerations-4710 | And has not the event proved that they were so? |
mill-considerations-4710 | And if he form an uncomplimentary opinion of their part in the affair, what moral obligation is he likely to feel as to his own? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Because the majority ought to prevail over the minority, must the majority have all the votes, the minority none? |
mill-considerations-4710 | But are not all these qualities fully as much required for preserving the good we have as for adding to it? |
mill-considerations-4710 | But are not these, of all qualities, the most conducive to improvement? |
mill-considerations-4710 | But does it follow that the minority should have no representatives at all? |
mill-considerations-4710 | But what is Order? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Chapter IX Should there be Two Stages of Election? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Chapter XII Ought Pledges to be Required from Members of Parliament? |
mill-considerations-4710 | For if it is indeed a trust, if the public are entitled to his vote, are not they entitled to know his vote? |
mill-considerations-4710 | For, first, what are Order and Progress? |
mill-considerations-4710 | How are they even to select him in the first instance but by the same standard? |
mill-considerations-4710 | How is it possible, then, to compute the elements of political power, while we omit from the computation any thing which acts on the will? |
mill-considerations-4710 | If it be deemed unjust that either should have to give way, which injustice is greatest? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Is he to alter his course? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Is he to defer to the nation? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Is it a good rule which, in the American Constitution, provides for the election of the President once in every four years by the entire people? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Is it likely he will suppose that it is for_ his_ interest they incur all this cost? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Is it necessary that the minority should not even be heard? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Or let the majority be English, the minority Irish, or the contrary: is there not a great probability of similar evil? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Should There Be Two Stages of Election? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Should a member of the legislature be bound by the instructions of his constituents? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Should he be the organ of their sentiments, or of his own? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Suppose the majority Catholics, the minority Protestants, or the reverse; will there not be the same danger? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Suppose the majority to be whites, the minority negroes, or_ vice versâ_: is it likely that the majority would allow equal justice to the minority? |
mill-considerations-4710 | What development can either their thinking or their active faculties attain under it? |
mill-considerations-4710 | What guaranty is there that these measures accord with the wishes of a majority of the people? |
mill-considerations-4710 | What is the monarch to do when these unfavorable opinions happen to be in the majority? |
mill-considerations-4710 | What should we then have? |
mill-considerations-4710 | What sort of human beings can be formed under such a regimen? |
mill-considerations-4710 | What, then, prevents the same powers from being exerted aggressively? |
mill-considerations-4710 | When a subject arises in which the laborers as such have an interest, is it regarded from any point of view but that of the employers of labor? |
mill-considerations-4710 | When it is said that the strongest power in society will make itself strongest in the government, what is meant by power? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Which of these modes of getting over the difficulty is most for the interest of both, and most conformable to the general fitness of things? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Why does no one ever hear a breath of disloyalty from the Islands in the British Channel? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Will those who object to his being questioned in classics and mathematics, tell us what they would have him questioned in? |
mill-considerations-4710 | With all this array of reasons, of the most fundamental character, on the affirmative side of the question, what is there on the negative? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Yet does Parliament, or almost any of the members composing it, ever for an instant look at any question with the eyes of a working man? |
mill-considerations-4710 | Yet what can be more conducive to Progress? |
mill-considerations-4710 | after their names? |
mill-considerations-4710 | and is not any growth of these virtues in the community in itself the greatest of improvements? |
mill-considerations-4710 | that the better judgment should give way to the worse, or the worse to the better? |
mill-considerations-4710 | their ambassador to a congress, or their professional agent, empowered not only to act for them, but to judge for them what ought to be done? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | AENEAS And thou, wherefore dost thou gird thee with thy sword? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | AENEAS How now? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | AENEAS What sure proof canst thou give of this? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | AENEAS Why, Hector, have the sentinels in terror made their way through the host to thy couch to hold a midnight conclave and disturb the army? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | ATHENA Whither away from the Trojan ranks, with sorrow gnawing at your hearts, because fortune granteth not you twain to slay Hector or Paris? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | And how shall thy charioteers cross the bridges without dashing the axles of their cars to pieces? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Art not aware how near the Argive host we take our night''s repose in all our harness clad? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | By us did pass- Well, who? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHARIOTEER How shall murderers''hands care for me? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHARIOTEER Where am I to turn, I ask thee, reft of my master now? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHARIOTEER Where can I find some Trojan chief? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHARIOTEER Why threaten these? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHORUS Art so sure thou hast already caught the foe? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHORUS Who art thou? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHORUS Who is he that groans? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHORUS Who was that man who slipped away? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHORUS Whose watch is it? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHORUS Why, what dress in place of this wilt thou assume? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | CHORUS Why, with what intent doth fortune change and bring Troy once again to mourning after her famous victory? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Can it be that thou art smitten with wild affright by Pan, the son of Cronion, and leaving thy watch therefore dost rouse the host? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | DIOMEDES Are others with him or cometh he alone? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | DIOMEDES Ought not he to head the list of slain? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | DIOMEDES What then are we to do, Odysseus? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | DOLON Gold have I in my home; no sustenance lack I. HECTOR What then is thy desire of all that Ilium stores within her? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Dost know whither those men are gone? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Dost think so really? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Dost thou expect to sack the entire camp? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | For what enemy could have come and found the lowly bed of Rhesus in the dark, unless some deity were guiding the murderers''steps? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR His country? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR How is it that he comes to Ida''s meadows, wandering from the broad waggon track across the plain? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR Is it the son of Oileus thou wouldst ask me for? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR Is there some midnight ambuscade? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR Prithee, what higher prize than these wilt ask me for? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR Then why dost thou desert thy post and rouse the army, save thou have some tidings of the night? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR What Trojan now af all our company doth volunteer to go and spy the Argive fleet? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR What reason else had the Argive host to kindle fires? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR Who goes there? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR Whom then of the Acheans wilt thou have alive to hold to ransom? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | HECTOR Why this tumultuous haste? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Have we not slain Dolon who spied upon the anchored fleet, and have we not his spoils safe here? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Have ye not heard that Rhesus is come to succour Troy in no mean sort? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | How oft came heralds and embassies from Phrygia urgently requiring thine aid for our city? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | How shall I catch him now? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Is he a Thessalian or a dweller in some seacoast town of Locris, or hath he his home amid the scattered islands of the main? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Is his company withdrawn elsewhere? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Is it a friend who calls? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Is it not then high time we went and roused the Lycians for the fifth watch, as the lot decided? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Is it possible he hath plunged into a hidden ambush and been slain? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Knowest thou not my palace or my father''s throne? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | ODYSSEUS Didst not hear, O Diomedes, the clash of arms? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | ODYSSEUS How, pray, in the darkness canst thou find them amid a hostile army, and slay them without risk? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | ODYSSEUS If however thou shouldst rouse them, dost know their watchword? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | ODYSSEUS What can it mean? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | RHESUS Avow they not that hither came the choicest chiefs of Hellas? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | RHESUS Who next to him hath won a name in their host? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Rouse ye, why delay? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | SEMI- CHORUS What is the watchword, then? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | SEMI- CHORUS Who goes there? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | SEMI- CHORUS Who was told off to the first watch? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | SEMI- CHORUS Whose work is this? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | SEMI- CHORUS Why doth not our scout draw near, whom Hector sent to spy the fleet? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | See ye not the moon''s pale beam? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Sleep''st thou? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Thy country? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Thy watchword? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | To which of the captains of the host am I to tell my tale? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Was it to die this inglorious death that Rhesus and I did come to Troy? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What better scheme could be than for a fleet spy to approach the ships and learn why our foes are lighting fires in front of their naval station? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What can he allege? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What god doth he avow as lord of the rest? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What goddess, O king, is hovering o''er our heads, bearing in her hands as on a bier the warrior slain but now? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What have we done? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What is his fatherland? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What is the watchword? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What means thy noisy summons? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What sumptuous presents did we not send to thee? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | What tidings can I say thou bringest? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Whence cam''st thou? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Where are they who should inspect the victims? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Where be the leaders of the light- armed troops? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Where doth Hector take his rest under arms? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Which of the Achaeans will their four- footed murderous foe slay in their beds, as he crosses the ground, feigning to be a beast? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who after him? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who art thou? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who but you shall pay the penalty for this? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who could have passed the Trojan lines and come against us without detection? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who is? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who of all the Argives but he would have devised or carried out such a deed? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who saith"I will"? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who was he that will loudly boast his daring in escaping me? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who was he, and whence came he? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who was wounded, who was slain amongst thy friends, when that foe thou speak''st of came? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who will be that patriot? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Who will to the son of Panthus? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Why delay to save your lives when the foemen''s storm is just bursting on you? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Why try to undermine my poor barbarian wit by crafty words, barbarian thou thyself? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | Wilt not the watchword declare, ere my sword finds its way to thy heart? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | an ally? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | and the home that he hath left? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | are tidings come of some secret stratagem set on foot during the night by the foe? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | hast thou slain Rhesus? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | is it the deed of Odysseus? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | or is it an idle noise that rings in my ears? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | shouldst not thou awake? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | to whom liken him? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | which? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | who relieves me? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | who to Europa''s son, captain of the Lycian band? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | whom art thou praising for valiancy? |
euripides-rhesus-1572 | why art afeard? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | And do we not see stones melt into glass and the glass itself under strong heat become more fluid than water? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | And do you not continuously impress this force[ virtù] upon the stone as long as you hold it in the hand? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | And why at D? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | And why should we feel greater repugnance, seeing that, in our search after the infinite among numbers we found it in unity? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Are we then to believe that substances become fluid in virtue of being resolved into their infinitely small indivisible components? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Besides, may not the parts of the water expand and dilate? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But even if this demanded an infinite number would you still think it impossible? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But how? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But if this second ball falls in water with a speed of two, what will be its speed of descent in air? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But if we can carry on indefinitely the division into finite parts what necessity is there then for the introduction of non- finite parts? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But if we find that air has levity instead of gravity what then shall we say of the foregoing discussion which, in other respects, is very clever? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But now that you mention gold, do not our senses tell us that that metal can be immensely expanded? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But of what kind and how great must we consider this speed of light to be? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But what if we should place the larger stone upon the smaller? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But what more do we need? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But what more is needed? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But without going into the matter more deeply, how have these common and[112] obvious properties escaped your notice? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | But, gentlemen, whither have we drifted during these many hours lured on by various problems and unexpected digressions? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Can we not decide this by experiment? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Do not children fall with impunity from heights which would cost their elders a broken leg or perhaps a fractured skull? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Do you not agree with me in this opinion? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Does it perhaps diminish with the time during which one holds the stone? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Does not the rectangle BO have an area which is equal to the sum of the areas of all the little rectangles through which the parabola passes? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Does the vessel perhaps expand so that the surrounding medium is displaced in order to give more room? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | For who will assure us that the air does not creep in between the glass and stopper even if it is well packed with tow or other yielding material? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Have we not taken the rectangle BO smaller than the area X? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | How could a body acquire, in a fall of a thousand cubits, that which it loses in a fall of four? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | How now can the smaller circle traverse a length greater than its circumference unless it go by jumps? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | How then is it possible to divide a continuum without limit into parts which are themselves always capable of subdivision? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | If then, Simplicio, we were to weigh a portion of air in a vacuum would you then be satisfied and assured of the fact? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | If these moving particles are always visible, what will be the locus of their positions at any instant? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Indeed, who knows but that we may thus[56] frequently discover something more interesting and beautiful than the solution originally sought? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Is it instantaneous or momentary or does it like other motions require time? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Is it not clear then that a leaden ball allowed to fall from a tower two hundred cubits high will outstrip an ebony ball by less than four inches? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Must we not confess that geometry is the most powerful of all instruments for sharpening the wit and training the mind to think correctly? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Now what shall we say concerning this metamorphosis in the transition from finite to infinite? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Otherwise what? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Shall we not then call them equal seeing that they are the last traces and remnants of equal magnitudes? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | The first question was, How can a single point be equal to a line? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Was not Plato perfectly right when he wished that his pupils should be first of all well grounded in mathematics? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | What shall we say, Simplicio? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | What then must one conclude under these circumstances? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | When a top spins on the ground at its greatest speed do we not hear a distinct buzzing of high pitch? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Why may not the air or exhalations or some other more subtile substances penetrate the pores of the wood, or even of the glass itself? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Why not say a grain of sand as rapidly as a grindstone? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Why not twelve? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Will you not, therefore, be good enough to repeat it? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Wo n''t you be good enough to explain this argument a little more clearly? |
galileo-dialogues-4209 | Would not then the cork be proportionately swifter? |
plato-apology-1243 | ''Who is he?'' |
plato-apology-1243 | And is there anyone who would rather be injured than benefited by those who live with him? |
plato-apology-1243 | And now, Meletus, I will ask you another question-- by Zeus I will: Which is better, to live among bad citizens, or among good ones? |
plato-apology-1243 | And so, Meletus, you really think that I do not believe in any god? |
plato-apology-1243 | And the senators? |
plato-apology-1243 | And what do you say of the audience,--do they improve them? |
plato-apology-1243 | And what is my due? |
plato-apology-1243 | And what shall I propose on my part, O men of Athens? |
plato-apology-1243 | And when you accuse me of corrupting and deteriorating the youth, do you allege that I corrupt them intentionally or unintentionally? |
plato-apology-1243 | And why not? |
plato-apology-1243 | And why should I live in prison, and be the slave of the magistrates of the year-- of the Eleven? |
plato-apology-1243 | Answer, my good friend, the law requires you to answer-- does any one like to be injured? |
plato-apology-1243 | Are they not either gods or the sons of gods? |
plato-apology-1243 | But I shall be asked, Why do people delight in continually conversing with you? |
plato-apology-1243 | But if death is the journey to another place, and there, as men say, all the dead abide, what good, O my friends and judges, can be greater than this? |
plato-apology-1243 | But is not this rather disgraceful, and a very considerable proof of what I was saying, that you have no interest in the matter? |
plato-apology-1243 | But now please to answer the next question: Can a man believe in spiritual and divine agencies, and not in spirits or demigods? |
plato-apology-1243 | But perhaps the members of the assembly corrupt them?--or do they too improve them? |
plato-apology-1243 | But suppose I ask you a question: How about horses? |
plato-apology-1243 | Did ever any man believe in horsemanship, and not in horses? |
plato-apology-1243 | Do not the good do their neighbours good, and the bad do them evil? |
plato-apology-1243 | Do you mean that I do not believe in the godhead of the sun or moon, like other men? |
plato-apology-1243 | Does one man do them harm and all the world good? |
plato-apology-1243 | Had Achilles any thought of death and danger? |
plato-apology-1243 | Has he not compounded a riddle, thinking to try me? |
plato-apology-1243 | Is not that true, Meletus, of horses, or of any other animals? |
plato-apology-1243 | Is not the exact opposite the truth? |
plato-apology-1243 | Is not this ignorance of a disgraceful sort, the ignorance which is the conceit that a man knows what he does not know? |
plato-apology-1243 | Is that what you affirm? |
plato-apology-1243 | Is there any one who understands human and political virtue? |
plato-apology-1243 | Now what are spirits or demigods? |
plato-apology-1243 | Or shall the penalty be a fine, and imprisonment until the fine is paid? |
plato-apology-1243 | Or, do you mean that I am an atheist simply, and a teacher of atheism? |
plato-apology-1243 | Shall I say imprisonment? |
plato-apology-1243 | Some one will say: And are you not ashamed, Socrates, of a course of life which is likely to bring you to an untimely end? |
plato-apology-1243 | Some one will say: Yes, Socrates, but can not you hold your tongue, and then you may go into a foreign city, and no one will interfere with you? |
plato-apology-1243 | Then every Athenian improves and elevates them; all with the exception of myself; and I alone am their corrupter? |
plato-apology-1243 | Well, what do the slanderers say? |
plato-apology-1243 | What do I take to be the explanation of this silence? |
plato-apology-1243 | What shall be done to such an one? |
plato-apology-1243 | What then can he mean when he says that I am the wisest of men? |
plato-apology-1243 | What would be a reward suitable to a poor man who is your benefactor, and who desires leisure that he may instruct you? |
plato-apology-1243 | What would not a man give if he might converse with Orpheus and Musaeus and Hesiod and Homer? |
plato-apology-1243 | What, all of them, or some only and not others? |
plato-apology-1243 | What, do you mean to say, Meletus, that they are able to instruct and improve youth? |
plato-apology-1243 | When I do not know whether death is a good or an evil, why should I propose a penalty which would certainly be an evil? |
plato-apology-1243 | When I heard the answer, I said to myself, What can the god mean? |
plato-apology-1243 | Why do I mention this? |
plato-apology-1243 | Why do you think so, Meletus? |
plato-apology-1243 | Why should I? |
plato-apology-1243 | Why should they too support me with their testimony? |
plato-apology-1243 | Will you believe me? |
plato-apology-1243 | You must have thought about the matter, for you have sons; is there any one?'' |
plato-apology-1243 | You think a great deal about the improvement of youth? |
plato-apology-1243 | and what does he charge?'' |
plato-apology-1243 | and what is the interpretation of his riddle? |
plato-apology-1243 | because I am afraid of the penalty of death which Meletus proposes? |
plato-apology-1243 | or in flute- playing, and not in flute- players? |
plato-apology-1243 | said I;''and of what country? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | ( 6) Further, if incontinence and continence are concerned with any and every kind of object, who is it that is incontinent in the unqualified sense? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | 10 Must no one at all, then, be called happy while he lives; must we, as Solon says, see the end? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | 11 Do we need friends more in good fortune or in bad? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | 3 Do we deliberate about everything, and is everything a possible subject of deliberation, or is deliberation impossible about some things? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Acts of a brave man, then, confronting dangers and running risks because it is noble to do so? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Acts of justice? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Again, how can it be a coming into being? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Again, just as health admits of degrees without being indeterminate, why should not pleasure? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Again, what is the difference in respect of involuntariness between errors committed upon calculation and those committed in anger? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | All such questions are hard, are they not, to decide with precision? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | And is all suffering of injustice of the latter kind or else all of the former, or is it sometimes voluntary, sometimes involuntary? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | And the man whose deserts are great would seem most unduly humble; for what would he have done if they had been less? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | And what would their temperate acts be? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Are goods one, then, by being derived from one good or by all contributing to one good, or are they rather one by analogy? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Are the necessary pleasures good in the sense in which even that which is not bad is good? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Are we to say then that in so far as they are satisfied with themselves and think they are good, they share in these attributes? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | But if one accepts another man as good, and he turns out badly and is seen to do so, must one still love him? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | But if one friend remained the same while the other became better and far outstripped him in virtue, should the latter treat the former as a friend? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | But to the incontinent man may be applied the proverb''when water chokes, what is one to wash it down with?'' |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | But towards whom? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | But what then do we mean by the good? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | But who is to fix the worth of the service; he who makes the sacrifice or he who has got the advantage? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Do men love, then, the good, or what is good for them? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Even if we are to lay down this doctrine, is it also the case that a man is happy when he is dead? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | For Plato, too, was right in raising this question and asking, as he used to do,''are we on the way from or to the first principles?'' |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | For pain is neither an evil nor a good, if pleasure is not; why then should he avoid it? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Have the carpenter, then, and the tanner certain functions or activities, and has man none? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | How, then, is it that no one is continuously pleased? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | If this is true, then, how will virtue be more voluntary than vice? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | In what circumstances, then? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is he born without a function? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is it not plain from the corresponding activities? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is it that most identify friends with useful people? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is it that we grow weary? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is it then practical wisdom whose resistance is mastered? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is it those that are pursued even when isolated from others, such as intelligence, sight, and certain pleasures and honours? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is it truly possible to be willingly treated unjustly, or is all suffering of injustice the contrary involuntary, as all unjust action is voluntary? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is it, as in all other cases, from statesmen? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is it, then, what has been decided on by previous deliberation? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is not such praise tasteless, since they have no bad appetites? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Is not this absurd, when one and the same thing is the cause? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Must the friendship, then, be forthwith broken off? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Must we not, then, next examine whence or how one can learn how to legislate? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Now if you take away from a living being action, and still more production, what is left but contemplation? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Now laws are as it were the''works''of the political art; how then can one learn from them to be a legislator, or judge which are best? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Of what then will these be the coming into being? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or are they good up to a point? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or does this statement too need qualification? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or how can prosperity be guarded and preserved without friends? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or is a difference apparent between statesmanship and the other sciences and arts? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or is it incidentally any and every choice but per se the true rule and the right choice by which the one abides and the other does not? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or is not this quite absurd, especially for us who say that happiness is an activity? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or is nothing other than the Idea of good good in itself? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or is the latter definition, at any rate, itself indefinite, since different things are hateful or pleasant to different people? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or is this keeping pace with his fortunes quite wrong? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or is this not so in all cases, but only when one''s friends are incurable in their wickedness? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or is this not true even of the arts? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or liberal acts? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or must we add''and who is destined to live thus and die as befits his life''? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Or must we add''when it is recognized''? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Shall we not, like archers who have a mark to aim at, be more likely to hit upon what is right? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Should he, then, behave no otherwise towards him than he would if he had never been his friend? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | These people seem to bear goodwill to each other; but how could one call them friends when they do not know their mutual feelings? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | To whom will they give? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | We assume the gods to be above all other beings blessed and happy; but what sort of actions must we assign to them? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Were you both willing, or unwilling both? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | What argument would remould such people? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | What sort of acts, then, should be called compulsory? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | What sort of goods would one call good in themselves? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | What then can this be? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | What then is it that the first school means, and in what respect is it right? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | What then is the good of each? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | What, then, is there that satisfies this criterion, which at the same time we can participate in? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | What, then, or what kind of thing is it, since it is none of the things we have mentioned? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Will not the gods seem absurd if they make contracts and return deposits, and so on? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | Will not the knowledge of it, then, have a great influence on life? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | With what sort of terrible things, then, is the brave man concerned? |
aristotle-nicomachean-2701 | is solved also by the distinction we applied to the question''can a man be voluntarily treated unjustly?'' |
milton-samson-2225 | All by him fell thou say''st, by whom fell he, What glorious hand gave Samson his deaths wound? |
milton-samson-2225 | Art thou our Slave, Our Captive, at the public Mill our drudge, And dar''st thou at our sending and command Dispute thy coming? |
milton-samson-2225 | Besides, how vile, contemptible, ridiculous, What act more execrably unclean, prophane? |
milton-samson-2225 | Bid go with evil omen and the brand Of infamy upon my name denounc''t? |
milton-samson-2225 | But for thee what shall be done? |
milton-samson-2225 | But had we best retire, I see a storm? |
milton-samson-2225 | But wherefore comes old Manoa in such hast With youthful steps? |
milton-samson-2225 | But who are these? |
milton-samson-2225 | But who is this, what thing of Sea or Land? |
milton-samson-2225 | Cam''st thou for this, vain boaster, to survey me, To descant on my strength, and give thy verdit? |
milton-samson-2225 | Can they think me so broken, so debas''d With corporal servitude, that my mind ever Will condescend to such absurd commands? |
milton-samson-2225 | Can this be hee, That Heroic, that Renown''d, Irresistible Samson? |
milton-samson-2225 | Comes he in peace? |
milton-samson-2225 | Do they not seek occasion of new quarrels On my refusal to distress me more, Or make a game of my calamities? |
milton-samson-2225 | Dost thou already single me; I thought Gives and the Mill had tam''d thee? |
milton-samson-2225 | For this did the Angel twice descend? |
milton-samson-2225 | His pardon I implore; but as for life, To what end should I seek it? |
milton-samson-2225 | In this other was there found More Faith? |
milton-samson-2225 | Is not thy Nation subject to our Lords? |
milton-samson-2225 | Masters commands come with a power resistless To such as owe them absolute subjection; And for a life who will not change his purpose? |
milton-samson-2225 | My message was impos''d on me with speed, Brooks no delay: is this thy resolution? |
milton-samson-2225 | My self? |
milton-samson-2225 | Nay what thing good Pray''d for, but often proves our woe, our bane? |
milton-samson-2225 | O first created Beam, and thou great Word, Let there be light, and light was over all; Why am I thus bereav''d thy prime decree? |
milton-samson-2225 | O wherefore did God grant me my request, And as a blessing with such pomp adorn''d? |
milton-samson-2225 | Or was too much of self- love mixt, Of constancy no root infixt, That either they love nothing, or not long? |
milton-samson-2225 | Self- violence? |
milton-samson-2225 | So obvious and so easie to be quench''t, And not as feeling through all parts diffus''d, That she might look at will through every pore? |
milton-samson-2225 | Some dismal accident it needs must be; What shall we do, stay here or run and see? |
milton-samson-2225 | Tongue- doubtie Giant, how dost thou prove me these? |
milton-samson-2225 | Wearied with slaughter then or how? |
milton-samson-2225 | What Pilot so expert but needs must wreck Embarqu''d with such a Stears- mate at the Helm? |
milton-samson-2225 | What do I beg? |
milton-samson-2225 | What noise or shout was that? |
milton-samson-2225 | Where outward force constrains, the sentence holds; But who constrains me to the Temple of Dagon, Not dragging? |
milton-samson-2225 | Which shall I first bewail, Thy Bondage or lost Sight, Prison within Prison Inseparably dark? |
milton-samson-2225 | Why are his gifts desirable, to tempt Our earnest Prayers, then giv''n with solemn hand As Graces, draw a Scorpions tail behind? |
milton-samson-2225 | Why do I humble thus my self, and suing For peace, reap nothing but repulse and hate? |
milton-samson-2225 | Why then Didst thou at first receive me for thy husband? |
milton-samson-2225 | Wilt thou then serve the Philistines with that gift Which was expresly giv''n thee to annoy them? |
milton-samson-2225 | With thee a Man condemn''d, a Slave enrol''d, Due by the Law to capital punishment? |
milton-samson-2225 | Yet God hath wrought things as incredible For his people of old; what hinders now? |
milton-samson-2225 | Yet e''re I give the rains to grief, say first, How dy''d he? |
milton-samson-2225 | can my ears unus''d Hear these dishonours, and not render death? |
milton-samson-2225 | how hast thou dealt already? |
milton-samson-2225 | much livelier than e''re while He seems: supposing here to find his Son, Or of him bringing to us some glad news? |
milton-samson-2225 | what cause Brought him so soon at variance with himself Among his foes? |
milton-samson-2225 | yet why? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Am I able to cast a cannon capable of throwing a ball or stone of sufficient size to batter the walls of Constantinople? gibbon-history-5875 And is it thus,"exclaimed the cardinal,[ 24]"that you will desert their expectations and your own fortune? |
gibbon-history-5875 | And what then do you propose to give us? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Could Tacitus have excelled this? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Do you require,said Michael,"that I should abdicate the empire?" |
gibbon-history-5875 | If you are spared,said the tribune,"by the mercy of the Romans, will you not promise to support the good estate with your lives and fortunes?" |
gibbon-history-5875 | What is your age? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Who are the true martyrs, of those who are slain on my side, or on that of my enemies? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Your wound,exclaimed Palæologus,"is slight; the danger is pressing: your presence is necessary; and whither will you retire?" |
gibbon-history-5875 | --"If he reserved them for me,"replied the despot,"how have you presumed to withhold them so long by a fruitless and fatal resistance?" |
gibbon-history-5875 | --"Lala,"[ 23]( or preceptor,) continued the sultan,"do you see this pillow? |
gibbon-history-5875 | 2;) Donasti Homerum non in alienum sermonem violento alveâ?? |
gibbon-history-5875 | 2;) Donasti Homerum non in alienum sermonem violento alveâ?? |
gibbon-history-5875 | 35,& c.,) which may be derived from the French_ Sire_, or the Greek Kur( kurioV?) |
gibbon-history-5875 | A numerous and loyal party yet adhered to the standard of Cantacuzene: but he asserts in his history( does he hope for belief?) |
gibbon-history-5875 | Am I a captive? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Am I not encompassed with the banners of a potent and invincible army? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Am I vanquished? |
gibbon-history-5875 | But what is a council, or a university, to the presses o Froben and the studies of Erasmus?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | Can you doubt my equity? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Could Acropolita mistake the dress of his own court?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | Could they be assembled in arms, who would dare to assume the office of general? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Cuides- tu que ce soit le roi Richart?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | Did he proceed from the Father alone, perhaps_ by_ the Son? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Do you not hear the language of the Roman matron? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Does he mean, by this decoration, a figurative or a real golden chain? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Had he read Villehardouin? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Had these modern Greeks never read Strabo, or any of their lesser geographers?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | Have the Russians found no Tartar chronicles at Tobolskoi? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Have ye the right, have ye the power, to control my actions on my own ground? |
gibbon-history-5875 | I claim by the right of inheritance and possession, and who shall dare to extort you from my hands? |
gibbon-history-5875 | In the double intoxication of zeal and wine, they valiantly exclaimed,"What occasion have we for succor, or union, or Latins? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Is the hand of the Franks[ 58] and Germans enfeebled by age? |
gibbon-history-5875 | It was proposed by Arnold to revive and discriminate the equestrian order; but what could be the motive or measure of such distinction? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Lax ti kinoV?. |
gibbon-history-5875 | On come spesso diceva,"Dove suono quelli buoni Romani? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Quæ signa tu facis ut credamus tibi? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Shall I mention in a serious history the furious reproaches that were urged against the Latins, who for a long while remained on the defensive? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Shall I relate that the thousands who guarded the emperor''s person fled on the approach, and before the lance, of a single warrior? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Shall we praise a secret correspondence with Huniades, while he commanded the vanguard of the Turkish army? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Should he not have corrected the register of Ford Abbey, and annihilated the phantom Florus, by the unquestionable evidence of the French historians?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | Some years after the sultan''s death, an oppressed subject called aloud in the streets of Damascus,"O Noureddin, Noureddin, where art thou now? |
gibbon-history-5875 | The rest of the courtiers are swayed by their personal or factious views; and how can I consult the monks on questions of policy and marriage? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Thou art no more than a pismire; why wilt thou seek to provoke the elephants? |
gibbon-history-5875 | To the reproachful question, what had been the event or the use of their Italian synod? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Von Hammer.--M.]? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Was Constantinople unprovided with a map?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | Was he deceived by the Byzantine theme of Lombardy which extended along the coast of Calabria?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | What benefits accrued to the conquerors from the three fires which annihilated so vast a portion of the buildings and riches of the city? |
gibbon-history-5875 | What eloquence could unite so many discordant and hostile powers under the same standard? |
gibbon-history-5875 | What is the foundation of thy insolence and folly? |
gibbon-history-5875 | What mortal could reconcile the English with the French, Genoa with Arragon the Germans with the natives of Hungary and Bohemia? |
gibbon-history-5875 | What order could be maintained?--what military discipline? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Who is this Holagou that dares to rise against them? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Who would understand their various languages, or direct their stranger and incompatible manners? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Who would undertake to feed such an enormous multitude? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Why do ye seek to affright us by vain and indirect menaces? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Why does he seek earthly and transitory rewards for his labors, and in his wanton speech liken himself to the Creator? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Why is he so arrogant and ungrateful towards the Most High? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Why might not the author be of Syrian extraction?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | Why must therefore the version and comment suppose the modest and insufficient reckoning of 90,000? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Will not my sword be unsheathed in the defence of the Capitol? |
gibbon-history-5875 | With foreigners do I say? |
gibbon-history-5875 | Yet how could he be alive seventy- five years afterwards? |
gibbon-history-5875 | [ 16]"Who is ignorant,"says the monk of Clairvaux,"of the vanity and arrogance of the Romans? |
gibbon-history-5875 | [ 29]"Dost thou not know, that the greatest part of Asia is subject to our arms and our laws? |
gibbon-history-5875 | [ 78] Am I writing the history of Orlando or Amadis? |
gibbon-history-5875 | [ Footnote 16: Quid tam notum seculis quam protervia et cervicositas Romanorum? |
gibbon-history-5875 | [ Footnote 34: Sic dicunt forsitan isti, unde scimus quòd a Domino sermo egressus sit? |
gibbon-history-5875 | [ Footnote 65: Can the death of a good man be esteemed a punishment by those who believe in the immortality of the soul? |
gibbon-history-5875 | [ Footnote 84: For this miraculous apparition, Cananus appeals to the Mussulman saint; but who will bear testimony for Seid Bechar?] |
gibbon-history-5875 | and why, instead of confiding in God, will ye put your trust in the Italians? |
gibbon-history-5875 | did I not cause all the citizens, exiled by party violence, with their wretched wives and children, to be readmitted? |
gibbon-history-5875 | dove ene loro somma justitia? |
gibbon-history-5875 | or from the Father_ and_ the Son? |
gibbon-history-5875 | or had you rather forfeit your kingdom, your treasures, and your life?" |
gibbon-history-5875 | p. 462) exclaim? |
gibbon-history-5875 | quando hactenus aurum Roma refudit? |
gibbon-history-5875 | shall we excuse the desertion of his standard, a treacherous desertion which abandoned the victory to the enemies of his benefactor? |
gibbon-history-5875 | that our invincible forces extend from one sea to the other? |
gibbon-history-5875 | that the potentates of the earth form a line before our gate? |
gibbon-history-5875 | their virtue, their justice, their power? |
gibbon-history-5875 | why was I not born in those happy times?" |
euripides-medea-1414 | ( antistrophe 2) Where shall hand or heart find hardihood enough in wreaking such a fearsome deed upon thy sons? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS But why that downcast eye, that wasted cheek? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS By whom? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS Can he have brought himself to such a dastard deed? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS Doth Jason allow it? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS Hath he found a new love? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS Surely thou dost trust me? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS What hath he done? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS What meanest thou? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS What shall I swear to do, from what refrain? |
euripides-medea-1414 | AEGEUS Who gives his daughter to him? |
euripides-medea-1414 | ATTENDANT And who''mongst men is not? |
euripides-medea-1414 | ATTENDANT Have I unwittingly announced some evil tidings? |
euripides-medea-1414 | ATTENDANT Then why this downcast eye, these floods of tears? |
euripides-medea-1414 | ATTENDANT Why art so disquieted in thy prosperous hour? |
euripides-medea-1414 | ATTENDANT Why dost thou, so long my lady''s own handmaid, stand here at the gate alone, loudly lamenting to thyself the piteous tale? |
euripides-medea-1414 | And yet this were surely a gain, to heal men''s wounds by music''s spell, but why tune they their idle song where rich banquets are spread? |
euripides-medea-1414 | And yet what possesses me? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Art learning only now, that every single man cares for himself more than for his neighbour, some from honest motives, others for mere gain''s sake? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Art not distraught, lady, who hearest with joy the outrage to our royal house done, and art not at the horrid tale afraid? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Art sane? |
euripides-medea-1414 | But thou, lady, why with fresh tears dost thou thine eyelids wet, turning away thy wan cheek, with no welcome for these my happy tidings? |
euripides-medea-1414 | CHORUS Didst hear, O Zeus, thou earth, and thou, O light, the piteous note of woe the hapless wife is uttering? |
euripides-medea-1414 | CHORUS( chanting) Didst hear, didst hear the children''s cry? |
euripides-medea-1414 | CREON Why then this violence? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Can I consent to let those foes of mine escape from punishment, and incur their mockery? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Can it be any profit to the gods to heap upon us mortal men beside our other woes this further grief for children lost, a grief surpassing all? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Can she want to kill me too? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Can there be any deed of horror left to follow this? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Dost see what thou art suffering? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Dost think I would ever have fawned on yonder man, unless to gain some end or form some scheme? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Dost think a royal palace wants for robes or gold? |
euripides-medea-1414 | FIRST SON( within) Ah, me; what can I do? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Have I erred in thinking my news was good? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Have I miscarried here? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Have I not my children to consider? |
euripides-medea-1414 | How shall a yearning for that insatiate resting- place ever hasten for thee, poor reckless one, the end that death alone can bring? |
euripides-medea-1414 | How wilt thou look upon thy babes, and still without a tear retain thy bloody purpose? |
euripides-medea-1414 | If thou shouldst break this oath, what curse dost thou invoke upon thyself? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Is she so sure she will escape herself unpunished from this house, when she hath slain the rulers of the land? |
euripides-medea-1414 | JASON And yet thou didst slay them? |
euripides-medea-1414 | JASON But why so rashly rob thyself of these gifts? |
euripides-medea-1414 | JASON Didst think that marriage cause enough to murder them? |
euripides-medea-1414 | JASON How now? |
euripides-medea-1414 | JASON Ladies, stationed near this house, pray tell me is the author of these hideous deeds, Medea, still within, or hath she fled from hence? |
euripides-medea-1414 | JASON O Zeus, dost hear how I am driven hence; dost mark the treatment I receive from this she- lion, fell murderess of her young? |
euripides-medea-1414 | JASON Where slew she them; within the palace or outside? |
euripides-medea-1414 | JASON Why prithee, unhappy one, dost moan o''er these children? |
euripides-medea-1414 | LEADER O lady, wilt thou steel thyself to slay thy children twain? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA Dost think a woman counts this a trifling injury? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA Hast thou a wife, or hast thou never known the married state? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA Pray tell me, hast thou till now dragged on a childless life? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA Say how; what am I to do? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA Surely I may learn the god''s answer? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA Till when? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA What did I do? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA What god or power divine hears thee, breaker of oaths and every law of hospitality? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA What object hast thou in sailing to this land? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA What said Phoebus to thee as to children? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA What said the god? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA What took thee on thy travels to the prophetic centre of the earth? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA What, wilt thou banish me, and to my prayers no pity yield? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA Why shake those doors and attempt to loose their bolts, in quest of the dead and me their murderess? |
euripides-medea-1414 | MEDEA Why, what hath chanced that calls for such a flight of mine? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Marry, then betray thee? |
euripides-medea-1414 | NURSE Do ye hear her words, how loudly she adjures Themis, oft invoked, and Zeus, whom men regard as keeper of their oaths? |
euripides-medea-1414 | NURSE O children, do ye hear how your father feels towards you? |
euripides-medea-1414 | NURSE What mean''st, old man? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Shall I enter the house? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Shall I not cease to fret? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Well, suppose them dead; what city will receive me? |
euripides-medea-1414 | What friendly host will give me a shelter in his land, a home secure, and save my soul alive? |
euripides-medea-1414 | What gain is life to me? |
euripides-medea-1414 | What possesses me, when heaven its best doth offer? |
euripides-medea-1414 | What protection, what home or country to save thee from thy troubles wilt thou find? |
euripides-medea-1414 | What? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Whence comest thou to this land? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Whither can I turn me now? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Whither fly to escape my mother''s blows? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Whither wilt thou turn? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Who is robbing me of thee, old as I am and ripe for death? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Who shall gainsay this? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Why do I hesitate to do the awful deed that must be done? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Why hatest thou them? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Why in its place is fell murder growing up? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Why should I wound their sire by wounding them, and get me a twofold measure of sorrow? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Why should I, for how hast thou injured me? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Why turnest thou thy cheek away, and hast no welcome for my glad news? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Why, pray, do thy children share their father''s crime? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Yet for all my wretched plight I will ask thee, Creon, wherefore dost thou drive me from the land? |
euripides-medea-1414 | Yet what kindness can I expect from one so base as thee? |
euripides-medea-1414 | do I forget that we are fugitives, in need of friends?" |
euripides-medea-1414 | hapless one, why doth fierce anger thy soul assail? |
euripides-medea-1414 | has not the poor lady ceased yet from her lamentation? |
euripides-medea-1414 | how comes it that Medea will have thee leave her to herself? |
euripides-medea-1414 | or does he loathe thy bed? |
euripides-medea-1414 | or is there aught that troubles thee? |
euripides-medea-1414 | to my father''s house, to my own country, which I for thee deserted to come hither? |
euripides-medea-1414 | to the hapless daughters of Pelias? |
euripides-medea-1414 | what am I to do? |
euripides-medea-1414 | what gain is life to me? |
euripides-medea-1414 | what must thou do first, what country visit? |
euripides-medea-1414 | what sayest thou? |
euripides-medea-1414 | why do ye look at me so, my children? |
euripides-medea-1414 | why dost thou not depart? |
euripides-medea-1414 | why hast thou granted unto man clear signs to know the sham in gold, while on man''s brow no brand is stamped whereby to gauge the villain''s heart? |
euripides-medea-1414 | why smile that last sweet smile? |
euripides-medea-1414 | will Jason brook such treatment of his sons, even though he be at variance with their mother? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS Are ye bringing the bodies, for the which the strife arose? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS Did he himself wash the bloody wounds of the hapless youths? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS Dost know how I did lead an expedition to its ruin? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS Must not the mothers touch their sons? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS O Zeus, why do men assert the wisdom of the wretched human race? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS On this or that side of the mount? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS What sayest thou? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS Where didst thou leave the dead he hath not buried? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS Where wilt thou set the tomb apart for him? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | ADRASTUS Yea, to Tydeus, and to Polyneices, who was Theban- born THESEUS What induced thee to select this alliance? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | AETHRA May I a scheme declare, my son, that shall add to thy glory and the state''s? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | And art thou come to cast dire threats at me while thy own folk are afraid of giving burial to the dead? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | And who did bury them? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Are we not then to proud, when heaven hath made such preparation for our life, not to be content therewith? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Besides, how shall the people, if it can not form true judgments, be able rightly to direct the state? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | But dost thou know what I would have thee do in this? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | But if thou wilt not, must be content with thy decision; for how can I help it? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | But wherefore these reflections? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | CHILDREN Father, thou hearest thy children''s lamentation; say, shall I e''er, as warrior dight, avenge thy slaughter? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | CHILDREN Shall Asopus''laughing tide ever reflect my brazen arms as I lead on my Argive troops? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Dost see how fiercely thy country looks on its revilers when they mock her for want of counsel? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Dost see yon corpse by Zeus''s bolt transfixed? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Dost think''tis Argos thou art injuring in refusing burial to the dead? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | EVADNE Why question them? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | For what sharper pang wilt thou ever find for mortals than the sight of children dead? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | For what will spiteful tongues say of me, when thou, my mother, who more than all others fearest for my safety, bidst me undertake this enterprise? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | For why shouldst thou, having been ill- advised thyself, seek to drag our fortune down? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Freedom''s mark is also seen in this:"Who hath wholesome counsel to declare unto the state?" |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | How then can a city remain stable, where one cuts short all enterprise and mows down the young like meadow- flowers in spring- time? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | IPHIS Ah, why are mortal men denied this boon, to live their youth twice o''er, and twice in turn to reach old age? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | IPHIS Dost thou in such garb appear before a funeral- pyre? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | IPHIS In Athena''s handiwork or in prudent counsel? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | IPHIS What dost thou say? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | IPHIS What hath not thy own father a right to know? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | IPHIS What wind hath blown thee hither, child? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | IPHIS Why dost thou deck thyself in that apparel? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Is it because thou didst hear their piteous lamentations? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | LEADER How did the son of Aegeus and his fellow- warriors raise their trophy to Zeus? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | MESSENGER Why, what disgrace to men are their fellows''sorrows? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Mayhap thou''lt say,"Why pass the land of Pelops o''er, and lay this toil on Athens?" |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | My son, wilt thou not go succour the dead and these poor women in their need? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Now say, why art thou come? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS Dost speak of issues of the sword, or interchange of words? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS For who but they allot whate''er betides? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS What fate, what issue there awaits the valiant monarch of this land? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS What is this new cry thou utterest? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Shall I then become thy ally? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Shall I to my home, there to see its utter desolation and the blank within my life? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THEBAN HERALD Wert thou then begotten of thy sire to cope with every foe? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THEBAN HERALD Who is the despot of this land? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THEBAN HERALD Wilt thou that I sum up in brief all thou wouldst say? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS And who is yonder man, that moaneth piteously in the gateway? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Are those his children, those boys who stand round him? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Art come to me then for counsel? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS As for yon Capaneus, stricken by the bolt of Zeus- ADRASTUS Wilt bury him apart as a consecrated corpse? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Didst consult seers, and gaze into the flame of burnt- offerings? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Didst thou give thy daughters to them as to wild beasts? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Didst thou rely on heralds, Hermes''servants, in order to bury them? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS How dost thou explain the message of the god? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Is this thy own private resolve, or the wish of all the city? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Mother mine, why weepest thou, drawing o''er thine eyes thy veil? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS To which of the Argives didst thou give thy daughters in marriage? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS What furious warrior- host could spring from dragon''s seed? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS What is this lamentation that I hear, this beating of the breast, these dirges for the dead, with cries that echo from this shrine? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS What said Apollo to determine the maidens''marriage? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS What seekest thou? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS What yet remains, wherein I can serve you? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Where is your Argos now? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Wherefore had the son of Oedipus left Thebes? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Why are they come to us, with suppliant hand outstretched? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Why didst lead thy seven armies against Thebes? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Why had they left the borders of their native land and come to thee? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Why then wilt thou add fresh grief to them? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | THESEUS Why, what say they to thy just request? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Think you they will undermine your land in their graves, or that they will beget children in the womb of earth, from whom shall rise an avenger? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What art thou doing? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What boots it to acquire wealth and livelihood for children, merely to add to the tyrant''s substance by one''s toil? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What fair pretext should I urge before my countrymen? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What greater equality can there be in a city? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What is not well in this? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What is this silly riddle thou propoundest? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What is your fear? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What means it, mother? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What need had I of children? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What need is thine? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What remains for such a hapless wretch as me? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What shall it avail me to touch my daughter''s bones? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What then? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What victory? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | What will the city decide, I wonder? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Where is now the toil I spent upon my sons? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Where the mother''s nursing care? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Wherefore stands she on the towering rock, which o''ertops this temple, advancing along yon path? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Whither thy journey? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Why bear thy tearful load to the fond mother of the dead, a handful of ashes in the stead of those who erst were men of mark in Mycenae? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Why didst thou pass the threshold of my house and seek this land? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Why do ye get you weapons and bring slaughter on one another? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Why train up virgin daughters virtuously in our homes to gratify a tyrant''s whim, whenso he will, and cause tears to those who rear them? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | Will it conclude a friendly truce with me, and shall we obtain burial for our sons? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | did brother rob brother of his inheritance? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | didst give Argive maids to foreign lords? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | do ye not behold my fate? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | or wherefore? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | the loving kiss upon my children''s brow? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | the rest who fell- say, where are they? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | the sleepless vigils mine eyes have kept? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | were its vauntings all in vain? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | what needest thou of this land? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | what now? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | what thank have I for nightly watch? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | who comes hither to interrupt my speech? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | will be said of me, who am the cause thereof? |
euripides-suppliants-2013 | wilt thou betray these suppliant symbols, and banish from thy land these aged women without the boon they should obtain? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE But how was it we had journeyed thither? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Cadmus- CHORUS What of him? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Cithaeron- CHORUS Yes, Cithaeron? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Dost approve? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Father, where is my dear child''s corpse? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Is it all fitted limb to limb in seemly wise? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Where died he? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Whither can I turn, an exile from my country? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Who slew him? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Why? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | AGAVE Ye Bacchanals from Asia CHORUS Why dost thou rouse me? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Am I to enlist among women after being a man? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | And where is Pentheus, my son? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | But how wert thou set free from the clutches of this godless wretch? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS Canst understand, and give distinct replies? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS Dost think it like a lion''s head? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS Is it still the same, or dost think there''s any change? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS Is there still that wild unrest within thy soul? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS Shall we alone of all the city dance in Bacchus''honour? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS To what house wert thou brought with marriage- hymns? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS What child was born thy husband in his halls? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS What head is that thou barest in thy arms? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CADMUS(*,* One line, or maybe more, is missing) AGAVE But what had Pentheus to do with folly of mine? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS But did he not lash fast thy hands with cords? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS Did ye mark yon architrave of stone upon the columns start asunder? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS Dost thou exult? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS From what desert lair? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS How now? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS Share? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS Who art thou? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS Who did the rest? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS Who was it gave the first blow? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | CHORUS Will this white foot e''er join the night- long dance? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Can not gods pass even over walls? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS Am I to be thy guide? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS And would that be a pleasant sight which will prove bitter to thee? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS Are ye so stricken with terror that ye have fallen to the earth, O foreign dames? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS Tell me what I am to suffer; what is the grievous doom thou wilt inflict upon me? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS Were ye cast down when I was led into the house, to be plunged into the gloomy dungeons of Pentheus? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS What kind of scheme, if by my craft I purpose to save thee? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS What use? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS Why then delay the inevitable? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | DIONYSUS Why this sudden, strong desire? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Dost thou mark the awful fate of Actaeon? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Dost thou mark this, O Dionysus, son of Zeus, thy prophets struggling''gainst resistless might? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Hast thou fresh tidings of the Bacchantes? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Hast thou no reverence, sir stranger, for the gods or for Cadmus who sowed the crop of earth- born warriors? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | How came he into my hands? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | How didst thou come forth, to appear thus in front of my palace? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | How scared he looks I what strange tidings will he tell? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Is not mine the carriage of Ino, or Agave my own mother? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Is not this enough to deserve the awful penalty of hanging, this stranger''s wanton insolence, whoe''er he be? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Ought men idly to boast and get them armourers''weapons? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS But how shall I pass through the city of the Cadmeans unseen? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS But what dress dost say thou wilt robe me in? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Hast thou come hither first with this deity? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS How am I to carry out thy wholesome advice? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS How is it thou hast escaped thy fetters and art at large? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Is it by night or day thou performest these devotions? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Is there a Zeus in Lydia, who begets new gods? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Pray, what do I resemble? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Pray, what special feature stamps thy rites? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Say how; am I to serve my own servants? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Shall I be able to carry on my shoulders Cithaeron''s glens, the Bacchanals and all? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Shall I hold the thyrsus in the right or left hand to look most like a Bacchanal? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Shall we take levers, or with my hands can I uproot it, thrusting arm or shoulder''neath its peaks? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Thou sayest thou didst see the god clearly; what was he like? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Was it by night or in the face of day that he constrained thee? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS What is the robe to be? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS What makes thee bring these mysteries to Hellas? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS What profit bring they to their votaries? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS What urgent news dost bring me? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Who was it? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Why so? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Why, where is he? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | PENTHEUS Wilt add aught else to my attire? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | SECOND MESSENGER Dost think Thebes so poor in men? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | TEIRESIAS What loiterer at the gates will call Cadmus from the house, Agenor''s son, who left the city of Sidon and founded here the town of Thebes? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Was it thou, Teiresias, urged him on to this? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Wert thou really once a brute beast? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | What is true wisdom, or what fairer boon has heaven placed in mortals''reach, than to gain the mastery o''er a fallen foe? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | What is true wisdom, or what fairer boon has heaven placed in mortals''reach, than to gain the mastery o''er a fallen foe? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | What joy to forget our years? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | What means this? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | What will he say, I wonder, after this? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Where are we to join the dance? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Where is my aged sire? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Who loiters in the road? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Who was to protect me, if thou shouldst meet with mishap? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Who will summon him hither to my sight to witness my happiness? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Whose child can he be? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Why avoid me? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Why dost thou scorn me? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | Why dost thou suggest my looking thereupon? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | a woman''s? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | ah I what? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | art thou glad, woman, at my master''s misfortunes? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | dost hear the words of Pentheus, dost hear his proud blaspheming Bromius, the son of Semele; first of all the blessed gods at every merry festival? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | dost not see the flame, dost not clearly mark it at the sacred tomb of Semele, the lightning flame which long ago the hurler of the bolt left there? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | in the house or where? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | my child, why fling thy arms around me, as a snowy cygnet folds its wings about the frail old swan? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | shall we chase Agave, mother of Pentheus, from her Bacchic rites, and thereby do our prince a service?" |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | to Cithaeron? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | what Evian cry is this that calls me? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | what do I see? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | what here for sorrow? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | what is faulty bere? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | what is it thou sayest? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | what is this I am carrying in my hands? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | when we with these our hands have caught this prey and torn the monster limb from limb? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | whence comes it? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | where in Nysa, haunt of beasts, or on the peaks of Corycus art thou, Dionysus, marshalling with thy wand the revellers? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | where plant the foot and shake the hoary head? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | who lingers''neath the roof? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | who vexes thy heart, a thorn within thy side? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | why? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | wilt thou essay the road? |
euripides-bacchantes-1942 | wouldst thou see them seated on the hills? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | And how can they provide for the public needs, without alienating the individual property of those who are forced to contribute to them? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | And what can remain, for fellow- citizens, of a heart already divided between avarice, a mistress, and vanity? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Are not all lucrative posts in their hands? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Are not all privileges and exemptions reserved for them alone? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Are not all the advantages of society for the rich and powerful? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | But can men be forced to defend the liberty of any one among them, without trespassing on that of others? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | But how could the government of the State be like that of the family, when the basis on which they rest is so different? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | But how, I shall be asked, can the general will be known in cases in which it has not expressed itself? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | But if we find few Galbas, where are we to look for a Cato? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Do we wish men to be virtuous? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | How can patriotism germinate in the midst of so many other passions which smother it? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | How could a human body subsist if it had veins and no arteries, or if its arteries conveyed the blood only within four inches of the heart? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | If man of eminence robs his creditors, or is guilty of other knaveries, is he not always assured of impunity? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Is it not the directest possible method of depopulating a country, and therefore in the end ruining it? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Is not the public authority always on their side? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Is not this an attack on the substance of the State at its very source? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Is the welfare of a single citizen any less the common cause than that of the whole State? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Must the whole nation be assembled together at every unforeseen event? |
rousseau-discourse-3744 | Need we look for examples of the protection which the State owes to its members, and the respect it owes to their persons? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | And is all that which we call an intelligible essence nothing at all, and only a name? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | And what was the tale about, Critias? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | Are we right in saying that there is one world, or that they are many and infinite? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | How can we doubt the word of the children of the gods? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | How or where shall we find another if we abandon this? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | How, then, shall we settle this point, and what questions about the elements may be fairly raised? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | Indeed, when it is in every direction similar, how can one rightly give to it names which imply opposition? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | Is there any self- existent fire? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | Or is there anything more, my dear Timaeus, which has been omitted? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | Or rather was not the proposal too singular to be forgotten? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | SOCRATES: And what about the procreation of children? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | SOCRATES: And what did we say of their education? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | SOCRATES: Did we not begin by separating the husbandmen and the artisans from the class of defenders of the State? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | SOCRATES: Do you remember what were the points of which I required you to speak? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | SOCRATES: One, two, three; but where, my dear Timaeus, is the fourth of those who were yesterday my guests and are to be my entertainers to- day? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | SOCRATES: Then have I now given you all the heads of our yesterday''s discussion? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | The prelude is charming, and is already accepted by us-- may we beg of you to proceed to the strain? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | This being supposed, let us proceed to the next stage: In the likeness of what animal did the Creator make the world? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | This is the greatest boon of sight: and of the lesser benefits why should I speak? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | Were they not to be trained in gymnastic, and music, and all other sorts of knowledge which were proper for them? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | What nature are we to attribute to this new kind of being? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | and do all those things which we call self- existent exist? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | or are only those things which we see, or in some way perceive through the bodily organs, truly existent, and nothing whatever besides them? |
plato-timaeus-1240 | or created, and had it a beginning? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | ''Tis written, when the man''s throne empty lies, The woman shall be honoured.--Hast thou heard Some tiding sure? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | (_ So was it with Helen in Troy._) And how shall I call the thing that came At the first hour to Ilion city? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | --Oh, who with heart sincere Shall bring praise or grief To lay on the sepulchre Of the great chief? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | --That thou art innocent herein, What tongue dare boast? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | --The fire of good tidings it hath sped the city through, But who knows if a god mocketh? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | ... What fangèd reptile like to her doth creep? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | ... Why lies she with a wolf, this lioness lone, Two- handed, when the royal lion is gone? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Again the awful pains of prophecy Are on me, maddening as they fall.... Ye see them there... beating against the wall? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Already thine the gift of prophecy? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Am I a child to hearken to such things? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Am I a poor Dreamer, that begs and babbles at the door? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | And Loxias did not smite thee in his wrath? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | And criest thou still this deed hath been My work? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | And for thee, what need to tell Thy further tale? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | And how should oath of mine, though bravely sworn, Appease thee? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | And mockers chid me:"Because beacons show On the hills, must Troy be fallen? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | And that which is to be, Ye will know at last; why weep before the hour? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | And what of the doom of craft that first He planted, making the House accurst? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | And who of heralds with such fury came? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Are not the brave dead blest in after days? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | But thou, O daughter of Tyndareus, Queen Clytemnestra, what need? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | By spell or singing who shall charm it back? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Canst speak of truth with comfort joined? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Dark? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Did love of this land work thee such distress? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Did there prevail One rumour, showing him alive or dead? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Did ye then pine for us, as we for you? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Doth ever the sound abate? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Drag out our poor lives, and stand Cowering to these defilers of the land? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | ELDER K. We heard a sound of groaning, nothing plain, How know we-- are we seers?--that one is slain? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | For what cause? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Hast lighted me to darkness yet again? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How could such deed be done? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How did it die? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How long must I stand dallying at the Gate? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How mean you? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How ran the sailors''talk? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How sayst thou? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How shall I weep, what word shall I say? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How shall I weep, what word shall I say? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How sweet? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How, thou poor oarsman of the nether row, When the main deck is master? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How, when God hurled His anger, did it rise? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | How? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Images in sweet guise Carven shall move him never, Where is Love amid empty eyes? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Is not the later still the sweeter day? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Is old Argos so accurst? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Is there proof of this? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Knoweth she them she sent, Knoweth she? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Lie ye so? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Lo, she who was erst reviled Revileth; and who shall say? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Nay, she that lies with him... is she the snare? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Oh, why these mockers at my throat? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Or is it Hope, hath stirred To fire these altars? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Or was he caught By storms in the midst of you, and swept away? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Or who knows if all be true? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Sailed he alone from Troy? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Say, what man this foul deed compasseth? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Sayst thou so?... |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Shall Agamemnon fail his ships and people, And the hosts of Hellas melt as melts the snow? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Shall he come with you, Our land''s belovèd crown, untouched of ill? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Slay a strong and armèd man? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | So in this war thou must my conqueror be? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Some dream- shape came to thee in speaking guise? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Some word within that hovereth without wings? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | That her blood should flow On her father''s hand, hard beside an altar? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | They? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Think, would he refrain? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | This gear Of wreathèd bands, this staff of prophecy? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | This is God''s law and grace, Who then shall hunt the race Of curses from out this hall? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | This throbbing of terror shaped to melody, Moaning of evil blent with music high? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Thou master? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Thy thought, it is very proud; Thy breath is the scorner''s breath; Is not the madness loud In thy heart, being drunk with death? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Troy fallen?--But how long? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Was the God''s heart pierced with desire for thee? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Was this a vow in some great peril made? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What Fury Voices call''st thou to be hot Against this castle? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What frights thee? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What hands may shroud him, what tears may flow? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What hast thou done, O Helen blind of brain, O face that slew the souls on Ilion''s plain, One face, one face, and many a thousand slain? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What house is this? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What if no man believe me? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What is it? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What is that thou startest from? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What is this place? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What is this that evermore,[_ Strophe 1._ A cold terror at the door Of this bosom presage- haunted, Pale as death hovereth? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What news? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What of the blossom, from this root riven, Iphigenîa, the unforgiven? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What others need you fear? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What spring of good hath seercraft ever made Up from the dark to flow? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What tale or tiding hath stirred thy mood To send forth word upon all our ways For incensed worship? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What turns thee in that blind Horror? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What warrant hast thou? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | What would they? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | When fell she, say? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Whence is it sprung, whence wafted on God''s breath, This anguish reasonless? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Where hast thou led me? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Who but a god goes woundless all his way?.... |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Who deemeth me a dupe of drowsing eyes? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Who hath marked out for thee that mystic path Through thy woe''s wilderness? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Why must I come with thee.... To die, only to die? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Why not in open strife Slay him? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Why pity these men''s doom? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Why should I grieve? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Why should such darkness be? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Why sob''st thou for Apollo? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Why think of it? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Why was not he man- hunted from his place, To purge the blood that stained him? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Will she prophesy about her own Sorrows? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Wilt lave with water, and then... How speak the end? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | With what high word shall I greet thee again, How give thee worship, and neither outrun The point of pleasure, nor stint too soon? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Wouldst fright me, like a witless woman? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Ye came to the getting of children, as is meet? |
aeschylus-agamemnon-1860 | Yet know I not the Greek tongue all too well? |
galen-on-2716 | And how can this happen? |
galen-on-2716 | And how does this appear? |
galen-on-2716 | For is it not indicative of peristalsis that always when the upper parts of the gullet contract the lower parts dilate? |
galen-on-2716 | What, then, are they? |
galen-on-2716 | Again, then, we say,"And in what way does the attraction of the stomach not appear? |
galen-on-2716 | And how could bread turn into blood without having gradually parted with its whiteness and gradually acquired redness? |
galen-on-2716 | And how could much presentation take place if it were not preceded by an abundant delivery of nutriment? |
galen-on-2716 | And how could the faeces be generated right away in the small intestine? |
galen-on-2716 | And how is propulsion by the veins impossible? |
galen-on-2716 | And if the watery fluid is so heavy, what plausibility can anyone find in the statement that it assists in the process of anadosis? |
galen-on-2716 | And if they do not rebound, how does the second piece become suspended to the first? |
galen-on-2716 | And what is the semen? |
galen-on-2716 | And what profit did he derive from these opinions from the point of view of treatment? |
galen-on-2716 | And when does it draw this in to a less degree than proper? |
galen-on-2716 | And, as regards the veins and the blood, he omitted even to ask the question"how?" |
galen-on-2716 | Are we to pay attention merely to the evacuation of this humour, and not to its genesis? |
galen-on-2716 | Are we to suppose this latter faculty alone to be as tough as steel and unaffected by circumstances? |
galen-on-2716 | But how about the nerves? |
galen-on-2716 | But if each of the parts formed were to remain as small as when it first came into existence, of what use would that be? |
galen-on-2716 | But if we did not know in what respect they were morbid or in what way they diverged from the normal, how should we be able to ameliorate them? |
galen-on-2716 | But why do I mention the situation of the bladder, peritoneum, and thorax? |
galen-on-2716 | But why was not investigation also made as to the primary originative cause of this? |
galen-on-2716 | Do we still, then, disbelieve that each drug attracts that humour which is proper to it? |
galen-on-2716 | For how are you going to be successful in treatment, if you do not understand the real essence of each disease? |
galen-on-2716 | For how could the nerve, being simple, attract its nourishment, as do the composite veins, by virtue of the tendency of a vacuum to become refilled? |
galen-on-2716 | For is it not indicative of attraction that always when the lower parts of the gullet dilate the upper parts contract?" |
galen-on-2716 | For what are we to say? |
galen-on-2716 | For what could a man possibly say about blood who had no use for innate heat? |
galen-on-2716 | For what is it that he says? |
galen-on-2716 | For what is there in this organ more potent in producing alteration than the factors in the stomach? |
galen-on-2716 | For who does not know that if a drug for attracting phlegm be given in a case of jaundice it will not even evacuate four cyathi of phlegm? |
galen-on-2716 | For, if they do rebound, how then do they pass through into the third piece? |
galen-on-2716 | How could it be otherwise? |
galen-on-2716 | How could it easily become blood if it were not previously prepared by means of a change of this kind? |
galen-on-2716 | How is it, then, that it does not run out? |
galen-on-2716 | How is it, then, that the tendency of a vacuum to become refilled is unable to afford nourishment to one in such a condition? |
galen-on-2716 | How then could bread, beef, beans, or any other food turn into blood if they had not previously undergone some other alteration? |
galen-on-2716 | How, and in what way? |
galen-on-2716 | How, then, are we to imagine it introduced? |
galen-on-2716 | How, then, could blood ever turn into bone, without having first become, as far as possible, thickened and white? |
galen-on-2716 | How, then, do they exert this traction? |
galen-on-2716 | How, then, if you suppose that no good comes from the bile, do you venture to say that an investigation into its origin is of no value in medicine? |
galen-on-2716 | How, then, is he going to diagnose or cure diseases if he is entirely ignorant of what they are, and of what kind and number? |
galen-on-2716 | How, then, was Erasistratus unaware of it, if the primary function of the semen be to draw to itself a due proportion of blood? |
galen-on-2716 | Is it, then, these facts only which are plainly irreconcilable with the views of Asclepiades? |
galen-on-2716 | Is the fourth combination of temperaments, which exists in all other things, non- existent in the humours alone? |
galen-on-2716 | Must we not, therefore, suppose he was either mad, or entirely unacquainted with practical medicine? |
galen-on-2716 | Now, could one begin the enquiry in any better way than with the largest and hollowest organs? |
galen-on-2716 | Now, how will they grow? |
galen-on-2716 | Or if it be an alteration of this latter kind, yet one perhaps which is not proper to the body of the animal? |
galen-on-2716 | Or is it that weakness of this faculty will result in something else than dropsy? |
galen-on-2716 | Or shall we also furnish our argument with the illustration afforded by corn? |
galen-on-2716 | Or, does the know it, and yet voluntarily neglect one of the finest studies in medicine? |
galen-on-2716 | Or, on the other hand, will you be convinced by the proofs which the ancient writers furnished? |
galen-on-2716 | Perhaps, however, they will maintain that it was in the matter of logic that Erasistratus associated himself with the Peripatetic philosophers? |
galen-on-2716 | Possibly you imagine that a house grows when it is being built, or a basket when being plated, or a garment when being woven? |
galen-on-2716 | Then do you venture to say that so great a weight of iron can be suspended by such small bodies? |
galen-on-2716 | Then, in Heaven''s name, is it useful to know how food is digested in the stomach, but unnecessary to know how bile comes into existence in the veins? |
galen-on-2716 | Then, when does it grow? |
galen-on-2716 | What are his words? |
galen-on-2716 | What could he say about yellow or black bile, or phlegm? |
galen-on-2716 | What doctrine, then, took the place of this one when it was condemned? |
galen-on-2716 | What does this say? |
galen-on-2716 | What ensures against a deficiency? |
galen-on-2716 | What further contrivance, then, does he suppose? |
galen-on-2716 | What is it then that measures the quantity of this afflux? |
galen-on-2716 | What is there to wonder at, then, if something should also be transferred from the extreme skin- surface and so reach the intestines and stomach? |
galen-on-2716 | What is this third overseer of animal generation that we are to look for, which will furnish the semen with a due amount of blood? |
galen-on-2716 | What power have we, then, which will draw back the purified blood from the kidneys? |
galen-on-2716 | What prevents more from coming? |
galen-on-2716 | What would Erasistratus have said if he had been alive, and had been asked this question? |
galen-on-2716 | What, however, if the bile is not contained in the food, but comes into existence in the animal''s body? |
galen-on-2716 | What, then, are these sects, and what are the logical consequences of their hypotheses? |
galen-on-2716 | What, then, is the appearance as found on dissection? |
galen-on-2716 | What, then, is the property of this faculty of growth? |
galen-on-2716 | What, then, is this piece of nonsense? |
galen-on-2716 | What, then, is this? |
galen-on-2716 | Who, in fact, does not know that anything which is overcooked grows at first salt and afterwards bitter? |
galen-on-2716 | Why do you confuse us by announcing that you are investigating natural activities with a view to treatment? |
galen-on-2716 | Why, then, did it not at once run downwards when it was in these situations? |
galen-on-2716 | Why, then, did you not call yourselves Empiricists from the beginning? |
galen-on-2716 | Will it not also be useful to know what state of the body is followed by a greater, and what by a smaller occurrence of bile? |
galen-on-2716 | Would it not be absurd for any one to choose voluntarily those articles which contain more bile, rather than those containing less? |
galen-on-2716 | Yet why do I say"rhetorical"? |
galen-on-2716 | and that they then course back to the first piece, and produce entanglements like the former ones? |
galen-on-2716 | that others penetrate into it, and rapidly pass through it by way of its empty channels? |
galen-on-2716 | that these then collide with the second piece of iron and are not able to penetrate it although they penetrated the first piece? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | ''Presently''or''just''refers to the part of future time which is near the indivisible present''now''(''When do you walk? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | ''When did you go?'' |
aristotle-physics-1690 | ''why did they go to war?-because there had been a raid''; or( 3) we are inquiring''for the sake of what? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | ( 3) What in the world then are we to suppose place to be? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | ( 4) Also we may ask: of what in things is space the cause? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | ( 5) Further, too, if it is itself an existent, where will it be? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | ( Further, how can there be any''before''and''after''without the existence of time? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | (''Why is he walking about?'' |
aristotle-physics-1690 | 4 What then after all is place? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Again, does it follow that Being, if one, is motionless? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Again, how can anything of continuous and naturally connected substance move itself? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Again, how will they explain, in the case of what is heavy, its movement downwards? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Again, if void is a sort of place deprived of body, when there is a void where will a body placed in it move to? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Again, the''now''which seems to bound the past and the future- does it always remain one and the same or is it always other and other? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Again, why is qualitative change impossible? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | And again what is the goal of their motion? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | And further, where alteration is in question, how is one alteration to be of equal velocity with another? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | And how are we to define the limits of a species? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | And how is it with alterations? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | And how? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | And if there can be two such things, why can not there be any number coinciding? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | And in what way will things be present either in place- or in the void? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | And now we must consider the same question in the case of becoming and perishing: how is one becoming of equal velocity with another? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Are we then to say that the All is composed of indivisible substances? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Are we, then, to find the commensurability in the subject of the affection or in the affection itself? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | But here again may we not take up the same position and say that the term''much''is equivocal? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | But how will our conclusion work out in the case of the circle and the straight line? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | But in what sense can this be so? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | But is it not only when an equal motion is accomplished by two things in an equal time that the velocities of the two are equal? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | But may we say that things are always commensurable if the same terms are applied to them without equivocation? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | But that is impossible; for why should one move faster? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | But what alteration? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Can it be that in this sense motion grows hot or cold, or changes place, or increases or decreases? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Can it be, then, that the term''quick''has not the same meaning as applied to straight motion and to circular motion respectively? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Certainly: and why should not this in a sense be so? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Do they mean that all things''are''substance or quantities or qualities? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Does it belong then to the same or to different sciences to know each severally? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | First, does it belong to the class of things that exist or to that of things that do not exist? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | For how could''white''come from''musical'', unless''musical''happened to be an attribute of the not- white or of the black? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | For how should you divide it? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | For in respect of coming to be it is mostly in this last way that causes are investigated-''what comes to be after what? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | For instance, why is a saw such as it is? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | For who understands''being itself''to be anything but a particular substance? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | For why downwards rather than upwards or in any other direction? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Further, how can the infinite be itself any thing, unless both number and magnitude, of which it is an essential attribute, exist in that way? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Further, how could a body be carried to its own place, if place was the matter or the form? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Further, is astronomy different from physics or a department of it? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Further, no one could say why a thing once set in motion should stop anywhere; for why should it stop here rather than here? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Here, however, the question arises, has every state of rest that is not permanent a becoming, and is this becoming a coming to a standstill? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | How far then must the physicist know the form or essence? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | How is it, it may be asked, that whereas in local change both remaining and moving may be natural or unnatural, in the other changes this is not so? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | How then can substance be derived from what are not substances? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | How then will the body of the cube differ from the void or place that is equal to it? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | How will there be two alterations of quality in one subject towards one definite quality? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | I mean, e.g, if you take a clod, where will it be moved or where will it be at rest? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | If it exists, we have still to ask how it exists; as a substance or as the essential attribute of some entity? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | If, then,''substance''is not attributed to anything, but other things are attributed to it, how does''substance''mean what is rather than what is not? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Into what then does it grow? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Is an attribute specifically different if the subject is different while the attribute is the same, or must the attribute itself be different as well? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Is it enough that it appears different in one subject from what appears in another? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Is it in fact an immortal never- failing property of things that are, a sort of life as it were to all naturally constituted things? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Is it that locomotion is a genus or that line is a genus? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Is there another time, then, and will there be two equal times at once? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Is time then always different or does the same time recur? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | It is either the body or the soul that undergoes alteration: what is it that correspondingly becomes motion or becoming? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | May we not say, however, that in so far as the thing is still stationary it is in a state of rest in a qualified sense? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Must we not say''of any kind''? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Now if this can occur in an animal, why should not the same be true also of the universe as a whole? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | On the other hand in circular motion there are no such definite points: for why should any one point on the line be a limit rather than any other? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Or are we to say that it never had any becoming and is not perishing, but always was and always will be? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Or how can non- substances be prior to substance? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Or how can there be any time without the existence of motion? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Or in neither way, yet none the less is there something which is infinite or some things which are infinitely many? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Or must there be no sameness at all? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Or ought we not rather to look for it in both? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Or shall we in the first place deny that things are always commensurable if the same terms are applied to them without equivocation? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Or should he investigate the combination of the two? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Since then they are both motions, we may ask: in what are they, if they are different? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Since there are two natures, with which is the physicist concerned? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | So we would raise the question: what would they say of an interval that has colour or sound- is it void or not? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | That divisibility does so we have already shown: that infinity does so will be made clear in what follows? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | The most pertinent question with which to begin will be this: In what sense is it asserted that all things are one? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | The question, what is place? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Then does this hold good of alteration and of increase also? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Then secondly, what is its nature? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Was there ever a becoming of motion before which it had no being, and is it perishing again so as to leave nothing in motion? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | We must therefore make a fresh start and consider the question; if a thing moves itself, in what sense and in what manner does it do so? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Were there then in plants also''olive- headed vine- progeny'', like the''man- headed ox- progeny'', or not? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | What can this be in the present case? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | What sort of destruction then is that? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | What then shall we say about growing things? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | What then will be the nature of its rest and of its movement, or where will they be? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | What will enable us to decide that particular instances of whiteness or sweetness are the same or different? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | What, then, is the reason of this? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | What, then, will the void be the condition of? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | When, then, is there a difference of species? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Why should there be body in one part of the void rather than in another? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Will it occupy the whole place, then? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Will time then fail? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | Yet how can void have a local movement or a place? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | a man changes from falling ill to getting well? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | and is this absence of change a state of rest? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | how will what is placed in it move, or rest? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | is health one? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | or how can the infinite have the one part up and the other down, or an extremity and a centre? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | the rapid growth to maturity of profligates and the rapid ripening of seeds even when not packed close in the earth? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | the''end''of a line and the''end''of walking touch or come to be one? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | things thrown, continue to be in motion when their movent is no longer in contact with them? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | this water? |
aristotle-physics-1690 | what was the primary agent or patient?'' |
aristotle-physics-1690 | whiteness and blackness, meet in the same extreme point? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ANDROMACHE Canst thou not conceal thy pangs of jealousy? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ANDROMACHE Dost look to that? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ANDROMACHE Dost see the image of Thetis with her eye upon thee? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ANDROMACHE Have no tidings come that Peleus may arrive? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ANDROMACHE Is this counted cleverness amongst you who dwell by the Eurotas? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ANDROMACHE Thinkest thou God''s hand is shortened, and that thou wilt not be punished? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ANDROMACHE Why should they? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ANDROMACHE Wilt likewise slay this tender chick, whom thou hast snatched from''neath my wing? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Am I mistaken or do I really see before me the queen of this palace, the daughter of Menelaus? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Am I so elated by my youth, my full healthy figure, the extent of my city, the number of my friends that I wish to supplant thee in thy home? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Am I then so void of sense because I hate injustice, and thou so full of cleverness? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | And dost thou enter the same abode with her, and deign to let her share thy board, and suffer her to rear her brood of vipers in thy house? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | And one said:"What prayer, young warrior, wouldst thou have us offer to the god? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Art not content with ruling thy Spartans? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | But even supposing I escape death myself, will ye kill my child? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | But now that I am come to Phthia, I am resolved to inquire about my kinswoman, Hermione of Sparta; is she alive and well? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | But what is the matter? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Didst think thou wert lashing up a lion or bull? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Dost thou then for a foreigner rail thus at thy nearest friends? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Even then, how will his father brook the murder of his child? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | For e''en an old man, be he brave, is worth a host of raw youths; for what avails a fine figure if a man is coward? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Go on thy way; who will lay a finger on you? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | HERMIONE Barbarian creature, hardened in impudence, wilt thou brave death itself? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | HERMIONE Pray, is it thy intention to probe my wounds yet deeper? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | HERMIONE Why this haughty tone, this bandying of words, as if, forsooth, thou, not I, wert the virtuous wife? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | HERMIONE Wilt thou leave these hallowed precincts of the sea- goddess? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | HERMIONE( chanting) Why should I cover it? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Has she heard that my babe was put out of her reach? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | How can it avail thee to waste thy comeliness and disfigure it by weeping by reason of a mistress''s harsh usage? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | How many a wrong against a wife wouldst thou prefer thy daughter to have found to suffering what I now describe? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | How then can he be wise? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | I ask you and your executioner; why is the palace in an uproar? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Is it any wonder then that ye fail to educate your women in virtue? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Is it that Laconia''s capital yields to Phrygia? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Is my purpose to take thy place and rear myself a race of slaves, mere appendages to my misery? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | LEADER Thou hast it; but who art thou to ask such a question? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | MAID How shall I explain my long absence from the house? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | MAID Surely thou dost not suppose that any of thy messengers heed thee? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | MENELAUS Is not all I have his, and all his mine? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | MENELAUS Why fall at my knees in supplication? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | MENELAUS Why, pray, should one call these old men wise, or those who once had a reputation in Hellas for being so? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Maybe some one will say,"How was it thou didst go thus astray?" |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Might will prevail against thee; why vainly toil in thy feebleness? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | NURSE Art so grieved at having devised thy rival''s death? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | NURSE My child, what wilt thou do? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | NURSE Why vex thyself thus? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | O Phoebus, O thou power divine, how can I believe the story? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ORESTES And didst thou slay them, or did something happen to rescue them from thee? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ORESTES And was he after all defeated by that old man''s prowess? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ORESTES Didst thou with woman''s craft devise a plot against thy rival? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ORESTES Hadst thou any accomplice in this attempted murder? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ORESTES On whom has thy husband set his affections in thy stead? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | ORESTES Why, what misfortune could happen to a woman as yet childless, unless her honour is concerned? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | PELEUS From an ambuscade, or meeting him fairly face to face? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | PELEUS In return for plotting his child''s death? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | PELEUS Shall I not tear my hair, and smite upon my head with grievous blows? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | PELEUS What did she fear? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | PELEUS What view hath he to further thereby? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | PELEUS With whom did she leave the house? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | PELEUS( calling out as he comes in sight) What means this? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Still if misfortune prevents her bearing offspring, is that a reason why we should be left childless? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Tell me, by what right have they pinioned thine arms and are dragging thee and thy child away? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Tell me, proud young wife, what assurance can make me confident of wresting from thee thy lawful lord? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Thou for instance, caitiff that thou art, didst thou ever wrest Troy from Priam with thy picked troops of Hellenes? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Thy daughter will be thrust forth from his house; and what wilt thou say when seeking to betroth her to another? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | To what rocky height can I climb above the sea or''mid some wooded mountain glen, there to die and trouble but the dead? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What can say for myself? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What cause is there why I should die? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What city have I betrayed? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What crime is wanting in your list? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What friend can I look to for relief? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What god is there to whose statue I can as a suppliant haste? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What house have I fired? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What is that moving? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What need had I to care about my lord? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What new schemes are they devising in their eagerness to take away my wretched life? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What pleasure then has life for me? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What reason hast thou? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | What right hast thou to any place''mongst men? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Where can I find some friendly fire? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Wherefore art thou come?" |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Wherefore weigh it well: wilt die thyself, or see him slain for the sin whereof thou art guilty against me and my daughter? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Which of thy children was ever slain by me? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Whither am I to turn my gaze? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Who then will we d her? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Who told her? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Why art thou bent on slaying me? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Why had I to be a mother too and take upon me a double load of suffering? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Why should I tell thee? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Will he marry her? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Wilt thou disfigure thyself? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Wilt thou then go for me? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | Yet why do I mourn the past, and o''er the present never shed a tear or compute its griefs? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | art thou afflicted by gods or men? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | art thou come hither to set my house in order? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | can I provide me''gainst my ills? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | dost not see the flood- gates of trouble opening wide for thee? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | doth not every woman put this first of all? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | give a reason; what mean your lawless machinations? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | give it back, dear nurse, that I may thrust it through my heart Why dost thou prevent me hanging myself? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | is it that my fortune outstrips thine? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | is this how thou hast galled her wrists? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | is this the home, the palace of Achilles''son? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | kind companion of my bondage, for such thou art to her, who, erst thy queen, is now sunk in misery; what are they doing? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | or shall I throw myself in slavish wise at slavish knees? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | or that in me thou seest a free woman? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | or wert afraid she would snatch a sword and defend herself against thee? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | or, supposing thou bear no children, will any one endure that sons of mine should rule o''er Phthia? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | shalt thou rank with men? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | surely not? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | to the present or the past? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | was I to let thy madness lead thee on to death? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | what influence divine am I conscious of? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | what is this? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | what shall be thy life hereafter? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | what spell can I now find to turn death''s stroke aside? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | what will become of me and thee too, mother mine? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | what wilt thou do, old man? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | why didst thou hunt me to snatch away my sword? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | why not begin my mourning then for thee, my child? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | why should I prolong my life, to serve Hermione? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | wilt say her virtue made her leave a worthless lord? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | wilt thou keep her without a husband in thy halls, grown grey in widowhood? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | wilt thou suffer that vile captive, a mere bondmaid, to dwell within thy house and share thy wedded rights? |
euripides-andromache-1948 | with her father? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Not died for thee?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | ''Tis not Alcestis? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | ''Tis so? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | ''Twould please thee, so?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | (_ A pause; then suddenly_) Where lies the tomb?--Where shall I find her now? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | (_ Recovering_) Where am I? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | (_ Taking the_ LITTLE GIRL_ to her_) What good And gentle care will guide thy maidenhood? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | --Admetus cast that dear wife to the grave Alone, with none to see? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | --Dead, and this quiet? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | --Hear ye no sob, or noise of hands Beating the breast? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | --No end, no end, Wilt thou lay to lamentations? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | --Why? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | --Yet''tis this very day...--This very day? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | A stranger, or of kin to thee? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | A wife dead; a dear chair Empty: is that so rare? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | A woman dead, of no one''s kin; why grieve So much? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | ADMETUS(_ approaching with awe_), Beloved eyes; beloved form; O thou Gone beyond hope, I have thee, I hold thee now? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Ah, and what paths are these I tread? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Ah, then she may yet... she may yet grow old? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Alcestis?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And after, think you he would mannerly Take what was set before him? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And aid this house unjustly? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And dare I touch her, greet her, as mine own Wife living? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And had I turned the stranger from my door, Who sought my shelter, hadst thou praised me more? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And he who feeds such beasts, who was his sire? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And how can I, forlorn of thee, live on? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And is Admetus in his home? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And is it life, To live with such an oath hung o''er her head? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And more, when bards tell tales, were it not worse My house should lie beneath the stranger''s curse? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And now wilt mourn for her? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And this good damsel, thou wilt take her home? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And thy charge I fain would hold Sacred.--If not, wouldst have me keep her in The women''s chambers... where my dead hath been? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | And who hath said that Love shall bring More joy to man than fear and strife? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Art thou mad? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Because none wrongs thee, thou must curse thy sire? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Bitter the homeward way, Bitter to seek A widowed house; ah me, Where should I fly or stay, Be dumb or speak? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | But how... how didst thou win her to the light? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | But how...? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | But now How dare I enter in? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | But where? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | But why this mourning hair, this garb of woe? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Children, ye heard his promise? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Died she through me?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Dost comprehend things mortal, how they grow?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Doth it win, with no man''s telling, Some high vision of the truth? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | For men whom the Gods had slain He pitied and raised again; Till God''s fire laid him low, And now, what help have we? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | For never shall ye be From henceforth under the same roof with me.... Must I send heralds and a trumpet''s call To abjure thy blood? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Friend, why so solemn and so cranky- eyed? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Go forth, when none is there To give me a parting word, and I to her?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Hath mine own friend so wronged me in his hall? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Have they nostrils breathing flame? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Heard''st thou not of yore The doom that she must meet? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How break the snare That is round our King? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How came she to be in Thy house to die? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How can an old life weigh against a young? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How canst thou? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How could I have this damsel in my sight And keep mine eyes dry? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How could I lay this woman where my bride Once lay? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How could he?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How often with these kings of Ares''kind Must I do battle? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How other? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How should thy revelling hurt, if that were all? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How, master? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | How? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | I might have lived to we d some prince of pride, Dwell in a king''s house.... Nay, how could I, torn From thee, live on, I and my babes forlorn? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | I still fear: what makes your speech so brave? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | If my truth of tongue Gives pain to thee, why didst thou do me wrong? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Is he strange to thee? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Is not life his one desire? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Is one in all this land more hospitable, One in all Greece? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Is she alive or dead? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Is there wit in Death, who seemed so blind? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Is this some real grief he hath hid from me? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Live? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Look in her face; Look; is she like...? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Man, hast thou heard nothing of our woe? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Must I go starved because some stranger dies? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | My broad lands shall be made Thine, as I had them from my father.... Say, How have I wronged thee? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | My son, whom seekest thou... some Lydian thrall, Or Phrygian, bought with cash?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | My wife... she whom I buried? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Nay, daughter, can the same soul live and die? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | No mourners''cries For one they can not save? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Not easy? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | O Zeus, What escape and where From the evil thing? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Oh, what has happened? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Oh, why didst hinder me to cast This body to the dust and die With her, the faithful and the brave? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | One cometh?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Or doth God mock at me And blast my vision with some mad surmise? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Or how could any wife more shining make Her lord''s love, than by dying for his sake? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Or, entered, how Go forth again? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Otherwise, Let all these questions sleep and just obey My counsel.... Thou believest all I say? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Our King is in his house, Lord Heracles.-- But say, what need brings thee in days like these To Thessaly and Pherae''s wallèd ring? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Prince, why wilt thou smite The smitten? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Say, is she living still Or dead, your mistress? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | She hath such tendance as the dying crave? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Such mocking beside all my pain shall I Endure.... What profit was it to live on, Friend, with my grief kept and mine honour gone? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Surely Admetus suffers, even to- day, For this true- hearted love he hath cast away? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Surely not thy wife? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | THANATOS(_ sneering_) And if words help thee not, an arrow must? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | There is no hope, methinks, to save her still? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Thou callest him thy friend; how didst thou dare Keep hid from him the burden of thy care? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Thou hast touched her? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Thou know''st not? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Thou lovest this light: shall I not love it, I?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Thou will not grant me, then, this boon? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Thou wilt stay Unwed for ever, lonely night and day? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Thy words have some intent: what wouldst thou say? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Time? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | To Pherae am I come By now? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Touched her?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What can I do but weep alone, Alone alway, when such a wife is gone?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What dare ye for him?" |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What hast thou said? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What have I kept away? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What lamb on the altar- strand Stricken shall comfort me? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What mak''st thou at the gate, Thou Thing of Light? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What meaneth this? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What must she, Who seeketh to surpass this woman, be? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What prize doth call thee, and to what far place? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What profit hast thou in such manslaying? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What profit will thy dead wife gain thereby? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What seekest thou? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What tiding shall we hear?... |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What woman wilt thou find at father''s side? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | What? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | When within a thing so sad Lies, thou wilt house a stranger? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Where Is grief like mine, whose wife is dead? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Where in my castle could so young a maid Be lodged-- her veil and raiment show her young: Here, in the men''s hall? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Where is such power? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Where shall I turn for refuge? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Who is it that has died? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Who is it that is dead? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Who will be happier, shouldst thou always weep? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Why here? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Why is Admetus here then, not below? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Why standeth she so still? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Wilt overtread The eternal judgment, and abate And spoil the portions of the dead? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Wilt say I failed in duty to thine age; For that thou hast let me die? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Wrong? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | Ye shapes that front me, wall and gate, How shall I enter in and dwell Among ye, with all Fortune''s spell Dischanted? |
euripides-alcestis-1762 | to affright withal By cursing? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | A man who is robbed of a considerable sum; does he find his vexation for the loss anywise diminished by these sublime reflections? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | And how far it is possible to push these philosophical principles of doubt and uncertainty? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | And shall we, rather than have a recourse to so natural a solution, allow of a miraculous violation of the most established laws of nature? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | And under what pretence can you embrace the one, while you reject the other? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | And what can you say more, allowing all your suppositions and reasonings? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | And what have we to oppose to such a cloud of witnesses, but the absolute impossibility or miraculous nature of the events, which they relate? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | And what he proposes by all these curious researches?_ He is immediately at a loss, and knows not what to answer. |
hume-enquiry-4145 | And what stronger instance can be produced of the surprising ignorance and weakness of the understanding than the present? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Are not these methods of reasoning exactly similar? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Are such remote and uncertain speculations able to counterbalance the sentiments which arise from the natural and immediate view of the objects? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Are the actions of the same person much diversified in the different periods of his life, from infancy to old age? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Are the manners of men different in different ages and countries? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But do we pretend to be acquainted with the nature of the human soul and the nature of an idea, or the aptitude of the one to produce the other? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But if they had any idea of power, as it is in itself, why could not they Measure it in itself? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But is this a sufficient reason, why philosophers should desist from such researches, and leave superstition still in possession of her retreat? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But still I ask; Why take these attributes for granted, or why ascribe to the cause any qualities but what actually appear in the effect? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But what do we mean by that affirmation? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But what greater temptation than to appear a missionary, a prophet, an ambassador from heaven? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But what is the foundation of this method of reasoning? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But when we have pushed up definitions to the most simple ideas, and find still some ambiguity and obscurity; what resource are we then possessed of? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | But you must confess that the inference is not intuitive; neither is it demonstrative: Of what nature is it, then? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | By what invention can we throw light upon these ideas, and render them altogether precise and determinate to our intellectual view? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | By what means has it become so prevalent among our modern metaphysicians? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Can I do better than propose the difficulty to the public, even though, perhaps, I have small hopes of obtaining a solution? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Can we give any reason for these variations, except experience? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Do you disclaim this principle, in order to embrace a more rational opinion, that the perceptions are only representations of something external? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Do you follow the instincts and propensities of nature, may they say, in assenting to the veracity of sense? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | For how much must we diminish from the beauty and value of this species of philosophy, upon such a supposition? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | For what is meant by liberty, when applied to voluntary actions? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | For what is meant by_ innate_? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | For what reason? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Has not the same custom the same influence on all? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | How could_ politics_ be a science, if laws and forms of goverment had not a uniform influence upon society? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | How is this remedied by experience? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | How is this to be accounted for? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | How many more have been celebrated for a time, and have afterwards sunk into neglect and oblivion? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | How many stories of this nature have, in all ages, been detected and exploded in their infancy? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | How often would the great names of Pascal, Racine, Amaud, Nicole, have resounded in our ears? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | How shall we reconcile these contradictions? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Is it more difficult to conceive that motion may arise from impulse than that it may arise from volition? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Is it not experience, which renders a dog apprehensive of pain, when you menace him, or lift up the whip to beat him? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Is it not proper to draw an opposite conclusion, and perceive the necessity of carrying the war into the most secret recesses of the enemy? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Is the behaviour and conduct of the one sex very unlike that of the other? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Is there any more intelligible proposition than to affirm, that all the trees will flourish in December and January, and decay in May and June? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | May not both these balls remain at absolute rest? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | May not the first ball return in a straight line, or leap off from the second in any line or direction? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Or what do you find in this whole question, wherein the security of good morals, or the peace and order of society, is in the least concerned? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | The hearing of an articulate voice and rational discourse in the dark assures us of the presence of some person: Why? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | The question still recurs, on what process of argument this_ inference_ is founded? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | This begets a very natural question; What is meant by a sceptic? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | This happens sometimes, and with regard to some objects: Why may it not happen always, and with regard to all objects? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | We need only ask such a sceptic,_ What his meaning is? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | What logic, what process of argument secures you against this supposition? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | What though these reasonings concerning human nature seem abstract, and of difficult comprehension? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | What would become of_ history,_ had we not a dependence on the veracity of the historian according to the experience which we have had of mankind? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | What, then, is the conclusion of the whole matter? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | When we run over libraries, persuaded of these principles, what havoc must we make? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Whence, I beseech you, do we acquire any idea of it? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Whence, do you think, can such philosophers derive their idea of the gods? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Where is the medium, the interposing ideas, which join propositions so very wide of each other? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Where shall we find such a number of circumstances, agreeing to the corroboration of one fact? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Where then is the power, of which we pretend to be conscious? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Where, then, is the odiousness of that doctrine, which I teach in my school, or rather, which I examine in my gardens? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Wherein, therefore, consists the difference between such a fiction and belief? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Who will assert that he can give the ultimate reason, why milk or bread is proper nourishment for a man, not for a lion or a tiger? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Who would not encounter many dangers and difficulties, in order to attain so sublime a character? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Why has the will an influence over the tongue and fingers, not over the heart or liver? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Why then do you refuse to admit the same method of reasoning with regard to the order of nature? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Why then should his moral resentment against the crime be supposed incompatible with them? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Why then should we give the preference to one, which is no more consistent or conceivable than the rest? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Why? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | Would you know the sentiments, inclinations, and course of life of the Greeks and Romans? |
hume-enquiry-4145 | _ Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence?_ No. |
euripides-trojan-2110 | ''Fore God, the wisdoms and the greatnesses Of seeming, are they hollow all, as things Of naught? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | ''Tis bitter that mine eye Should see it.... O ye Argives, was your spear Keen, and your hearts so low and cold, to fear This babe? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | ''Tis we, thy children; shall no man aid us? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | ( How? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | A deadly wrong they did me, yea within Mine holy place: thou knowest? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Ah, husband still, how shall thy hand be bent To slay me? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Ah, is it thou? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Ah, what bringeth he Of news or judgment? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Ah, woe is me; hath Ajax come again? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Am I still alone? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And Hector''s woe, What is it? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And I, whose slave am I, The shaken head, the arm that creepeth by, Staff- crutchèd, like to fall? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And comest thou now Forth, and hast decked thy bosom and thy brow, And breathest with thy lord the same blue air, Thou evil heart? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And hast thou turned from the Altar of frankincense, And given to the Greek thy temple of Ilion? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And her own Prize that God promised Out of the golden clouds, her virgin crown?... |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And is it granted that I speak, or no, In answer to them ere I die, to show I die most wronged and innocent? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And is this not woe?) |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And my sons? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And this their King so wise, who ruleth all, What wrought he? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And this unhappy one-- would any eyes Gaze now on Hecuba? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And thou, Polyxena, Where art thou? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And thou, what tears can tell thy doom? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And will ye leave her downstricken, A woman, and so old? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | And yet, what help?... |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Argos, belike, or Phthia shall it be, Or some lone island of the tossing sea, Far, far from Troy? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | But what minion of the Greek Is this that cometh, with new words to speak? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Canst thou see help, or refuge anywhere? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Dear God, what would they? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Deep in the heart of me I feel thine hand, Mother: and is it he Dead here, our prince to be, And lord of the land? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Do I not know her? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Doth he not go With me, to the same master? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | For Helen''s sister''s pride? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | For this land''s sake Thou comest, not for Hellas? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | For what woe lacketh here? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Had ye so little pride? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Hath that old hate and deep Failed, where she lieth in her ashen sleep? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Heard ye? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Here on the shore Wouldst hold them or amid mine own salt foam? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | How have they cast me, and to whom A bondmaid? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | How say''st thou? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | How shall it be? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | How should a poet carve the funeral stone To tell thy story true? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | How, for his Spartan bride A tirewoman? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | How? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | How? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | How? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | I ask not thee; I ask my own sad thought, What was there in my heart, that I forgot My home and land and all I loved, to fly With a strange man? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | I shall do service in the hall Of them that slew.... How? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Is God''s word As naught, to me in silence ministered, That in this place she dies?... |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Is it the Isle Immortal, Salamis, waits for me? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Is it the Rock that broods Over the sundered floods Of Corinth, the ancient portal Of Pelops''sovranty?'' |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Is it the flare Of torches? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Is the fall thereof Too deep for all that now is over me Of anguish, and hath been, and yet shall be? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Is''t not rare fortune that the King hath smiled On such a maid? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Know''st thou my bitter stress? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Marked ye? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Mother of him of old, whose mighty spear Smote Greeks like chaff, see''st thou what things are here? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | My daughter? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Nay, Hadst thou no surer rope, no sudden way Of the sword, that any woman honest- souled Had sought long since, loving her lord of old? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Nay, why, my little one? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Nay: Why call I on the Gods? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | O Fire, Fire, where men make marriages Surely thou hast thy lot; but what are these Thou bringest flashing? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | O Helen, Helen, thou ill tree That Tyndareus planted, who shall deem of thee As child of Zeus? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | O thou great wealth of glory, stored Of old in Ilion, year by year We watched... and wert thou nothingness? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Or is it tidings heard From some far Spirit? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Or what child meanest thou? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Out of the tent of the Greek king I steal, my Queen, with trembling breath: What means thy call? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Overseas Bear me afar to strange cities? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Polyxena? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Priam, mine own Priam, Lying so lowly, Thou in thy nothingness, Shelterless, comfortless, See''st thou the thing I am? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Say then what lot hath any? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | See''st thou what end is come? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Seëst thou, seëst thou? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Shall I thrust aside Hector''s beloved face, and open wide My heart to this new lord? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Shall the ship go heavier for her sin? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | She liveth still? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Speak first; wilt thou be one In heart with me and hand till all be done? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Speak, Friend? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Ten years behind ten years athwart his way Waiting: and home, lost and unfriended.... Nay: Why should Odysseus''labours vex my breath? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | The flame of the cakes of corn, is it gone from hence, The myrrh on the air and the wreathèd towers gone? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | The sainted of Apollo? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Thou hast some counsel of the Gods, or word Spoken of Zeus? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Thou of the Ages, O wherefore fleëst thou, Lord of the Phrygian, Father that made us? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Thou pitiest her? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Thy land is fallen and thy lord, and thou A prisoner and alone, one woman; how Canst battle against us? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Tis ordered, this child.... Oh, How can I tell her of it? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | To Odysseus''gate My mother goeth, say''st thou? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | To watch a tomb? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Weak limbs, why tremble ye? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Weepest thou, Mother mine own? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What fall yet lacketh, ere we touch The last dead deep of misery? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What fashion of the laws of Greece? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What hope have I To hold me? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What is it? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What is there that I fear to say? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What is this?... |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What knoweth she of evils like to these, That dead Polyxena, thou weepest for? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What lingereth still, O wounded City, of unknown ill, Ere yet thou diest? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What lord, what land.... Ah me, Phthia or Thebes, or sea- worn Thessaly? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What man now hath her, or what doom? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What meanest thou? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What means that sudden light? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What of Andromache, Wife of mine iron- hearted Hector, where Journeyeth she? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What of joy Falls, or can fall on any child of Troy? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What of that other child Ye reft from me but now? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What seekest thou? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What sought ye then that ye came? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | What woman''s lips can so forswear her dead, And give strange kisses in another''s bed? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | When wast thou taken? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Where lies the galley? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Wherefore should great Hera''s eyes So hunger to be fair? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Wherefore? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Whither moves thy cry, Thy bitter cry? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Whither shall I tread? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Who am I that I sit Here at a Greek king''s door, Yea, in the dust of it? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Who be these on the crested rock? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Who found thee so? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Why call on things so weak For aid? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Why didst thou cheat me so? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Why raise me any more? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Why should I speak the shame of them, before They come?... |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Why will ye slay this innocent, that seeks No wrong?... |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Will they leave him here to build again The wreck?... |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Yea, and thou, And these that lie around, do they not know? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | Yet I would ask thee, what decree is gone Forth for my life or death? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | and is it come, the end of all, The very crest and summit of my days? |
euripides-trojan-2110 | who is there That prayeth heaven, and in so strange a prayer? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | ARTEMIS Doth my story wound thee, Theseus? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Are there not young servants here? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Art dumb? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Art thou the man who dost with gods consort, as one above the vulgar herd? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | At length he stayed his lamentation and spake:"Why weakly rave on this wise? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | By what cruel stroke of chance? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Come, then, why so dumb? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Did I not foresee thy purpose, did I not bid thee keep silence on the very matter which is now my shame? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Did aspire to fill the husband''s place after thee and succeed to thy house? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Did some husband come to blows with him, one whose wife, like mine, had suffered brutal violence? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Did this woman exceed in beauty all her sex? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Dost remember those three prayers thy father granted thee, fraught with certain issue? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | FIRST SEMI- CHORUS Friends, what shall we do? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Great Zeus, dost thou see this? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | HIPPOLYTUS Dost see me, mistress mine? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | HIPPOLYTUS Great Zeus, why didst thou, to man''s sorrow, put woman, evil counterfeit, to dwell where shines the sun? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | HIPPOLYTUS Not I; but wherefore such a question? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | HIPPOLYTUS Say, hath some friend been slandering me and hath he still thine ear? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | HIPPOLYTUS Whither shall I turn? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | HIPPOLYTUS Whom speak''st thou of? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | HIPPOLYTUS Why not? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | HIPPOLYTUS Why say this, if, as thou pretendest, thy lips are free from blame? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Hath aught befallen old Pittheus? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Hath she, poor lady, as a last request, written her bidding as to my marriage and her children? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How came she thus? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How can I escape the stroke of fate? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How can these, queen Cypris, ocean''s child, e''er look their husbands in the face? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How could I commit so foul a crime when by the very mention of it I feel myself polluted? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How from my life get rid of this relentless agony? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How many fathers, when their sons have gone astray, assist them in their amours? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How many, prithee, men of sterling sense, when they see their wives unfaithful, make as though they saw it not? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How my pangs conceal, kind friends? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | How shall I speak of thee, my poor wife, what tale of direst suffering tell? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER Art thou bent then on some cureless woe? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER But dost not thou insist in thy endeavour to find out her complaint, her mind? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER But there''s a charm in courtesy? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER Dost know, then, the way of the world? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER Dost think the same law holds in heaven as well? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER Is this infatuation, or an attempt to die? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER Nor tell what source these sorrows have? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS O what wilt thou do now in thy cruel dilemma? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS What is it? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS What, Phaedra, is this dread event within thy house? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | LEADER Why, then, dost thou neglect to greet an august goddess? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | MESSENGER But say, are we to bring the victim hither, or how are we to fulfil thy wishes? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | MESSENGER Ladies, where may I find Theseus, king of the country? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE And dost thou then conceal this boon despite my prayers? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE Daughter, are thy hands from bloodshed pure? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE Hath Theseus wronged thee in any wise? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE Her love for the bull? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE My child, what wild speech is this? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE My son, what wilt thou do? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE She hides from him her sorrow, and vows she is not ill. LEADER Can he not guess it from her face? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE The issue of some enemy''s secret witchery? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE There then I cover thee; but when will death hide my body in the grave? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE What ails thee, child? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE What keener grief for me than failing to win thee? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE What marvel? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE What means this solemn speech? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE Why betray thy frenzy in these wild whirling words? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | NURSE Why, why, my child, these anxious cares? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | O fortune, how heavily hast thou set thy foot on me and on my house, by fiendish hands inflicting an unexpected stain? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | O ye linked Graces, why are ye sending from his native land this poor youth, guiltless sufferer, far from his home? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | PHAEDRA How now? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | PHAEDRA Is it just, is it any satisfaction to me, that thou shouldst wound me first, then bandy words with me? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | PHAEDRA Is thy drug a salve or potion? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | PHAEDRA Never may I prove untrue to himl NURSE Then what strange mystery is there that drives thee on to die? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | PHAEDRA The Amazon''s son, whoever he may be- NURSE Mean''st thou Hippolytus? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | PHAEDRA What is it they mean when they talk of people being in"love-"? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS Why should we? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Say how he perished; how fell the uplifted hand of justice to smite the villain who dishonoured me? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | She is dead; dost think that this will save thee? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | THESEUS Dost fly to speechless witnesses? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | THESEUS Had grief so chilled her blood? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | THESEUS How now? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | THESEUS What sayest thou? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | THESEUS Who slew him? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | THESEUS Women, can ye tell me what the uproar in the palace means? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Thou art in love; what wonder? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | What arts, what arguments have we, once we have made a slip, to loose by craft the tight- drawn knot? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | What can I do for thee? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | What counsel shall I give thee? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | What god will appear to help me, what mortal to take my part or help me in unrighteousness? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | What hast thou to do with the chase? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | What hath each passing day and every hour in store for thee? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | What limit will its bold assurance have? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | What oaths, what pleas can outweigh this letter, so that thou shouldst''scape thy doom? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Where will this history end? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Whither have I strayed, my senses leaving? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Who can tell me what caused the fatal stroke that reached thy heart, dear wife? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Who cast the shadow o''er thy life, poor lady? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Who stands there at my right side? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Why dost thou not for very shame hide beneath the dark places of the earth, or change thy human life and soar on wings to escape this tribulation? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Why so eager for the flowing spring, when hard by these towers stands a hill well watered, whence thou may''st freely draw? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Will no one come and save me for all my virtue?" |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Will no one tell me what befell? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Wilt thou banish me, without so much as waiting for Time''s evidence on my case? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Wilt thou refuse to yield? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Wilt thou, because thou lov''st, destroy thyself? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | Yet why do I thus bandy words with thee, when before me lies the corpse, to be the clearest witness? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | and I, though guiltless, banned? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | art thou the chaste and sinless saint? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | banish me untried, without even testing my oath, the pledge offer, or the voice of seers? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | daughter, or what meanest thou? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | destroy thy friends? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | do they never feel one guilty thrill that their accomplice, night, or the chambers of their house will find a voice and speak? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | dost absolve me from bloodshed? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | dost see my present suffering? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | doth my palace all in vain give shelter to a herd of menials? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | doth that touch the quick? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | from what refrain? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | hath some strange calamity o''ertaken these two neighbouring cities? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | is it a child''s life death robs me of? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | my child, art thou in love? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | my wife dead? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | or what had befallen her? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | pray, tell me if ye know; is he within the palace here? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | the manner of her death? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | think you we should enter the house, and loose the queen from the tight- drawn noose? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | thy wife is dead? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | to what lengths will it proceed? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | we needs must call upon the gods, our lords, so wilt thou listen to a friendly word from me? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | what can I say? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | what have I done? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | what is this, my child? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | what is this? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | what means this letter? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | what wilt thou do? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | where can I escape my load of woe? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | whose friendly house will take me in, an exile on so grave, a charge? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | why do I not unlock my lips, seeing that I am ruined by you, the objects of my reverence? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | why have I crowned my head with woven garlands, when misfortune greets my embassage? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | why should I? |
euripides-hippolytus-2027 | why? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | ( 2) how many kinds of law- courts are there? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | ( 2) what are the motives of those who make them? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | ( 3) are the judges chosen by vote or by lot? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | ( 3) whence arise political disturbances and quarrels? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Again, if Socrates makes the women common, and retains private property, the men will see to the fields, but who will see to the house? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Again, will the good management of a household be promoted by his arrangement of homesteads? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Again, will there not be confusion if the judge thinks that damages should be given, but not so much as the suitor demands? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Also about the appointment to them- from whom are they to be chosen, by whom, and how? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And are they to be changed by anybody who likes, or only by certain persons? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And even granting that music may form the character, the objection still holds: why should we learn ourselves? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And if the guardians are not happy, who are? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And if this is often a cause of disturbance among the meaner sort, how much more among high- spirited warriors? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And if this is true of the body, how much more just that a similar distinction should exist in the soul? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And is it by the agency of time, which, as he declares, makes all things change, that things which did not begin together, change together? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And what if they, in like manner, rob and plunder the people- is this just? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And who can say whether, having this use, it may not also have a nobler one? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And who will do so if the agricultural class have both their property and their wives in common? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | And, whichever way we answer the question, a difficulty arises; for, if they have virtue, in what will they differ from freemen? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Are his children to succeed him? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Are we to assign to a thousand poor men the property qualifications of five hundred rich men? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | BOOK THREE I HE who would inquire into the essence and attributes of various kinds of governments must first of all determine''What is a state?'' |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Besides, in an over- populous state foreigners and metics will readily acquire the rights of citizens, for who will find them out? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But if this is not injustice, pray what is? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But is it just then that the few and the wealthy should be the rulers? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But is there not a great difference in the two cases? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But may not men have both of them and yet be deficient in self- control? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But should a well ordered state have all things, as far as may be, in common, or some only and not others? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But there still remains a question: equality or inequality of what? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But what are to be included under the term''offices''? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But what difference does it make whether women rule, or the rulers are ruled by women? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But what if the law itself be democratical or oligarchical, how will that help us out of our difficulties? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But what if the many are men of property and have the power in their hands? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But when the law can not determine a point at all, or not well, should the one best man or should all decide? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But why is such a cause of change peculiar to his ideal state, and not rather common to all states, nay, to everything which comes into being at all? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | But will there then be no case in which the virtue of the good citizen and the virtue of the good man coincide? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Does he not say-''When I find a man skulking apart from the battle, nothing shall save him from the dogs and vultures, for in my hands is death''? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Even if we admit that the laws are to be changed, are they all to be changed, and in every state? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Even supposing the principle to be maintained that kingly power is the best thing for states, how about the family of the king? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | For example, if something has come into being the day before the completion of the cycle, will it change with things that came into being before? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | For how can a state which has any title to the name be of a slavish nature? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | For if a noble nature is equally required in both, why should one of them always rule, and the other always be ruled? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | For if the ruler is intemperate and unjust, how can he rule well? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | For what if the cause of the war be unjust? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | For who can be the general of such a vast multitude, or who the herald, unless he have the voice of a Stentor? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Further, under different constitutions, should the magistrates be the same or different? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Further, what use are farmers to the city? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Further, why should the perfect state change into the Spartan? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | He allows that a man''s whole property may be increased fivefold, but why should not his land also increase to a certain extent? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | How are we to decide? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | How can that which is not even lawful be the business of the statesman or the legislator? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | I mean,( 1) are the judges taken from all, or from some only? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | III Next comes the question, how is this equality to be obtained? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | If not, how will he administer his kingdom? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | If the poor, for example, because they are more in number, divide among themselves the property of the rich- is not this unjust? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | If the subject, how can he obey well? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | If, knowing and loving their own interests, they do not always attend to them, may they not be equally negligent of the interests of the public? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | If, on the other hand, the inferior classes are to be like other cities in respect of marriage and property, what will be the form of the community? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | In making the election ought we not to consider two points? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | In this way they will go on splitting up the damages, and some will grant the whole and others nothing: how is the final reckoning to be taken? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | In what city shall we find a hundred persons of good birth and of virtue? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Is it not obvious that a state may at length attain such a degree of unity as to be no longer a state? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | It is evident that this is the best kind of democracy, and why? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | It is evident, therefore, that we must begin by asking, Who is the citizen, and what is the meaning of the term? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | It is further asked: When are men, living in the same place, to be regarded as a single city- what is the limit? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Nay, there may indeed be cases which the law seems unable to determine, but in such cases can a man? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Now what is the cure of these three disorders? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Now, should these two classes be distinguished, or are both functions to be assigned to the same persons? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Or a tyrant? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Or is each individual to have his own? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Or shall we say that it contributes to the enjoyment of leisure and mental cultivation, which is a third alternative? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Or the good? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Or the one best man? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Or the wealthy? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Over what shall they preside, and what shall be their duration? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Secondly, does not the same principle apply to elections? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Secondly, is it well that a single man should have the supreme power in all things? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Shall they be for life or for a long term of years; or, if for a short term only, shall the same persons hold them over and over again, or once only? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Shall we use them all or make a distinction? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | The Helen of Theodectes says: Who would presume to call me servant who am on both sides sprung from the stem of the Gods? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | The varieties depend on three terms, and the combinations of these give all possible modes: first, who appoints? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Then ought the good to rule and have supreme power? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Then will it be well that the one best man should rule? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | There is another point: Should not the amount of property be defined in some way which differs from this by being clearer? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | This is a short and practical definition but there are some who raise the further question: How this third or fourth ancestor came to be a citizen? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | This question runs up into another: on what principle shall we ever say that the state is the same, or different? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | V There still remains one more question about the citizen: Is he only a true citizen who has a share of office, or is the mechanic to be included? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | We want to know( 1) what is the feeling? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | What does this mean but that they distinguish freedom and slavery, noble and humble birth, by the two principles of good and evil? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | What is this but the temporary destruction of the state and dissolution of society? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Why is this? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Will not the many? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | X There is also a doubt as to what is to be the supreme power in the state: Is it the multitude? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | XVII But may not all this be true in some cases and not in others? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | Yet, if the two other classes have no share in the government, how can they be loyal citizens? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | and shall the same distinction be made for those who practice music with a view to education, or shall it be some other? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | and shall we give the thousand a power equal to that of the five hundred? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | and thirdly, how? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | or, thirdly, shall some employments be assigned to individuals and others common to all? |
aristotle-politics-1790 | secondly, from whom? |
plato-crito-1025 | ''For just consider, if you transgress and err in this sort of way, what good will you do either to yourself or to your friends? |
plato-crito-1025 | ''Or against those of us who after birth regulate the nurture and education of children, in which you also were trained? |
plato-crito-1025 | And I should like to know whether I may say the same of another proposition-- that not life, but a good life, is to be chiefly valued? |
plato-crito-1025 | And because we think right to destroy you, do you think that you have any right to destroy us in return, and your country as far as in you lies? |
plato-crito-1025 | And first of all answer this very question: Are we right in saying that you agreed to be governed according to us in deed, and not in word only? |
plato-crito-1025 | And has the argument which was once good now proved to be talk for the sake of talking-- mere childish nonsense? |
plato-crito-1025 | And have we, at our age, been earnestly discoursing with one another all our life long only to discover that we are no better than children? |
plato-crito-1025 | And shall that be the premiss of our argument? |
plato-crito-1025 | And that which has been destroyed is-- the body? |
plato-crito-1025 | And what will you say to them? |
plato-crito-1025 | And where will be your fine sentiments about justice and virtue? |
plato-crito-1025 | Are all our former admissions which were made within a few days to be thrown away? |
plato-crito-1025 | CRITO: And what was the nature of the vision? |
plato-crito-1025 | CRITO: I think that you are right, Socrates; how then shall we proceed? |
plato-crito-1025 | CRITO: Why do you think so? |
plato-crito-1025 | Do I not desert the principles which were acknowledged by us to be just-- what do you say? |
plato-crito-1025 | Do the laws speak truly, or do they not? |
plato-crito-1025 | Do we suppose that principle, whatever it may be in man, which has to do with justice and injustice, to be inferior to the body? |
plato-crito-1025 | Has the ship come from Delos, on the arrival of which I am to die? |
plato-crito-1025 | How shall we answer, Crito? |
plato-crito-1025 | I am to die on the day after the arrival of the ship? |
plato-crito-1025 | I ask you whether I was right in maintaining this? |
plato-crito-1025 | In leaving the prison against the will of the Athenians, do I wrong any? |
plato-crito-1025 | In the first place did we not bring you into existence? |
plato-crito-1025 | Is that true or not?'' |
plato-crito-1025 | Is this the benefit which you will confer upon them? |
plato-crito-1025 | Must we not assent? |
plato-crito-1025 | Now were we right in maintaining this before I was condemned? |
plato-crito-1025 | Now, can there be a worse disgrace than this-- that I should be thought to value money more than the life of a friend? |
plato-crito-1025 | Or do you decline and dissent from this? |
plato-crito-1025 | Or will you go to them without shame, and talk to them, Socrates? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: Again, Crito, may we do evil? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: And a good life is equivalent to a just and honorable one-- that holds also? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: And are you only just arrived? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: And he ought to fear the censure and welcome the praise of that one only, and not of the many? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: And the opinions of the wise are good, and the opinions of the unwise are evil? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: And what of doing evil in return for evil, which is the morality of the many-- is that just or not? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: And what was said about another matter? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: And what will the evil be, whither tending and what affecting, in the disobedient person? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: And will life be worth having, if that higher part of man be destroyed, which is improved by justice and depraved by injustice? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: But if this is true, what is the application? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: But why, my dear Crito, should we care about the opinion of the many? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: Could we live, having an evil and corrupted body? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: For doing evil to another is the same as injuring him? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: More honourable than the body? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: Nor when injured injure in return, as the many imagine; for we must injure no one at all? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: The good are to be regarded, and not the bad? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: Then we must do no wrong? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: Then why did you sit and say nothing, instead of at once awakening me? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: Very good; and is not this true, Crito, of other things which we need not separately enumerate? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: What is the exact time? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: What? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES: Why have you come at this hour, Crito? |
plato-crito-1025 | SOCRATES:''And was that our agreement with you?'' |
plato-crito-1025 | Say whether you have any objection to urge against those of us who regulate marriage?'' |
plato-crito-1025 | Shall we say so or not? |
plato-crito-1025 | Suppose I say that? |
plato-crito-1025 | Suppose now I ask, why I rather than anybody else? |
plato-crito-1025 | Tell us,--What complaint have you to make against us which justifies you in attempting to destroy us and the state? |
plato-crito-1025 | Were not the laws, which have the charge of education, right in commanding your father to train you in music and gymnastic?'' |
plato-crito-1025 | What answer shall we make to this, Crito? |
plato-crito-1025 | What will be our answer, Crito, to these and the like words? |
plato-crito-1025 | What will be the fairest way of considering the question? |
plato-crito-1025 | What you say here about virtue and justice and institutions and laws being the best things among men? |
plato-crito-1025 | Will you then flee from well- ordered cities and virtuous men? |
plato-crito-1025 | Will you, O professor of true virtue, pretend that you are justified in this? |
plato-crito-1025 | Would that be decent of you? |
plato-crito-1025 | and is existence worth having on these terms? |
plato-crito-1025 | are you not going by an act of yours to overturn us-- the laws, and the whole state, as far as in you lies? |
plato-crito-1025 | or rather do I not wrong those whom I ought least to wrong? |
plato-crito-1025 | the law would answer;''or were you to abide by the sentence of the state?'' |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Which was the most necessary, society already formed to invent languages, or languages already invented to form society? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | And had he presumed to exact it on pretense of defending them, would he not have immediately received the answer in the apologue? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | And how often perhaps has not every one of these secrets perished with the discoverer? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | And which is aptest to become insupportable to those who enjoy it, a civil or a natural life? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Had he a hatchet, would his hand so easily snap off from an oak so stout a branch? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Had he a horse, would he with such swiftness shoot along the plain? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Had he a ladder, would he run so nimbly up a tree? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Had he a sling, would it dart a stone to so great a distance? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | How many ages perhaps revolved, before men beheld any other fire but that of the heavens? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | How many different accidents must have concurred to make them acquainted with the most common uses of this element? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | How often have they let it go out, before they knew the art of reproducing it? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | In fact, what is generosity, what clemency, what humanity, but pity applied to the weak, to the guilty, or to the human species in general? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Is it not, because he thus returns to his primitive condition? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Of what service can beauty be, where there is no love? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Was a deer to be taken? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Was ever any free savage known to have been so much as tempted to complain of life, and lay violent hands on himself? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | What anguish must he not suffer at his not being able to assist the fainting mother or the expiring infant? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | What equivalent could he have offered them for so fine a privilege? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | What horrible emotions must not such a spectator experience at the sight of an event which does not personally concern him? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | What progress could mankind make in the forests, scattered up and down among the other animals? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | What therefore is precisely the subject of this discourse? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | What will wit avail people who do n''t speak, or craft those who have no affairs to transact? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | What worse treatment can we expect from an enemy? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Who traced it out for you, another might object, and what right have you to expect payment at our expense for doing that we did not oblige you to do? |
rousseau-discourse-7821 | Why is man alone subject to dotage? |
plato-ion-806 | ),''-- will the art of the fisherman or of the rhapsode be better able to judge whether these lines are rightly expressed or not? |
plato-ion-806 | Am I not right, Ion? |
plato-ion-806 | And if I were to ask whether I and you became acquainted with this fact by the help of the same art of arithmetic, you would acknowledge that we did? |
plato-ion-806 | And will they not choose Ion the Ephesian to be their general, and honour him, if he prove himself worthy? |
plato-ion-806 | Are not these the themes of which Homer sings? |
plato-ion-806 | Are you from your native city of Ephesus? |
plato-ion-806 | As he does not know all of them, which of them will he know? |
plato-ion-806 | But just now I should like to ask you a question: Does your art extend to Hesiod and Archilochus, or to Homer only? |
plato-ion-806 | But let me ask a prior question: You admit that there are differences of arts? |
plato-ion-806 | Do you mean to say that the art of the rhapsode and of the general is the same? |
plato-ion-806 | Do you think that the Hellenes want a rhapsode with his golden crown, and do not want a general? |
plato-ion-806 | Does not Homer speak of the same themes which all other poets handle? |
plato-ion-806 | For the rhapsode ought to interpret the mind of the poet to his hearers, but how can he interpret him well unless he knows what he means? |
plato-ion-806 | Have you already forgotten what you were saying? |
plato-ion-806 | ION: And what is there in Homer of which I have no knowledge? |
plato-ion-806 | ION: Who may he be? |
plato-ion-806 | ION: Why, what am I forgetting? |
plato-ion-806 | Is not war his great argument? |
plato-ion-806 | Let us consider this matter; is not the art of painting a whole? |
plato-ion-806 | Must the same art have the same subject of knowledge, and different arts other subjects of knowledge? |
plato-ion-806 | Now would you say that the art of the rhapsode or the art of medicine was better able to judge of the propriety of these lines? |
plato-ion-806 | Now, Ion, will the charioteer or the physician be the better judge of the propriety of these lines? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And Homer in a better way? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And are you aware that you produce similar effects on most of the spectators? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And are you the best general, Ion? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And can you interpret better what Homer says, or what Hesiod says, about these matters in which they agree? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And do not the other poets sing of the same? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And do the Epidaurians have contests of rhapsodes at the festival? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And he who is a good general is also a good rhapsode? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And he who judges of the good will be the same as he who judges of the bad speakers? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And he will be the arithmetician? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And if a different knowledge, then a knowledge of different matters? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And if you judged of performers on the lyre, you would admit that you judged of them as a performer on the lyre, and not as a horseman? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And if you knew the good speaker, you would also know the inferior speakers to be inferior? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And if you were a prophet, would you not be able to interpret them when they disagree as well as when they agree? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And in judging of the general''s art, do you judge of it as a general or a rhapsode? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And the art of the rhapsode is different from that of the charioteer? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And there are and have been many painters good and bad? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And this is true of all the arts;--that which we know with one art we do not know with the other? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And were you one of the competitors-- and did you succeed? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And who is he, and what is his name? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And will the reason be that this is his art, or will there be any other reason? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And you admitted that being different they would have different subjects of knowledge? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And you are the best of Hellenic rhapsodes? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: And you rhapsodists are the interpreters of the poets? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Are there any things about which Homer and Hesiod agree? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: At any rate he will know what a general ought to say when exhorting his soldiers? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: But he will know what a slave ought to say? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: But he will know what a spinning- woman ought to say about the working of wool? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: But how did you come to have this skill about Homer only, and not about Hesiod or the other poets? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Do you know that the spectator is the last of the rings which, as I am saying, receive the power of the original magnet from one another? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Do you mean that a rhapsode will know better than the pilot what the ruler of a sea- tossed vessel ought to say? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Do you not remember that you declared the art of the rhapsode to be different from the art of the charioteer? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Is not the same person skilful in both? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: My good Ion, did you never hear of Apollodorus of Cyzicus? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Nor do we know by the art of the carpenter that which we know by the art of medicine? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Or will the rhapsode know better than the physician what the ruler of a sick man ought to say? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Surely not about things in Homer of which you have no knowledge? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Tell me, then, what I was intending to ask you,--whether this holds universally? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Then he who has no knowledge of a particular art will have no right judgment of the sayings and doings of that art? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Then he who is a good rhapsode is also a good general? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Then upon your own showing the rhapsode, and the art of the rhapsode, will not know everything? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Then which will be a better judge of the lines which you were reciting from Homer, you or the charioteer? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Then you are the interpreters of interpreters? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Well, but is the art of the rhapsode the art of the general? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: What, in a worse way? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: Why, does not Homer speak in many passages about arts? |
plato-ion-806 | SOCRATES: You would argue, as I should, that when one art is of one kind of knowledge and another of another, they are different? |
plato-ion-806 | Was not this the lesson which the God intended to teach when by the mouth of the worst of poets he sang the best of songs? |
plato-ion-806 | Were not the Ephesians originally Athenians, and Ephesus is no mean city? |
plato-ion-806 | Which do you prefer to be thought, dishonest or inspired? |
plato-ion-806 | Would you like me to explain my meaning, Ion? |
plato-ion-806 | You ask,''Why is this?'' |
plato-ion-806 | what is happening to you? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON Am I to loose my son, old friends, or what? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON But who will bury me, my son? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON Didst worst him in fight, or receive him from the goddess? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON Does not Eurystheus know that thou hast returned to the upper world? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON How is it thou wert so long beneath the earth? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON How? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON Is the monster really lodged in the house of Eurystheus? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON My aged friends, shall I approach the scene of my sorrow? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON O Zeus, dost thou behold these deeds proceeding from the throne of Hera? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON She, I believe, so far as I can guess from outside- LYCUS What grounds hast thou to base thy fancy on? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON When wilt thou come? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON Where is he? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | AMPHITRYON Why, didst thou in very deed go to the house of Hades, my son? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | After I was grown to man''s estate, of all the toils I then endured what need to tell? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | After all, what was the fine exploit thy husband achieved, if he did kil a hydra in a marsh or that monster of Nemea? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | And they the while in turn keep asking me,"Mother, whither is our father gone from the land? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | And yet what shalt thou say in thy defence, if thou, child of man, dost kick against the pricks of fate, while they do not? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Are these your weapons for the hard struggle? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | CHORUS Is he sleeping? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | CHORUS O Zeus, why hast thou shown such savage hate against thine own son and plunged him in this sea of troubles? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | CHORUS What, canst thou prove this piteous ruin was a father''s outrage on his children? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Can it be that the blood of thy late victims has driven thee frantic?" |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Do you trust that these children''s father, who lies dead in the halls of Hades, will return? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | For whom ought I to help rather than wife and children and aged sire? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES And were ye being haled to death? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Did I dash my house to pieces or incite others thereto? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Did he meet him in fair fight, or was the land sick and weak? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Didst ever find another more afflicted? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Do they make so light of my hard warring with the Minyae? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Father, why dost thou weep and veil thy eyes, standing aloof from thy beloved son? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Had he no mercy, to ill- use the old man so? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Have I by living grown so abject in thy sight? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES How so? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES How then canst thou say of me, that I am abased by my troubles? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES I am undone; what mischance wilt thou unfold? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES O Theseus, didst thou witness this struggle with my children? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Was I so poor in friends in my absence? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Was it I that slew my wife also? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES What about thyself? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES What meanest thou? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES What means this dress they wear, suited to the dead? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES What put such desperate thoughts into your heads? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES What sayst thou? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Where did my frenzy seize me? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Wherein, father, am I now showing more than fitting haste? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Why did ye leave my hearth and home? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Why hath panic fallen on thee and my aged sire? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Why then hast thou unveiled my head to the sun? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Why, what had he to fear from my orphan babes? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | HERACLES Why, what is there so sad in my case that thou dost weep? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Have they not intermarried in ways that law forbids? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Have they not thrown fathers into ignominious chains to gain the sovereign power? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | How long do ye seek to prolong your lives? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | How now? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | If I share thy misfortune, what is that to me? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Is it for this then that Heracles''children should be spared? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | LEADER Have not the brave amongst mankind a fair opening for speech, albeit slow to begin? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | LYCUS Pray, where is Megara? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Let me draw near to them and inquire; lady, what strange stroke of fate hath fallen on the house? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | MEGARA Come now, who is to sacrifice or butcher these poor children? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | MEGARA Dost need a further taste of grief, or cling so fast to life? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | MEGARA Is this he who, they told us, was beneath the earth? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | MEGARA What am I saying? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | MEGARA Who are the friends of a man in misfortune? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Meantime his father caught him by his stalwart arm, and thus addressed him,"My son, what meanest thou hereby? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Next, why art thou desirous of slaying these children? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Shall I carry them after that? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Shall I to Argos? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Surely I am not come a second time to Hades''halls, having just returned from thence for Eurystheus? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Surely I have not delayed too long and come too late to check new ills? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Are these indeed the words of Heracles, the much- enduring? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Aye, too much so; for how dost show thyself the glorious Heracles of yore? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Dost thou suppose the gods attend to these thy threats? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Hast thou so short a memory for thy troubles? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Is this man''s benefactor, his chiefest friend? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS This is Hera''s work; but who lies there among the dead, old man? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS What charm dost think to find in this to soothe thy soul? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS What meanest thou? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS What wilt thou do? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Whose be these children, o''er whom thou weepest? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Why doth he veil his head, poor wretch, in his robe? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Why have I? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | THESEUS Why this piteous prelude in addressing me? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Then cried their mother,"O father, what art thou doing? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Thou thinkest thy son will return from beneath the earth: who ever has come back from the dead out of the halls of Hades? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Well, is there a single other city I can fly to? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | What groans or wails, what funeral dirge, or chant of death am I to raise? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | What have they done to thee? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | What hope or way of salvation art thou now devising, old friend? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | What hope, what succour do ye see to save you from death? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | What right have I to live? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | What strange doings are these? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | What visions do these anxious eyes behold? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Where can I find release from my sorrows? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Who slew these children? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Who would pray to such a goddess? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | Why dost thou wave thy hand at me, signifying murder? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | art thou safe, and is thy coming just in time to help thy dear ones? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | dost mean to slay thy children?" |
euripides-heracles-1745 | gone to his native land? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | have I suffered something from her enmity? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | how can I, when I am an exile from my country? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | is it that I may not be polluted by speaking with thee? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | is the same wild panic fallen on us all; what phantom is this I see hovering o''er the house? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | of all the lions, Typhons triple- bodied, and giants that I slew; or of the battle I won against the hosts of four- legged Centaurs? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | old friend, is it my own, my dearest I behold? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | on which bestow my kiss, or clasp close to me? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | or rob me of my wretched life? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | or what am I to say? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | shall I take wings or plunge beneath the earth? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | they do not loose their hold, but cling to my garments all the more; were ye in such jeopardy? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | thou land of Cadmus,-for to thee too will I turn, upbraiding thee with words of reproach,-is this your succour of Heracles and his children? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what am I to do? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what answer can I make? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what art thou doing, son of Zeus? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what befell him? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what hath he done? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what have I done? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what hideous sight is here? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what is he about? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what is this confusion I find on my arrival, father? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what is this? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what kind of hero wert thou when in trouble in the world below? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what means this heap of dead upon the floor? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what meanst thou? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | what profit can I have in the possession of a useless, impious life? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | when will he return?" |
euripides-heracles-1745 | where are the children of Alcmena''s son? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | where did it destroy me? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | which of my friends is near or far to help me in my ignorance? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | which of you shall I first press to my bosom, which last? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | whither is thy fury drifting thee? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | who dealt the fatal blow? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | who killed these? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | whose fortune was e''er so curst as his? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | whose wife is this I see? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | why do I spare my own life when I have taken that of my dear children? |
euripides-heracles-1745 | why this loud address to me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | ( Pause, as Demos does so) Well? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | ( To the SAUSAGE- SELLER) And what did you learn from the master of exercises? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | ( To the SAUSAGE- SELLER) And when you had become a man, what trade did you follow? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | ( to the SAUSAGE- SELLER) Tell me, was it on the market- place or near the gates that you sold your sausages? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | A purse? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | AGORACRITUS What then will become of Clisthenes and of Strato? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Am I compelled to hear myself thus abused, and merely because I love you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | And after him, who? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | And what is this one''s fate? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | And who, pray, has been maltreating you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Any statue? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Are you not rowing?" |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | But come, tell me, you, who sell so many skins, have you ever made him a present of a pair of soles for his slippers? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | But where can this man be found? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CHORUS( singing) Have you not always shown that blatant impudence, which is the sole strength of our orators? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON Can a wretched pair of slippers make you forget all that you owe me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON Can you match me with a rival? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON Does that astonish you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON In what way? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON Is it possible, Demos, to love you more than I do? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON Must you have recourse to such jackanapes''tricks to supplant me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON Once more, will you let me speak? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON What makes you so bold as to dare to speak to my face? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON What''s that you say? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON Will you not let me speak? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | CLEON( showing him the hare) Do you see this, you rogue? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Can I do with her as I wish? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Can a man strike out a brilliant thought when drunk? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Can you be of the race of Harmodius? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Can you suggest anything? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Come, are you of honest parentage? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Come, what''s the best to give you to eat? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Crates, again, have you done hounding him with your rage and your hisses? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS All these? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS And of what do they speak? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS And should we still be dwelling in this city without this protecting stew- pan? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS And what punishment will you inflict upon this Paphlagonian, the cause of all my troubles? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS And what shall I do with this tripe? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS And why? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS And yours? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS But what did I do? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS Come, let us see, whose are these oracles? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS How shall I act here so that the spectators shall approve my judgment? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS How"in front of Pylos"? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS Let us see then, what is there in yours? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS Of what greedy fist? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS Please tell me, how did you get the idea to filch it from him? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS Was I then so stupid and such a dotard? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS What are these? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS What connection is there between a galley and dog- fox? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS What does the god mean, then? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS What is it then? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS What, I? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS Who are you then? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS Why, then, does the oracle not say dog instead of dog- fox? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS( to the SAUSAGE- SELLER) And whose are yours? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS( to the SAUSAGE- SELLER) And you, who are you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOS( to the SAUSAGE- SELLER) But what is your name then? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOSTHENES Exists there a mortal more blest than you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOSTHENES How? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOSTHENES Let me think, what is the most heroic? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOSTHENES Of which statue? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOSTHENES Tell me, what is the Paphlagonian doing now? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOSTHENES What proof have you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | DEMOSTHENES You really want to know? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Dear Demos, do you see this stewed hare which I bring you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Did you drink enough water to inspire you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Did you mutter over the thing sufficiently through the night, spout it along the street, recite it to all you met? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Did you not put enough strain on your bottom at Salamis? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Do you consent to my telling the spectators of our troubles? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Do you know what the oracle intends to say? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Do you remember the time when silphium was so cheap? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Do you see these tiers of people? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Do you then believe there are gods? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Do you understand that? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Firstly, what school did you attend when a child? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Go, ninny, blow yourself out with water; do you dare to accuse wine of clouding the reason? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Have you bored your friends enough with it? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Have you then such a good opinion of yourself? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | How could I express my thoughts with the pomp of Euripides? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | How shall I give tongue to my joy and praise you sufficiently? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | I used to linger around the cooks and say to them,"Look, friends, do n''t you see a swallow? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | I? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | If anchovies are so cheap, what need have we of peace? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Is it not I who curbed the pederasts by erasing Gryttus''name from the lists of citizens? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Is that not enough? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Knights, are you helping them? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS I admire your invertive genius; but, where is he? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS And how? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS And the leather- seller must destroy the sheep- seller? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS But what is in it? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS How so? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS Is"Pour again"in the oracle? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS Tell me, pray, what is that? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS Tell me, what is it? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS Two tradesmen, eh? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | NICIAS What does it say? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Oh, too credulous son of Cecrops, do you accept that as a glorious exploit? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER And I, that one of your grandfathers was a satellite.... CLEON To whom? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER And the dragon? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER And what do you drink yourself then, to be able all alone by yourself to dumbfound and stupefy the city so with your clamour? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER But what does the oracle say? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER If you do not devour me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER In what way does this concern me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER In what way, please? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER Is then Demos your property, your contemptible creature? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER Pray, what for? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER Well then, Demos, say now, who has treated you best, you and your stomach? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER Were you not yourself in those days quite red in the gills with farting? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER What connection? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER What do the hooked claws mean? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER What is it? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER What is the matter? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER What price then is paid for forage by Boeotians? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER What was your device? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER Who will be my ally? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | SAUSAGE- SELLER Why not leave me to wash my tripe and to sell my sausages instead of making game of me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Shall I tell you what has happened to you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What can your drinking do to help us? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What connection is there between Erechtheus, the jays and the dog? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What do you prefer? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What does he mean by that? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What fate befell Magnes, when his hair went white? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What is his dress like, what his manner? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What is the matter? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What means this Chalcidian cup? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What then? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | What''s that to you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Where can another seller be found, is there ever a one left? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Where, where, I say? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Who will get us out of this mess? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Why afflict Lysistratus with our satires on his poverty, and Thumantis, who has not so much as a lodging? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Why do you call me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Why do you not hold yourself worthy? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Why do you turn away your face? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Will you not even now let the strangers alone? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | You have become a lion and I never knew a thing about it? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | Your mind is on drink intent? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | and how was I then? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | are you for running away? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | but what other measures do you wish to take? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | citizens of Argos, do you hear what he says? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | does that not please you? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | how am I to pay the wages of my young foxes? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | my poor fellow, what is your condition? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | they would treat me so, and I never saw it? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | torch of sacred Athens, saviour of the Islands, what good tidings are we to celebrate by letting the blood of the victims flow in our marketplaces? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | was this the way you robbed me? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | what can be done? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | what says the oracle? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | what would you do? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | where did you discover her, pray? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | where shall I find it? |
aristophanes-knights-1993 | you have the nature of a dog and you dare to fight a dog- headed ape? |
darwin-origin-2190 | And even if one was so, what chance was there of the perpetuation of such a variation?" |
darwin-origin-2190 | But how to obtain the beginning of such useful development?" |
darwin-origin-2190 | But how, it may be asked, can any analogous principle apply in nature? |
darwin-origin-2190 | But if the same species can be produced at two separate points, why do we not find a single mammal common to Europe and Australia or South America? |
darwin-origin-2190 | But in the intermediate region, having intermediate conditions of life, why do we not now find closely- linking intermediate varieties? |
darwin-origin-2190 | But may not the areas of preponderant movement have changed in the lapse of ages? |
darwin-origin-2190 | But may not this inference be presumptuous? |
darwin-origin-2190 | But what is meant by this system? |
darwin-origin-2190 | But what other natural material could bees use? |
darwin-origin-2190 | But why, it may be asked, are certain forms treated as the mimicked and others as the mimickers? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Can a more striking instance of adaptation be given than that of a woodpecker for climbing trees and seizing insects in the chinks of the bark? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Can the principle of selection, which we have seen is so potent in the hands of man, apply under nature? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Do they believe that at each supposed act of creation one individual or many were produced? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Have we any right to assume that the Creator works by intellectual powers like those of man? |
darwin-origin-2190 | He may ask where are the remains of those infinitely numerous organisms which must have existed long before the Cambrian system was deposited? |
darwin-origin-2190 | How will the struggle for existence, briefly discussed in the last chapter, act in regard to variation? |
darwin-origin-2190 | How, then, comes it that such a vast number of the seedlings are mongrelized? |
darwin-origin-2190 | How, then, does the lesser difference between varieties become augmented into the greater difference between species? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Is this the case? |
darwin-origin-2190 | It may well be asked how it is possible to reconcile this case with the theory of natural selection? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Now do these complex and singular rules indicate that species have been endowed with sterility simply to prevent their becoming confounded in nature? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Now, what does this remarkable law of the succession of the same types within the same areas mean? |
darwin-origin-2190 | One writer asks, why has not the ostrich acquired the power of flight? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Or, again, why has not any member of the group acquired a long proboscis? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Thirdly, can instincts be acquired and modified through natural selection? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Were all the infinitely numerous kinds of animals and plants created as eggs or seed, or as full grown? |
darwin-origin-2190 | What can be more extraordinary than these well- ascertained facts? |
darwin-origin-2190 | What can be plainer than that the webbed feet of ducks and geese are formed for swimming? |
darwin-origin-2190 | What now are we to say to these several facts? |
darwin-origin-2190 | What reason, it may be asked, is there for supposing in these cases that two individuals ever concur in reproduction? |
darwin-origin-2190 | What shall we say to the instinct which leads the bee to make cells, and which has practically anticipated the discoveries of profound mathematicians? |
darwin-origin-2190 | What then checks an indefinite increase in the number of species? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Who can explain what is the essence of the attraction of gravity? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Who can explain why one species ranges widely and is very numerous, and why another allied species has a narrow range and is rare? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why are not all organic beings blended together in an inextricable chaos? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why does it not double or quadruple its numbers? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why does not every collection of fossil remains afford plain evidence of the gradation and mutation of the forms of life? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why have not apes acquired the intellectual powers of man? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why have not the more highly developed forms every where supplanted and exterminated the lower? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why is not all nature in confusion, instead of the species being, as we see them, well defined? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why should not Nature take a sudden leap from structure to structure? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why should the brain be enclosed in a box composed of such numerous and such extraordinarily shaped pieces of bone apparently representing vertebrae? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why should the degree of sterility be innately variable in the individuals of the same species? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why should the sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils, in each flower, though fitted for such distinct purposes, be all constructed on the same pattern? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why should there often be so great a difference in the result of a reciprocal cross between the same two species? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why should this be so? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why should this be so? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why then is not every geological formation and every stratum full of such intermediate links? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why, it has been asked, if instinct be variable, has it not granted to the bee"the ability to use some other material when wax was deficient?" |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why, it may be asked, has the supposed creative force produced bats and no other mammals on remote islands? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why, it may be asked, until recently did nearly all the most eminent living naturalists and geologists disbelieve in the mutability of species? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why, it may even be asked, has the production of hybrids been permitted? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Why, on the theory of Creation, should there be so much variety and so little real novelty? |
darwin-origin-2190 | Would the just- hatched young sometimes adhere to the feet of birds roosting on the ground and thus get transported? |
darwin-origin-2190 | and in the case of mammals, were they created bearing the false marks of nourishment from the mother''s womb? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | ( 1) And why dress in these miserable tragic rags? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | ( 1) What do you bring? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | ( 1) Will you give me back my garlic? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | AMBASSADOR Do you understand what he says? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | AMBASSADOR What does he say? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | AMPHITHEUS Has anyone spoken yet? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | AMPHITHEUS Oh, Triptolemus and Ceres, do ye thus forsake your own blood? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | AMPHITHEUS Well? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Am I a beggar? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | And as to the rest, what do you wish to sell me? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | And this other one? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | And you, Dracyllus, Euphorides or Prinides, have you knowledge of Ecbatana or Chaonia? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Art thou sensible of the dangerous battle we are about to engage upon in defending the Lacedaemonians? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | BOEOTIAN Anchovies, pottery? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | BOEOTIAN And what will you give me in return? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | BOEOTIAN What harm have I done you? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | But HAVE you brought me a treaty? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | But as you are so strong, why did you not circumcise me? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | But come( there are only friends who hear me), why accuse the Laconians of all our woes? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | But how, great gods? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | But what else is doing at Megara, eh? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | But who would make so sorry a deal as to buy you? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | But will you buy anything of me, some chickens or some locusts? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | CHORUS Acharnians, what means this threat? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | CHORUS But what will be done with him? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | CHORUS Listen to you? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | CHORUS What do you purport doing? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS And Attic figs? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS And do we give you two drachmae, that you should treat us to all this humbug? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS And how long was he replacing his dress? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS And who is this Lamachus, who demands an eel? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS And why do you always receive your pay, when none of these others ever gets any? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS And why do you bite me? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS But what is this? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Can they eat alone? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Can you eat chick- pease? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Come, what do you wish to say? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Do you want to fight this four- winged Geryon? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Euripides.... EURIPIDES What words strike my ear? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Is Euripides at home? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Is it a feather? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Is it salt that you are bringing? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Is this not sufficient to drive one to hang oneself? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Of the Odomanti? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Of what King? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS On what terms? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Phaleric anchovies, pottery? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Prytanes, will you let me be treated in this manner, in my own country and by barbarians? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Take back, take back your viands; for a thousand drachmae I would not give a drop of peace; but who are you, pray? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Well, how are things at Megara? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What DO you bring then? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What can I do in the matter? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What do they like most? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What do you want crying this gait? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What has happened to you? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What is the matter? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What is this? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What medimni? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What other news of Megara? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What plague have we here? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS What then will you say when you see the thrushes roasting? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Who am I? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Who are you? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Who are you? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Who dares do this thing? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Who ever saw an oxen baked in an oven? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Why, what has happened? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS Women, children, have you not heard? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | DICAEOPOLIS''Tis garlic then? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Dicaeopolis, do you want to buy some nice little porkers? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Did you hear him? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Do you hear? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Do you mean those of the beggar Philoctetes? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Dost thou hesitate and art thou fully steeped in Euripides? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | EURIPIDES Is it the filthy dress of the lame fellow, Bellerophon? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | EURIPIDES Now, what tatters DOES he want? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | EURIPIDES Of Phoenix, the blind man? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | EURIPIDES What rags do you prefer? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | EURIPIDES Whatever do you want such a thing as that for? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | FIRST SEMI- CHORUS But though it be true, need he say it? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | For ready- money or in wares from these parts? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | For what sum will you sell them? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Friends, do you hear the sacred formula? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | HERALD Who asks to speak? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | HERALD Your name? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Has he got one of our children in his house? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | I may not denounce our enemies? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | I see another herald running up; what news does he bring me? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Is it not Straton? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Is it not to convict him from the outset? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Is this not a scandal? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | LAMACHUS But what have you said? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | LAMACHUS What are you then? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | LAMACHUS Whence comes this cry of battle? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | LAMACHUS Why do you embrace me? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | LAMACHUS You are but a mendicant and you dare to use language of this sort? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Listen to your long speeches, after you have treated with the Laconians? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | MEGARIAN And why not? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | MEGARIAN Are you not holding back the salt? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | MEGARIAN Is that a little sow, or not? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | MEGARIAN What else? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | NICARCHUS Whose are these goods? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Of what country, then? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS Where are you running to? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | SLAVE Who''s there? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Shall we wager and submit the matter to Lamachus, which of the two is the best to eat, a locust or a thrush? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Speak, Marilades, you have grey hair; well then, have you ever been entrusted with a mission? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Suppose that a Lacedaemonian had seized a little Seriphian(4) dog on any pretext and had sold it, would you have endured it quietly? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | That is what you assuredly would have done, and would not Telephus have done the same? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Then our ambassadors are seeking to deceive us? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Those in which I rigged out Aeneus(1) on the stage, that unhappy, miserable old man? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | To be sold or to cry with hunger? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | What gives him such audacity? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | What have we here? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | What is wheat selling at? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | What think you? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | What would Marpsias reply to this? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Whence has sprung this accursed swarm of Charis(1) fellows which comes assailing my door? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Where is Amphitheus? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Where is be? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Where is the king of the feast? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Which would you prefer? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Who has mutilated them like this? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Will the Great King send us gold? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | Will they eat them? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | You really will not, Acharnians? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | You say no, do you not? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | You will not hear me? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | You will say that Sparta was wrong, but what should she have done? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | a Megarian? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | a braggart''s? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | and yet you have not left off white? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | are such exaggerations to be borne? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | do you dare to jeer me? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | do you not at every raid grub up the ground with your pikes to pull out every single head? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | do you not heed the herald? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | do you want to make yourself vomit with this feather? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | fellow, what countryman are you? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | great baboon, with such a beard do you seek to play the eunuch to us? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | is it not a sow then? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | is it not so? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | of what value to me have been these few pleasures? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | try not to scoff at my armor? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | what are you going to say? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | what are you proposing to do? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | what bird''s? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | where must I bring my aid? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | where must I sow dread? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | who wants me to uncase my dreadful Gorgon''s head? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | will you hear them squeal? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | will you kill this coal- basket, my beloved comrade? |
aristophanes-achamians-2166 | you declare war against birds? |
augustine-on-2959 | ), he says:"Dare any of you, having a matter against another, go to law before the unjust, and not before the saints? |
augustine-on-2959 | Am I therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth? |
augustine-on-2959 | And because it might possibly occur to the hearer to ask, If there is no inheritance by the law, why then was the law given? |
augustine-on-2959 | And here an objection occurs which he himself has stated:"Is the law then against the promises of God?" |
augustine-on-2959 | And if he be not intelligible, is it not plain that he can neither give pleasure nor enforce conviction? |
augustine-on-2959 | And if the world shall be judged by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters? |
augustine-on-2959 | And if we have received it, why do we glory, as if we had not received it? |
augustine-on-2959 | And in the same way we shall have the inquiry,"Who is he that condemneth?" |
augustine-on-2959 | And is he not there told:"Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth?" |
augustine-on-2959 | And to this he adds two clauses in a tone of inquiry:"Who is weak, and I am not weak? |
augustine-on-2959 | And what do we find from the examples themselves to be the case in this respect? |
augustine-on-2959 | And what else have many good and faithful men among our brethren done? |
augustine-on-2959 | And what testimony to thine ugliness can we find, O woman, that is more unquestionable than thine own, when thou art afraid to show thyself? |
augustine-on-2959 | And what will be the use of gaining the first two ends if we fail in the third? |
augustine-on-2959 | And when any one narrates a story, even in the subdued style, what does he wish but to be believed? |
augustine-on-2959 | And when the apostle spoke about trials in regard to secular affairs( and what were these but matters of money? |
augustine-on-2959 | And who can make us say what we ought, and in the way we ought, except Him in whose hand both we and our speeches are? |
augustine-on-2959 | And who will stay to listen if he receives no pleasure? |
augustine-on-2959 | Are they Hebrews? |
augustine-on-2959 | Are they Israelites? |
augustine-on-2959 | Are they Israelites? |
augustine-on-2959 | Are they ministers of Christ? |
augustine-on-2959 | Are they the seed of Abraham? |
augustine-on-2959 | Are they the seed of Abraham? |
augustine-on-2959 | Are we in this case to seek out ornaments instead of proofs? |
augustine-on-2959 | As objects of use or as objects of enjoyment? |
augustine-on-2959 | But in another place, upbraiding such men, He says,"O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things?" |
augustine-on-2959 | But reading and understanding, as he does, without the aid of any human interpreter, why does he himself undertake to interpret for others? |
augustine-on-2959 | But what is better than wholesome sweetness or sweet wholesomeness? |
augustine-on-2959 | But what use is there in attaining such an object as this last? |
augustine-on-2959 | But who can be moved if he does not understand what is said? |
augustine-on-2959 | But who will listen to him if he do not arrest attention by some beauty of style? |
augustine-on-2959 | But who would say that it is their duty to do what they do not know? |
augustine-on-2959 | But with whatever tone of voice one may choose to pronounce that saying of Nathanael''s,"Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?" |
augustine-on-2959 | Did secular matters deserve so much at his hands? |
augustine-on-2959 | Do we not read there:"Rebuke not an elder, but entreat him as a father?" |
augustine-on-2959 | Do ye not know that the saints shall judge the world? |
augustine-on-2959 | Does the hearer learn anything more than when he listens to the same thought expressed in the plainest language, without the help of this figure? |
augustine-on-2959 | Dost thou, then, think that thou wilt carry off with impunity so audacious an act of wickedness, such an insult to God the great artifices? |
augustine-on-2959 | For even the apostle exclaims,"Was Paul crucified for you? |
augustine-on-2959 | For how can they say in words what they deny in deeds? |
augustine-on-2959 | For is there anything greater than God Himself? |
augustine-on-2959 | For of what service is a golden key, if it can not open what we want it to open? |
augustine-on-2959 | For that very truth about which he asks, how I know it? |
augustine-on-2959 | For what have we that we did not receive? |
augustine-on-2959 | For what is there that sober ears could wish changed in this speech? |
augustine-on-2959 | For what shall we do in the end thereof? |
augustine-on-2959 | For who does not say,"So may you flourish?" |
augustine-on-2959 | Have I spoken of God, or uttered His praise, in any worthy way? |
augustine-on-2959 | He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things? |
augustine-on-2959 | How do I know this, except from the fact that God is unspeakable? |
augustine-on-2959 | How much Lactantius brought with him? |
augustine-on-2959 | How much more things that pertain to this life? |
augustine-on-2959 | If God be for us, who can be against us? |
augustine-on-2959 | If thou art comely why dost thou hide thy comeliness? |
augustine-on-2959 | In the First Epistle to Timothy do we not read:"These things command and teach?" |
augustine-on-2959 | In what way then does He love us? |
augustine-on-2959 | Is it not more likely that serious men would think I had gone too far, than that any of the studious would think I had done enough? |
augustine-on-2959 | Is it not said in the Second Epistle:"Hold fast the form of sound words,; which thou hast heard of me?" |
augustine-on-2959 | Is it so, that there is not a wise man among you? |
augustine-on-2959 | Is nothing, then, to be learnt about Him? |
augustine-on-2959 | It is God that justifieth; who is he that condemneth? |
augustine-on-2959 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?" |
augustine-on-2959 | Know ye not that we shall judge angels? |
augustine-on-2959 | No, not one that shall be able to judge between his brethren? |
augustine-on-2959 | Now therefore there is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to law one with another: why do ye not rather take wrong? |
augustine-on-2959 | Now, no one is so egregiously silly as to ask,"How do you know that a life of unchangeable wisdom is preferable to one of change?" |
augustine-on-2959 | On the other hand, in that passage where the apostle says,"What shall we say then? |
augustine-on-2959 | Or is the hearer to be moved to do something instead of being instructed so that he may learn something? |
augustine-on-2959 | Or were ye baptized in the name of Paul?" |
augustine-on-2959 | Or what objection is there to a wooden one if it can, seeing that to open what is shut is all we want? |
augustine-on-2959 | Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
augustine-on-2959 | That the Gentiles which followed not after righteousness have attained to righteousness;"unless after the inquiry,"What shall we say then?" |
augustine-on-2959 | The passage will be pronounced, then, in such a way that after the inquiry,"Who shall lay anything to the charge of God''s elect?" |
augustine-on-2959 | To whom is it light but to the meek and lowly in heart, whom knowledge does not puff up, but charity edifieth? |
augustine-on-2959 | We have an example of the calm, subdued style in the Apostle Paul, where he says:"Tell me, ye that desire to be under the law, do ye not hear the law? |
augustine-on-2959 | What shall we then say to these things? |
augustine-on-2959 | What then are we to think? |
augustine-on-2959 | What then is purity of speech, except the preserving of the custom of language established by the authority of former speakers? |
augustine-on-2959 | When did she quarrel with her neighbours? |
augustine-on-2959 | When did she spurn the humble, laugh at the weak, or shun the indigent? |
augustine-on-2959 | When did she wound her parents even by a look? |
augustine-on-2959 | Where is then the blessedness ye spake of? |
augustine-on-2959 | Whether this be true or not, why need we inquire? |
augustine-on-2959 | Who does not speak of a fish- pond in which there is no fish, which was not made for fish, and yet gets its name from fish? |
augustine-on-2959 | Who is such a fool as to think this wisdom? |
augustine-on-2959 | Who is weak, and I am not weak? |
augustine-on-2959 | Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect? |
augustine-on-2959 | Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
augustine-on-2959 | Who, then, can doubt that each of these is the gift of God, when he learns from this passage, and believes, that each of them is given? |
augustine-on-2959 | Why do ye not rather suffer yourselves to be defrauded? |
augustine-on-2959 | Why does he not rather send them direct to God, that they too may learn by the inward teaching of the Spirit without the help of man? |
augustine-on-2959 | Why is it that the apostle is so indignant, and that he thus accuses, and upbraids, and chides, and threatens? |
augustine-on-2959 | Why is it that the changes in his tone, so frequent and so abrupt, testify to the depth of his emotion? |
augustine-on-2959 | Why is it, in fine, that he speaks in a tone so exalted about matters so very trifling? |
augustine-on-2959 | Why then did He come, seeing that He was already here, except that it pleased God through the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe? |
augustine-on-2959 | Why, then, is he in a strait betwixt the two? |
augustine-on-2959 | and the answer here again in the form of an interrogative,"Is it Christ who died? |
augustine-on-2959 | he himself anticipates this objection and asks,"Wherefore then serveth the law?" |
augustine-on-2959 | what follows will be put as an interrogative:"Shall God who justifieth?" |
augustine-on-2959 | who also maketh intercession for us?" |
augustine-on-2959 | who is even at the right hand of God? |
augustine-on-2959 | who is offended, and I burn not? |
augustine-on-2959 | who is offended, and I burn not?" |
augustine-on-2959 | yea, rather, who is risen again? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Again, Where can the billows yield a way, so long As ever the fish are powerless to go? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Again, behold we not the monuments Of heroes, now in ruins, asking us, In their turn likewise, if we do n''t believe They also age with eld? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Again, gold unto gold Doth not one substance bind, and only one? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Again, shall taste Accuse this touch or shall the nose confute Or eyes defeat it? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Again, why never hurtles Jupiter A bolt upon the lands nor pours abroad Clap upon clap, when skies are cloudless all? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Again, why see we among objects some Of heavier weight, but of no bulkier size? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And O how Canst thou believe he shoots at one same time Into diverse directions? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And first, Why doth the mind of one to whom the whim To think has come behold forthwith that thing? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And hast thou never marked With what a force the water will disgorge Timber and beam? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And is not brass by tin joined unto brass? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And out of what does Ether feed the stars? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And seest thou not how those whom mutual pleasure Hath bound are tortured in their common bonds? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And seest thou not, indeed, How widely one small water- spring may wet The meadow- lands at times and flood the fields? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And so I''ll follow on, and whereso''er thou set The extreme coasts, I''ll query,"what becomes Thereafter of thy spear?" |
lucretius-of-2983 | And the mare''s filly why not trained so well As sturdy strength of steed? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And the rest Of all those monsters slain, even if alive, Unconquered still, what injury could they do? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And too, when all is said, What evil lust of life is this so great Subdues us to live, so dreadfully distraught In perils and alarms? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And what besides of those first particles Whence soul and mind must fashioned be?--Seest not How nice and how minute? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And what is there so horrible appears? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And what motions, too, They give and get among themselves? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And why Doth he himself allow it, nor spare the same Even for his enemies? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And why is never a child''s a prudent soul? |
lucretius-of-2983 | And, contrariwise, if wills he to o''erwhelm us, Quite off our guard, with fire, why thunders he Off in yon quarter, so that we may shun? |
lucretius-of-2983 | BOOK V PROEM O WHO can build with puissant breast a song Worthy the majesty of these great finds? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Beside these matters, why Doth nature feed and foster on land and sea The dreadful breed of savage beasts, the foes Of the human clan? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Besides are seeds of soul there left behind In the breathless body, or not? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Besides, if''tis his will that we beware Against the lightning- stroke, why feareth he To grant us power for to behold the shot? |
lucretius-of-2983 | But ask the mourner what''s the bitterness That man should waste in an eternal grief, If, after all, the thing''s but sleep and rest? |
lucretius-of-2983 | But should some say that always souls of men Go into human bodies, I will ask: How can a wise become a dullard soul? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For hast thou not observed How eyes, essaying to perceive the fine, Will strain in preparation, otherwise Unable sharply to perceive at all? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For how, I ask, can things so varied be, If formed of fire, single and pure? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For what could hurt us now that mighty maw Of Nemeaean Lion, or what the Boar Who bristled in Arcadia? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For what may we surmise A blow inflicted can achieve besides Shaking asunder and loosening all apart? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For where can scaly creatures forward dart, Save where the waters give them room? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For which will last against the grip and crush Under the teeth of death? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For whither shall we make appeal? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For who of us Wondereth if some one gets into his joints A fever, gathering head with fiery heat, Or any other dolorous disease Along his members? |
lucretius-of-2983 | For why could he mark everything by words And utter the various sounds of tongue, what time The rest may be supposed powerless To do the same? |
lucretius-of-2983 | How stars and constellations drop to earth, Seest not? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Indeed, and were there not For each its procreant atoms, could things have Each its unalterable mother old? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Is''t not serener far than any sleep? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Nay, why, then, aim they at eternal wastes, And spend themselves in vain?--perchance, even so To exercise their arms and strengthen shoulders? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Now what is there so sad about it all? |
lucretius-of-2983 | O why most oft Aims he at lofty places? |
lucretius-of-2983 | O why not rather make an end of life, Of labour? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or darest thou Contend that never hath it come to pass That divers strokes have happened at one time? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or do the idols watch upon our will, And doth an image unto us occur, Directly we desire-- if heart prefer The sea, the land, or after all the sky? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or else the air? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or how can mind wax strong Coequally with body and attain The craved flower of life, unless it be The body''s colleague in its origins? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or how, when thus restored, may daedal Earth Foster and plenish with her ancient food, Which, kind by kind, she offers unto each? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or lest its house, Outworn by venerable length of days, May topple down upon it? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or shall the ears have power to blame the eyes, Or yet the touch the ears? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or what new factor could, After so long a time, inveigle them-- The hitherto reposeful-- to desire To change their former life? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or what''s the purport of its going forth From aged limbs?--fears it, perhaps, to stay, Pent in a crumbled body? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Or, again, O what could Cretan Bull, or Hydra, pest Of Lerna, fenced with vipers venomous? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Our gratefulness, O what emoluments could it confer Upon Immortals and upon the Blessed That they should take a step to manage aught For sake of us? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Seest thou not also how the clouds be sped By contrary winds to regions contrary, The lower clouds diversely from the upper? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Seest thou not, Besides, how drops of water falling down Against the stones at last bore through the stones? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Then for what reason shoots he at the sea?-- What sacrilege have waves and bulk of brine And floating fields of foam been guilty of? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Then what the difference''twixt the sum and least? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Then, why may yonder stars in ether there Along their mighty orbits not be borne By currents opposite the one to other? |
lucretius-of-2983 | What marvel, then, that mind doth lose the rest, Save those to which''thas given up itself? |
lucretius-of-2983 | What power, in sum, Can raise with agile leap our body aloft, Save energy of mind which steers the limbs? |
lucretius-of-2983 | What then? |
lucretius-of-2983 | What, then''s, the principle? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Whence may the water- springs, beneath the sea, Or inland rivers, far and wide away, Keep the unfathomable ocean full? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Wherefore stalks at large Death, so untimely? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Whither have sunk so oft so many deeds Of heroes? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Why behold we Marks of his lightnings most on mountain tops? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Why do the seasons bring Distempers with them? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Why do those deeds live no more, Ingrafted in eternal monuments Of glory? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Why rouseth he beforehand darkling air And the far din and rumblings? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Why suffer they the Father''s javelin To be so blunted on the earth? |
lucretius-of-2983 | Why this bemoaning and beweeping death? |
lucretius-of-2983 | for what More certain than our senses can there be Whereby to mark asunder error and truth? |
lucretius-of-2983 | the blood? |
lucretius-of-2983 | the bones? |
lucretius-of-2983 | the fire? |
lucretius-of-2983 | the moist? |
lucretius-of-2983 | which then? |
lucretius-of-2983 | why keep we not Some footprints of the things we did of, old? |
lucretius-of-2983 | why not with mind content Take now, thou fool, thy unafflicted rest? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Are all these tales of the gods true, Euthyphro? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | As in the case of horses, you may observe that when attended to by the horseman''s art they are benefited and improved, are they not? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | But I see plainly that you are not disposed to instruct me-- clearly not: else why, when we reached the point, did you turn aside? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | But in what way does he say that you corrupt the young? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | But just at present I would rather hear from you a more precise answer, which you have not as yet given, my friend, to the question, What is''piety''? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | But what is the charge which he brings against you? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Do we not go at once to arithmetic, and put an end to them by a sum? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Do you dissent? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Do you mean that they are a sort of science of praying and sacrificing? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Do you mean that we prefer requests and give gifts to them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Do you not agree? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Do you not agree? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Do you not recollect that there was one idea which made the impious impious, and the pious pious? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | EUTHYPHRO: And do you imagine, Socrates, that any benefit accrues to the gods from our gifts? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | EUTHYPHRO: And who is he? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | EUTHYPHRO: How do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | EUTHYPHRO: Then some one else has been prosecuting you? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | EUTHYPHRO: What else, but tributes of honour; and, as I was just now saying, what pleases them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | EUTHYPHRO: Why have you left the Lyceum, Socrates? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | EUTHYPHRO: Why not, Socrates? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | For surely neither God nor man will ever venture to say that the doer of injustice is not to be punished? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Have you forgotten? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | How would you show that all the gods absolutely agree in approving of his act? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | I suppose that you follow me now? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Is it not so? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Is not piety in every action always the same? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Is not that true? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Please then to tell me, what is the nature of this service to the gods? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Again, there is an art which ministers to the ship- builder with a view to the attainment of some result? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And I should also conceive that the art of the huntsman is the art of attending to dogs? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And are you not saying that what is loved of the gods is holy; and is not this the same as what is dear to them-- do you see? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And does piety or holiness, which has been defined to be the art of attending to the gods, benefit or improve them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And further, Euthyphro, the gods were admitted to have enmities and hatreds and differences? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And is not attention always designed for the good or benefit of that to which the attention is given? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And is not that which is beloved distinct from that which loves? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And is, then, all which is just pious? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And now tell me, my good friend, about the art which ministers to the gods: what work does that help to accomplish? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And of the many and fair things done by the gods, which is the chief or principal one? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And of what is he accused? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And sacrificing is giving to the gods, and prayer is asking of the gods? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And that which is dear to the gods is loved by them, and is in a state to be loved of them because it is loved of them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And the quarrels of the gods, noble Euthyphro, when they occur, are of a like nature? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And the same is true of what is led and of what is seen? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And upon this view the same things, Euthyphro, will be pious and also impious? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And we end a controversy about heavy and light by resorting to a weighing machine? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And well said? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And what do you say of piety, Euthyphro: is not piety, according to your definition, loved by all the gods? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And what is piety, and what is impiety? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And what is your suit, Euthyphro? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And what sort of difference creates enmity and anger? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: And when you say this, can you wonder at your words not standing firm, but walking away? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: As the art of the oxherd is the art of attending to oxen? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: As there is an art which ministers to the house- builder with a view to the building of a house? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Because it is pious or holy, or for some other reason? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: But do they admit their guilt, Euthyphro, and yet say that they ought not to be punished? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: But for their good? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: But if not, Euthyphro, what is the meaning of gifts which are conferred by us upon the gods? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: But what differences are there which can not be thus decided, and which therefore make us angry and set us at enmity with one another? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Does not every man love that which he deems noble and just and good, and hate the opposite of them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Good: but I must still ask what is this attention to the gods which is called piety? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: I should suppose that the art of horsemanship is the art of attending to horses? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: In like manner holiness or piety is the art of attending to the gods?--that would be your meaning, Euthyphro? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Is not that which is loved in some state either of becoming or suffering? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Is not the right way of asking to ask of them what we want? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: It is loved because it is holy, not holy because it is loved? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Many and fair, too, are the works of the husbandman, if I am not mistaken; but his chief work is the production of food from the earth? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: May not this be the reason, Euthyphro, why I am charged with impiety-- that I can not away with these stories about the gods? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Medicine is also a sort of ministration or service, having in view the attainment of some object-- would you not say of health? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: No doubt, Euthyphro; but you would admit that there are many other pious acts? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Nor is every one qualified to attend to dogs, but only the huntsman? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Of whom? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Or suppose that we differ about magnitudes, do we not quickly end the differences by measuring? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Ought we to enquire into the truth of this, Euthyphro, or simply to accept the mere statement on our own authority and that of others? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Piety, then, is pleasing to the gods, but not beneficial or dear to them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Tell me then, oh tell me-- what is that fair work which the gods do by the help of our ministrations? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Then once more the assertion is repeated that piety is dear to the gods? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Then piety, Euthyphro, is an art which gods and men have of doing business with one another? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Then the same things are hated by the gods and loved by the gods, and are both hateful and dear to them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Then we must begin again and ask, What is piety? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Then, if piety is a part of justice, I suppose that we should enquire what part? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Upon this view, then, piety is a science of asking and giving? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Well, but speaking of men, Euthyphro, did you ever hear any one arguing that a murderer or any sort of evil- doer ought to be let off? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Well; and now tell me, is that which is carried in this state of carrying because it is carried, or for some other reason? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: What is the charge? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Who is he? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | SOCRATES: Why, has the fugitive wings? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Shall I tell you in what respect? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Shall this be our definition of piety and impiety? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Surely you can not be concerned in a suit before the King, like myself? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Tell me, then-- Is not that which is pious necessarily just? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Was not that said? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Were we not saying that the holy or pious was not the same with that which is loved of the gods? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | What are they? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | What do you say? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | What else can I say, confessing as I do, that I know nothing about them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | What should I be good for without it? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Would you not say that victory in war is the chief of them? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | Would you say that when you do a holy act you make any of the gods better? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | You know that in all such cases there is a difference, and you know also in what the difference lies? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | and what are you doing in the Porch of the King Archon? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | are you the pursuer or the defendant? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | my companion, and will you leave me in despair? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | my good man? |
plato-euthyphro-1480 | or, is that which is pious all just, but that which is just, only in part and not all, pious? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE And who shall tend thee in thy blindness, father? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Are the gates fast barred, and the brazen bolts shot home into Amphion''s walls of stone? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE But what can I do? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE By what means, mother mine? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE How art thou so sure of these descriptions, old man? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Is this he, old man, who wedded a sister of the wife of Polyneices? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE May not I too share thy sorrows? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Mother mine, what new terror art thou proclaiming to thy dear ones before the palace? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE What crime did he commit in coming to claim his heritage? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE What mean''st thou? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE What oracle was that? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Where is now the famous Oedipus, where that famous riddle? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Where? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Whither away from my maiden- bower? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Who is that with the white crest, who marches in the van, lightly bearing on his arm a buckler all of bronze? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Who is that youth passing close to the tomb of Zethus, with long flowing hair, but a look of fury in his eye? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Who is that, old man, on yonder car driving snow- white steeds? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ANTIGONE Why dost thou groan? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Am I still so young myself that I can find a livelihood? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Am I to mourn with bitter tears myself or my city, round which is settling a swarm thick enough to send us to Acheron? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | As for the madness of Capaneus, how am I to describe it? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | As for thee, thou new- made king, why, I ask, dost thou mock my father thus with banishment? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | But where is Capaneus who utters those dreadful threats against this city? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | But why repeat these horrors? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Abide, why dost thou seek to fly? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON After passing Delphi- MENOECEUS Whither must I go, father? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON How can they be more hard to bear than these? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Most certainly thou must; how wilt thou escape his bed? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Not wish to save my country? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON What is this? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON What is thy tale? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON What mean''st thou? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON What wilt thou then do to me? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Whence came this curse on me and my son? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Whither went she? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Whither? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Why art so bent on being released from this marriage? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Why, is it not just for that other to be given to the dogs? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Why, what could one say? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON Yea; for wherein should I show greater zeal? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | CREON( turning to OEDIPUS) Dost witness how boldly she reproached me? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Come, suppose I put before thee two alternatives, whether thou wilt rule or save thy city? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Dost hear, O mother of this chief? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Dost hear, thou whose aged step now gropes its way across the court, now seeks repose on wretched pallet couch? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Dost see him? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Art anxious then that I should have recourse to any other scheme? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Pray, what scheme is wiser than mine? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Selecting them for courage or thoughtful prudence? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Suppose we fall on them by night from ambuscade? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Thou art near him, aye, very near; dost see my arm? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES To lead our companies, or to fight single- handed? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Was it then to meet a dastard thou camest with all that host to war? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Well, shall I fall upon them as they sit at meat? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES What are we to do? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES What if our cavalry make a sortie against the host of Argos? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES What is that? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES What is their appointed task? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES What news does he bring from their camp? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES What then can I do? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Who would hear thee after thou hast marched against thy fatherland? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Why ask me this? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ETEOCLES Why dost thou, their bitterest foe, call on them? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Go to; why make this moan and bootless lamentation? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | How did you succeed in beating off from our gates the Argive hosts, when thus beleaguered? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | I will away; amongst the rest must I endure my doom, if need be; for what will become of me? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | If, on the other hand, thou art worsted and thy brother''s cause prevail, how shalt thou return to Argos, leaving countless dead behind? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Is my son alive or dead? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA Art thou blest or curst in thy marriage? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA But doth not time expose her futility? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA But why did Adrastus liken you to wild beasts? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA Did not thy father''s friends and whilom guests assist thee? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA Did not thy noble breeding exalt thy horn for thee? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA Have they been in jeopardy of the Argive spear? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA He doubtless had some wise design; but how didst thou win thy wife? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA How didst thou persuade an army to follow thee hither? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA How was it thou didst go to Argos? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA In search of a resting- place, or wandering thither in thy exile? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA Next, how is it with the seven towers that wall us in? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA One thing tell me, I implore; knowest thou aught of Polyneices, is he yet alive? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA Was it then that the son of Talaus understood the oracle? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA What hadst thou, my son, to do with the name of beasts? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA What is it like? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA What was it? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA Whence hadst thou means to live, ere thy marriage found it for thee? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | JOCASTA Who was he? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Why so silent, Creon, why are thy lips hushed and dumb? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | MENOECEUS How shall I find the means? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | MENOECEUS To Dodona''s hallowed threshold? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | MENOECEUS What protection shall I find me there? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | MENOECEUS Whither can I fly? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | MENOECEUS Whither thence? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | MESSENGER Hast thou any further wish than thy sons''safety? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | My pair of gallant sons, then? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | O Creon, why seek thus to slay me utterly? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | OEDIPUS Where am I planting my aged step? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | OEDIPUS Where lies the corpse of Eteocles, and of Polyneices, where? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | OLD SERVANT A chieftain, lady- ANTIGONE Who is he? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | OLD SERVANT Dost see yon chieftain crossing Dirce''s stream? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Oh why, my son, art thou so set upon Ambition, that worst of deities? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | On which of these corpses shall I throw my offerings first, plucking the hair from my head? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Or wouldst thou by heaping riches in thy halls, heap up toil therewith? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | POLYNEICES O father, dost thou hear what I am suffering? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | POLYNEICES Thou too, mother mine? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | POLYNEICES Where wilt thou be stationed before the towers? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | POLYNEICES Who will slay me? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Shall I become his slave, when I can be his master? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Shall she, that is dead? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | TEIRESIAS Art thou still eager to be told? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | TEIRESIAS Enough; I have arrived; why, Creon, dost thou summon me so urgently? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | TEIRESIAS Is truth dead, because thou art curst with woe? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | TEIRESIAS Why implore me? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | TEIRESIAS Wilt thou then that I tell thee in his presence? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Tell me, young Menoeceus, son of Creon, how much further toward the city is it ere reach thy father? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Thou art my mother''s brother, so why need I say more? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | What am I, poor wretch, to do? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | What am to do? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | What can I say to thee? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | What doth my aged sire within the house, his light all darkness now? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | What means exile from one''s country? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | What tidings art thou here to bring me? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Whence could I? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Which of her two sons will send the other to a bloody grave? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Who is that? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Who now will be my guide and tend the blind man''s step? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Why art thou delaying to leave the sheltering roof to fold thy son in thy embrace? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Why prize beyond its worth the monarch''s power, injustice in prosperity? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Why start making laws over a helpless corpse? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | Wilt thou say"Rule"? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | am I to surrender the city to the foe? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | and keep more than thy share? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | and wherefore? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | art thou so young that thine eyes see not what they should? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | brother severing brother''s throat and robbing him of life, cleaving through his shield to spill his blood? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | canst thou have further woes to tell? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | dost think I will live to we d thy son? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | his name? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | how can that be? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | how recall in every way, by word, by deed, the bliss of days long past, expressing my joy in the mazy measures of the dance? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | if not, why where is justice? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | is he a captain? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | is it a great evil? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | on the breast of the mother that suckled me, or beside the ghastly death- wounds of my brothers''corpses? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | or is it an idle sound I fear? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | ought I not to carry out his behests? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | slay my child? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | tell me, I conjure thee, how wilt thou rear a trophy to Zeus? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | thou hast a heavy tale of woe for me and Thebes LEADER O house of Oedipus, hast thou heard these tidings? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | to what city? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | to which of our guest- friends? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what advantage is it? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what fenced town in Attica will take thee in? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what hast thou to tell, mother? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what is it galls the exile? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what is this thou hast said, old man? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what language can I find to tell my tale? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what meanest thou? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what of my sisters twain? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what shall I do? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what was thy scheme? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | what will ye do, my sons? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | which of them will claim my dirge of death? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | who goes there? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | who is at the palace- gates? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | who is so invulnerable as to plunge his sword in my body without reaping the self- same fate? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | whose son? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | why didst thou not let me go after announcing my good news, instead of forcing me to disclose evil? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | why speak of enduring? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | why think so much of the admiring glances turned on rank? |
euripides-phoenissae-1977 | why, why art thou possessed by love of blood and death, out of harmony with the festivals of Bromius? |
plato-laches-1104 | Am I not correct in saying so, Laches? |
plato-laches-1104 | And I will begin with courage, and once more ask, What is that common quality, which is the same in all these cases, and which is called courage? |
plato-laches-1104 | And are you ready to give assistance in the improvement of the youths? |
plato-laches-1104 | And is not that generally thought to be courage? |
plato-laches-1104 | And yet Nicias, would you allow that you are yourself a soothsayer, or are you neither a soothsayer nor courageous? |
plato-laches-1104 | Are you not risking the greatest of your possessions? |
plato-laches-1104 | But what say you of the matter of which we were beginning to speak-- the art of fighting in armour? |
plato-laches-1104 | But why, instead of consulting us, do you not consult our friend Socrates about the education of the youths? |
plato-laches-1104 | Do you imagine that I should call little children courageous, which fear no dangers because they know none? |
plato-laches-1104 | Do you imagine, Laches, that the physician knows whether health or disease is the more terrible to a man? |
plato-laches-1104 | Do you not agree to that, Laches? |
plato-laches-1104 | Do you now understand what I mean? |
plato-laches-1104 | Do you or do you not agree with me? |
plato-laches-1104 | For how can we advise any one about the best mode of attaining something of which we are wholly ignorant? |
plato-laches-1104 | For who but one of them can know to whom to die or to live is better? |
plato-laches-1104 | Had not many a man better never get up from a sick bed? |
plato-laches-1104 | In all things small as well as great? |
plato-laches-1104 | Is not that, on the other hand, to be regarded as evil and hurtful? |
plato-laches-1104 | Is that a practice in which the lads may be advantageously instructed? |
plato-laches-1104 | Is this a slight matter about which you and Lysimachus are deliberating? |
plato-laches-1104 | LACHES: How flying? |
plato-laches-1104 | LACHES: I have but one feeling, Nicias, or( shall I say?) |
plato-laches-1104 | LACHES: Indeed I do: who but he? |
plato-laches-1104 | LACHES: To what extent and what principle do you mean? |
plato-laches-1104 | LACHES: Well but, Socrates; did you never observe that some persons, who have had no teachers, are more skilful than those who have, in some things? |
plato-laches-1104 | LACHES: What can he possibly mean, Socrates? |
plato-laches-1104 | LACHES: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-laches-1104 | LACHES: Why, Socrates, what else can a man say? |
plato-laches-1104 | LYSIMACHUS: Why do you say that, Nicias? |
plato-laches-1104 | LYSIMACHUS: Why, Laches, has Socrates ever attended to matters of this sort? |
plato-laches-1104 | LYSIMACHUS: Why, yes, Socrates; what else am I to do? |
plato-laches-1104 | Let me ask you a question: Do not physicians know the dangers of disease? |
plato-laches-1104 | May not death often be the better of the two? |
plato-laches-1104 | Must we not select that to which the art of fighting in armour is supposed to conduce? |
plato-laches-1104 | NICIAS: And do you think that the same things are terrible to those who had better die, and to those who had better live? |
plato-laches-1104 | NICIAS: What is that? |
plato-laches-1104 | NICIAS: Why, Socrates, is not the question whether young men ought or ought not to learn the art of fighting in armour? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And are we right in saying so? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And at present we have in view some knowledge, of which the end is the soul of youth? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And courage, my friend, is, as you say, a knowledge of the fearful and of the hopeful? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And do you, Nicias, also acknowledge that the same science has understanding of the same things, whether future, present, or past? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And for this reason, as I imagine,--because a good decision is based on knowledge and not on numbers? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And in a word, when he considers anything for the sake of another thing, he thinks of the end and not of the means? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And is anything noble which is evil and hurtful? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And is this condition of ours satisfactory? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And shall we invite Nicias to join us? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And so should I; but what would you say of another man, who fights flying, instead of remaining? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And suppose I were to be asked by some one: What is that common quality, Socrates, which, in all these uses of the word, you call quickness? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And that is in contradiction with our present view? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And that which we know we must surely be able to tell? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And the fearful, and the hopeful, are admitted to be future goods and future evils? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And the knowledge of these things you call courage? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And the same science has to do with the same things in the future or at any time? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And we are enquiring, Which of us is skilful or successful in the treatment of the soul, and which of us has had good teachers? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And when he considers whether he shall set a bridle on a horse and at what time, he is thinking of the horse and not of the bridle? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And when you call in an adviser, you should see whether he too is skilful in the accomplishment of the end which you have in view? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And would you do so too, Melesias? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: And you would say that a wise endurance is also good and noble? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: But as to the epithet''wise,''--wise in what? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: But then, Nicias, courage, according to this new definition of yours, instead of being a part of virtue only, will be all virtue? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: But we were saying that courage is one of the parts of virtue? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: But what is this knowledge then, and of what? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: But what would you say of a foolish endurance? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: But would there not arise a prior question about the nature of the art of which we want to find the masters? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: But, my dear friend, should not the good sportsman follow the track, and not be lazy? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: But, surely, this is a foolish endurance in comparison with the other? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Do you agree with me about the parts? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Do you hear him, Laches? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Do you understand his meaning, Laches? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Great care, then, is required in this matter? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: His one vote would be worth more than the vote of all us four? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: How so? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: I will endeavour to explain; you would call a man courageous who remains at his post, and fights with the enemy? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Must we not then first of all ask, whether there is any one of us who has knowledge of that about which we are deliberating? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Nor the wisdom which plays the lyre? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Suppose that we instruct instead of abusing him? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Tell him then, Nicias, what you mean by this wisdom; for you surely do not mean the wisdom which plays the flute? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Then must we not first know the nature of virtue? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Then which of the parts of virtue shall we select? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Then you would not admit that sort of endurance to be courage-- for it is not noble, but courage is noble? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Then, Laches, we may presume that we know the nature of virtue? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Then, according to you, only the wise endurance is courage? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: What is Laches saying, Nicias? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: What is it, Nicias? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: What, Lysimachus, are you going to accept the opinion of the majority? |
plato-laches-1104 | SOCRATES: Why do you say so, Laches? |
plato-laches-1104 | Should we not select him who knew and had practised the art, and had the best teachers? |
plato-laches-1104 | Tell me, my boys, whether this is the Socrates of whom you have often spoken? |
plato-laches-1104 | There is this sort of courage-- is there not, Laches? |
plato-laches-1104 | What do you say to that alteration in your statement? |
plato-laches-1104 | What do you say, Socrates-- will you comply? |
plato-laches-1104 | What do you say? |
plato-laches-1104 | Who are they who, having been inferior persons, have become under your care good and noble? |
plato-laches-1104 | Would you not say the same? |
plato-laches-1104 | do you mean to say that the soothsayer ought to know the grounds of hope or fear? |
plato-laches-1104 | or are the physicians the same as the courageous? |
plato-laches-1104 | or do the courageous know them? |
kant-critique-2541 | Does the fifth, or the tenth century belong to the earlier centuries? |
kant-critique-2541 | A philosopher was asked:"What is the weight of smoke?" |
kant-critique-2541 | All that we are entitled to ask is,"What takes place in nature?" |
kant-critique-2541 | And now the question arises:"How is metaphysics, as a natural disposition, possible?" |
kant-critique-2541 | And that of a fluid body? |
kant-critique-2541 | And where, indeed, should we look for objects to correspond to our conceptions, if not in experience, by which alone objects are presented to us? |
kant-critique-2541 | Annihilate its existence in thought, and you annihilate the thing itself with all its predicates; how then can there be any room for contradiction? |
kant-critique-2541 | Are they real existences? |
kant-critique-2541 | Are you seeking for an explanation of certain phenomena; and do you expect these ideas to give you the principles or the rules of this explanation?" |
kant-critique-2541 | But do we thus extend the limits of our knowledge beyond the field of possible experience? |
kant-critique-2541 | But how and by what can we fix and determine this point of time, unless by that which already exists? |
kant-critique-2541 | But how can we know that they exist in one and the same time? |
kant-critique-2541 | But of what kind is this intuition? |
kant-critique-2541 | But what other internal attributes of such an object can I think than those which my internal sense presents to me? |
kant-critique-2541 | But, I ask, what is meant by contingent? |
kant-critique-2541 | But, as regards the quantity of a thing( quantitas), that is to say, the answer to the question:"How large is this or that object?" |
kant-critique-2541 | But, it will be asked again, can we on these grounds, admit the existence of a wise and omnipotent author of the world? |
kant-critique-2541 | But, it will be asked further, can I make any use of this conception and hypothesis in my investigations into the world and nature? |
kant-critique-2541 | But, it will be asked, what kind of a treasure is this that we propose to bequeath to posterity? |
kant-critique-2541 | But, it will be said, is this all that pure reason can effect, in opening up prospects beyond the limits of experience? |
kant-critique-2541 | For how can any experience be adequate with an idea? |
kant-critique-2541 | For how can two persons dispute about a thing, the reality of which neither can present in actual or even in possible experience? |
kant-critique-2541 | For how can we have any experience or perception of an absolute void? |
kant-critique-2541 | For how can we know all the possible cases that may arise? |
kant-critique-2541 | For how, under different wills, should we find complete unity of ends? |
kant-critique-2541 | For on what ground can reason base such synthetical propositions, which do not relate to the objects of experience and their internal possibility? |
kant-critique-2541 | For whence could our experience itself acquire certainty, if all the rules on which it depends were themselves empirical, and consequently fortuitous? |
kant-critique-2541 | From what source does this free- thinker derive his knowledge that there is, for example, no Supreme Being? |
kant-critique-2541 | Hence we can not ask:"Why did not reason determine itself in a different manner?" |
kant-critique-2541 | Hence, the question no longer is,"What is the quantity of this series of conditions in itself-- is it finite or infinite?" |
kant-critique-2541 | How is pure natural science possible? |
kant-critique-2541 | I ask, is the proposition, this or that thing( which I am admitting to be possible) exists, an analytical or a synthetical proposition? |
kant-critique-2541 | If it is finite and limited, we have a right to ask:"What determines these limits?" |
kant-critique-2541 | If, secondly, the question is asked whether this being is substance, whether it is of the greatest reality, whether it is necessary, and so forth? |
kant-critique-2541 | If, thirdly, the question is whether we may not cogitate this being, which is distinct from the world, in analogy with the objects of experience? |
kant-critique-2541 | In the first place, how can I desire an a priori cognition or metaphysic of objects, in so far as they are given a posteriori? |
kant-critique-2541 | In the same way I ask: Does the conception of extension belong to metaphysics? |
kant-critique-2541 | In what propositions is pure reason unavoidably subject to an antinomy? |
kant-critique-2541 | Is it a pure a priori, or is it an empirical intuition? |
kant-critique-2541 | Is the motive for this endeavour to be found in its speculative, or in its practical interests alone? |
kant-critique-2541 | Nothing more than two articles of belief? |
kant-critique-2541 | Now what is this tertium quid that is to be the medium of all synthetical judgements? |
kant-critique-2541 | Now, if I cogitate a being as the highest reality, without defect or imperfection, the question still remains-- whether this being exists or not? |
kant-critique-2541 | Shall we suppose that it is impossible to discover it? |
kant-critique-2541 | That is to say, this conception contains the answer to the question:"Are there objects quite unconnected with, and independent of, our intuition?" |
kant-critique-2541 | The difficulty here lies wholly in the question: How can the subject have an internal intuition of itself? |
kant-critique-2541 | The first question which occurs in considering our representations is to what faculty of cognition do they belong? |
kant-critique-2541 | The proper problem of pure reason, then, is contained in the question:"How are synthetical judgements a priori possible?" |
kant-critique-2541 | The question ought to be thus stated:"Why did not reason employ its power of causality to determine certain phenomena in a different manner?" |
kant-critique-2541 | The question,"What ought to happen in the sphere of nature?" |
kant-critique-2541 | The second question is this: If I conduct myself so as not to be unworthy of happiness, may I hope thereby to obtain happiness? |
kant-critique-2541 | This highest cause-- what magnitude shall we attribute to it? |
kant-critique-2541 | This last question, which arises out of the above universal problem, would properly run thus:"How is metaphysics possible as a science?" |
kant-critique-2541 | To the question How? |
kant-critique-2541 | To the understanding or to the senses? |
kant-critique-2541 | Until that time, we can not learn philosophy-- it does not exist; if it does, where is it, who possesses it, and how shall we know it? |
kant-critique-2541 | WHAT CAN I KNOW? |
kant-critique-2541 | WHAT MAY I HOPE? |
kant-critique-2541 | WHAT OUGHT I TO DO? |
kant-critique-2541 | Well, that of body too? |
kant-critique-2541 | What are the causes of this antinomy? |
kant-critique-2541 | What is the real value of this system of metaphysics, purified by criticism, and thereby reduced to a permanent condition? |
kant-critique-2541 | What is to be done to provide against the danger which seems in the present case to menace the best interests of humanity? |
kant-critique-2541 | What means shall we employ to bridge the abyss? |
kant-critique-2541 | What other course was left for us to pursue? |
kant-critique-2541 | What then are time and space? |
kant-critique-2541 | What use can we make of our understanding, even in respect of experience, if we do not propose ends to ourselves? |
kant-critique-2541 | What would be said if we were asked to be satisfied with a division of the epochs of the world into the earlier centuries and those following them? |
kant-critique-2541 | What, then, must be our representation of space, in order that such a cognition of it may be possible? |
kant-critique-2541 | Whether and in what way can reason free itself from this self- contradiction? |
kant-critique-2541 | Why then should nature have visited our reason with restless aspirations after it, as if it were one of our weightiest concerns? |
kant-critique-2541 | [* Footnote: The question,"What is the constitution of a transcendental object?" |
kant-critique-2541 | and how is it possible to cognize the nature of things according to a priori principles, and to attain to a rational physiology? |
kant-critique-2541 | and, Is there a future life? |
kant-critique-2541 | for it is nothing in itself; but,"How is the empirical regress to be commenced, and how far ought we to proceed with it?" |
kant-critique-2541 | is just as absurd as the question,"What ought to be the properties of a circle?" |
kant-critique-2541 | or this--"How I can be an object of my own intuition and internal perceptions?" |
kant-critique-2541 | or, in the latter case,"What are the properties of a circle?" |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | ... What is that? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | 1ST MARKET- LOUNGER What''s this? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | 1ST WOMAN Must I never use my wool then? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | ATHENIANS Can anyone tell us where Lysistrata is? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | ATHENIANS Tell us then, Spartans, what has brought you here? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | ATHENIANS Then what will we do? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | ATHENIANS Then, ah, we''ll choose this snug thing here, Echinus, Shall we call the nestling spot? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | ATHENIANS What allies? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Ah, Strymodorus, who''d have thought affairs could tangle so? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Are new privations springing up in Sparta? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | But if the affair''s so wonderful, tell us, what is it? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | But what avail will your scheme be if the men Drag us for all our kicking on to the couch? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | But what has vexed you so? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | But what of them as well? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | But when at the last in the streets we heard shouted( everywhere ringing the ominous cry)"Is there no one to help us, no saviour in Athens?" |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | But you''ve not forgotten? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CAILONICE But, Lysistrata, What is this oath that we''re to swear? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE And long? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE Anything else? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE But if they should force us? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE But if-- which heaven forbid-- we should refrain As you would have us, how is Peace induced? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE But wo n''t the men March straight against us? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE By Woman? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE How could we do Such a big wise deed? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE Then what will symbolise us? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE Then why are n''t they here? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE What is it all about, dear Lysistrata, That you''ve called the women hither in a troop? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE Yes, but how? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CALONICE_ If not, to nauseous water change this wine._ LYSISTRATA Do you all swear to this? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CINESIAS I. LYSISTRATA A man? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CINESIAS O is that true? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CINESIAS There now, do n''t you feel pity for the child? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CINESIAS Well, ca n''t your oath perhaps be got around? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CINESIAS Who are you that thus eject me? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | CINESIAS Why some cushions? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Come, now from off my back.... Is there no Samos- general to help me to unpack? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Did anything new arise? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Do n''t you go throb- throb? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Do we seem a fearful host? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Do ye see our condition? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Do you feel a jerking throbbing in the morning? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Do you mind that? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Does anyone recognise his face? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Gorgon- buckler instead the usual platter or dish? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | HERALD What here gabs the Senate an''the Prytanes? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Hail, Spartans how do you fare? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | I''m coming of my own accord.... Why bars? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | I''m just drawing off my shoes.... You''re sure you will vote for Peace? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | In plain sight? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Is it from Pan? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Is your groin swollen With stress of travelling? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LAMPITO But who''s garred this Council o''Women to meet here? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LAMPITO Hark, what caterwauling hubbub''s that? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA And what am I to get? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA And what if they do? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA And you? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Are you not sad your children''s fathers Go endlessly off soldiering afar In this plodding war? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA How is it different? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA How sensible? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Now what story is this you tell? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Now, brethren twined with mutual benefactions, Can you still war, can you suffer such disgrace? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Now, tell me, are the women right to lag? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Of course.... Well then Where is our Scythianess? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Then why the helm? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA This girl? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA We must refrain from every depth of love.... Why do you turn your backs? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA What more is lacking? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA What nonsense is this? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA What oath would suit us then? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA What of us then, who ever in vain for our children must weep Borne but to perish afar and in vain? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA What use is Zeus to our anatomy? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Which one? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Who is this youngster? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Why are you blaming us for laying you out? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Will you truly do it then? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA Yes, why not? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | LYSISTRATA You too, dear turbot, you that said just now You did n''t mind being split right up in the least? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Look, there goes one.... Hey, what''s the hurry? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Are you a man Or a monstrosity? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Are you afraid? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE But the old man will often select-- LYSISTRATA O why not finish and die? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Does not a man age? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE How, may I ask, will your rule re- establish order and justice in lands so tormented? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE If we do n''t want to be saved? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Is gold then the cause of the war? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Not for a staff? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Out with it speedily-- what is this plan that you boast you''ve invented? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Then why do you hide that lance That sticks out under your arms? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Then why do you turn aside and hold your cloak So far out from your body? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Tut tut, what''s here? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Well, what is it then? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE What did you do? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE What do you mean? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE What madness is this? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE What then is that you propose? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE What will you do if emergencies arise? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE What_ you_ will? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Whence has this evil come? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAGISTRATE Why do you women come prying and meddling in matters of state touching war- time and peace? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAN Grann''am, do you much mind men? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MAN That I fear do you suppose? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN Ah cursed drab, what have you brought this water for? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN Cleaner, you dirty slut? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN Did you hear that insolence? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN Ho, Phaedrias, shall we put a stop to all these chattering tricks? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN How may this ferocity be tamed? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN Is that what''s wrong? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN What vengeance can you take if with my fists your face I beat? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN What, sweet? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MEN What, you put out my fire? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MYRRHINE Are we late, Lysistrata? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MYRRHINE But how can I break my oath? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MYRRHINE What is the amazing news you have to tell? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MYRRHINE What? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MYRRHINE Where shall I dress my hair again Before returning to the citadel? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | MYRRHINE Would you like me to perfume you? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Men say we''re slippery rogues-- CALONICE And are n''t they right? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Nothing to say? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Now what are two legs more or less? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | O is it something in a blaze? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | O where''s that girl, Reconciliation? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | O women, if we would compel the men To bow to Peace, we must refrain-- MYRRHINE From what? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Observe my case-- I, a magistrate, come here to draw Money to buy oar- blades, and what happens? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | See... where are they from? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Shall I singe you with my torch? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Suppose that now upon their backs we splintered these our sticks? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | That ruddy glare, that smoky skurry? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | The plain, hard wood? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Then I would say to him,"O my dear husband, why still do they rush on destruction the faster?" |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMAN What is this? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMAN Where is he, whoever he is? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMAN Yes, now I see him, but who can he be? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN Dear Mistress of our martial enterprise, Why do you come with sorrow in your eyes? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN So then we scare you, do we? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN So... was it hot? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN Speak; can we help? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN Watered, perhaps you''ll bloom again-- why not? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN What can it be? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN What is your fire for then, you smelly corpse? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN What''s this? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN Yes, yes, what is it? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | WOMEN You villainous old men, what''s this you do? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | We can persuade Our men to strike a fair an''decent Peace, But how will ye pitch out the battle- frenzy O''the Athenian populace? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What are these black looks for? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What do you gape at, wretch, with dazzled eyes? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What do you mean? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What else is like it, dearest Lysistrata? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What is there to prevent you? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What is this hard lump here? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What kind of an object is it? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What''s that rising yonder? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | What''s the good of argument with such a rampageous pack? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Where are you going? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Where is that archer? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Where is the archer now? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Where is the other archer gone? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Who are you? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Who is this that stands within our lines? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Who knows what kind of person may perceive you? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why are you calling me? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why are you staring? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why are your faces blanched? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why do you bite your lips and shake your heads? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why do you weep? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why not be friends? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why not we? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why the noise? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Why then delay any longer? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Will you or wo n''t you, or what do you mean? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Would you hear the words? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | You ca n''t hide your clear intent, And anyway why not wait till the tenth day Meditating a brazen name for your brass brat? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | You dotard, because he at no time had lent His intractable ears to absorb from our counsel one temperate word of advice, kindly meant? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | You''re not deceiving me about the Treaty? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | Yourself to burn? |
aristophanes-lysistrata-2337 | _ She drinks._ CALONICE Here now, share fair, have n''t we made a pact? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Knew ye not that wee shall judge the Angels? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Men and Brethren what shall we doe? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Not to beleeve every Spirit, but to try the Spirits whether they are of God, because many false Prophets are gone out into the world? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | See( saith the Eunuch) here is water, what doth hinder me to be baptized? hobbes-leviathan-1519 Shall I come unto you with a Rod, or in love, and the spirit of lenity?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | They went about to kill him,the people answered,"Thou hast a Devill, who goeth about to kill thee?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | What shall I doe to inherit eternall life? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | What shall they doe which are Baptized for the dead, if the dead rise not at all? hobbes-leviathan-1519 Which way went the Spirit of the Lord from me to speak to thee?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Who is hee that overcommeth the world, but he that beleeveth that Jesus is the Son of God? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Who made mee a Judge, or Divider over you? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Who told thee that thou wast naked? hobbes-leviathan-1519 14,15. of the same Chapter)How shall they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | And Job, how earnestly does he expostulate with God, for the many Afflictions he suffered, notwithstanding his Righteousnesse? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | And To What Laws But what Commandements are those that God hath given us? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | And if it be further asked, What if wee bee commanded by our lawfull Prince, to say with our tongue, wee beleeve not; must we obey such command? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | And in case a Subject be forbidden by the Civill Soveraign to professe some of those his opinions, upon what grounds can he disobey? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | And thereupon God saith,"Hast thou eaten,& c."as if he should say, doest thou that owest me obedience, take upon thee to judge of my Commandements? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | And why are not also the Precepts of good Physitians, so many Laws? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Are all those Laws which were given to the Jews by the hand of Moses, the Commandements of God? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Are there not therefore Spirits, that neither have Bodies, nor are meer Imaginations? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But Cui Bono? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But a man may here again ask, When the Prophet hath foretold a thing, how shal we know whether it will come to passe or not? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But are not( may some men say) the Universities of England learned enough already to do that? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But if Teaching be the cause of Faith, why doe not all beleeve? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But man dyeth, and wasteth away, yea, man giveth up the Ghost, and where is he?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But then what shall we answer to our Saviours saying,"Whosoever denyeth me before men, I will deny him before my Father which is in Heaven?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But this Authority of man to declare what be these Positive Lawes of God, how can it be known? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But what is a good Law? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But what is it to Dip a man into the water in the name of any thing? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But what reason is there for it? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But what then can bee the meaning of those our Saviours words? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But when is it, that the heavens shall be no more? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But who are those now that are sent by Christ, but such as are ordained Pastors by lawfull Authority? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But who is there, that reading this Text, can say, this stile of the Apostles may not as properly be used in giving Counsell, as in making Laws? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | But why then( will some object) doth our Saviour interpose these words,"Thou art Peter"? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Can any man think that God is served with such absurdities? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Christian Kings may erre in deducing a Consequence, but who shall Judge? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Do not ye judg them that are within?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Does he not there as much accuse mankind by his actions, as I do by my words? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For how shall a man know the Infallibility of the Church, but by knowing first the Infallibility of the Scripture? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For if the Supreme King, have not his Regall Power in this world; by what authority can obedience be required to his Officers? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For in a Discourse of our present civill warre, what could seem more impertinent, than to ask( as one did) what was the value of a Roman Penny? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For what argument of Madnesse can there be greater, than to clamour, strike, and throw stones at our best friends? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For what have I to do to judg them that are without? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For what is it for men to excommunicate their lawful King, but to keep him from all places of Gods publique Service in his own Kingdom? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For who is so stupid, as both to mistake in Geometry, and also to persist in it, when another detects his error to him? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For who is there, that beleeving this to be true, will not readily obey him in whatsoever he commands? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | For who will endeavour to obey the Laws, if he expect Obedience to be Powred or Blown into him? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | How then could his words, or actions bee seditious, or tend to the overthrow of their then Civill Government? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | How then could the Jewes fall into this opinion of possession? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | If S. Paul, what needed he to quote any places to prove his doctrine? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | If one Prophet deceive another, what certainty is there of knowing the will of God, by other way than that of Reason? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | If then this Kingdome were to come at the Resurrection of Christ, why is it said,"some of them"rather than all? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | If these Jews of Thessalonica were not, who else was the Judge of what S. Paul alledged out of Scripture? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | If they be not, what others are so, besides the Law of Nature? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | If they bee, why are not Christians taught to obey them? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | In what court should they sue for it, who had no Tribunalls? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Is it because such opinions are contrary to true Religion? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Is it because they be contrary to the Religion established? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Is it because they tend to disorder in Government, as countenancing Rebellion, or Sedition? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Is not this full Power, both Temporall and Spirituall, as they call it, that would divide it? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Of Martyrs But what then shall we say of all those Martyrs we read of in the History of the Church, that they have needlessely cast away their lives? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Or how can a man beleeve, that Jesus is the King that shall reign eternally, unlesse hee beleeve him also risen again from the dead? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Or if they had Arbitrators amongst themselves, who should execute their Judgments, when they had no power to arme their Officers? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Or who will not obey a Priest, that can make God, rather than his Soveraign; nay than God himselfe? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Or who, that is in fear of Ghosts, will not bear great respect to those that can make the Holy Water, that drives them from him? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Shall a private man Judge, when the question is of his own obedience? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Shall not all Judicature appertain to Christ, and his Apostles? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Shall we say they did not onely obey, but also teach what they meant not, for want of strength? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | That Subjects may be freed from their Alleageance, if by the Court of Rome, the King be judged an Heretique? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | That a King( as Chilperique of France) may be deposed by a Pope( as Pope Zachary,) for no cause; and his Kingdome given to one of his Subjects? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | That a King, if he be a Priest, can not Marry? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | That the Clergy, and Regulars, in what Country soever, shall be exempt from the Jurisdiction of their King, in cases criminall? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | That whether a Prince be born in lawfull Marriage, or not, must be judged by Authority from Rome? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | The Kingdome of God is gotten by violence; but what if it could be gotten by unjust violence? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | The Prophet David argueth thus,"Shall he that made the eye, not see? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | The Schoole Of Graecians Unprofitable But what has been the Utility of those Schools? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Upon what ground, but on this submission of their own,"Speak thou to us, and we will heare thee; but let not God speak to us, lest we dye?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | What Profit did they expect from it? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | What is Baptisme? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | What is that Condensed, and Rarefied? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | When men write whole volumes of such stuffe, are they not Mad, or intend to make others so? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | Why Our Saviour Controlled It Not Which doctrine if it be not true, why( may some say) did not our Saviour contradict it, and teach the Contrary? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | and How Can He Be Bound To Obey Them? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | and after it was sold, was it not in thy power?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | and how shall they Preach, except they be sent?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | and how shall they hear without a Preacher? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | and such diversity of ways in running to the same mark, Felicity, if it be not Night amongst us, or at least a Mist? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | and who are lawfully ordained, that are not ordained by the Soveraign Pastor? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | and who is ordained by the Soveraign Pastor in a Christian Common- wealth, that is not ordained by the authority of the Soveraign thereof? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | and with force to resist him, when he with force endeavoureth to correct them? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | can Diseases heare? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | did not one of the two, St. Peter, or St. Paul erre in a superstructure, when St. Paul withstood St. Peter to his face? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | goeth to war at his own charges? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | had said to Martha,"Beleevest thou this?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | hast thou eaten of the tree, of which I commanded thee thou shouldest not eat?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | he asked them all again,( not Peter onely)"Whom say yee that I am?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | nay why does he use on diverse occasions, such forms of speech as seem to confirm it? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | or can there be a corporeall Spirit in a Body of Flesh and Bone, full already of vitall and animall Spirits? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | or he that made the ear, not hear?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | or if the Pope, or an Apostle Judge, may he not erre in deducing of a consequence? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | or is it you will undertake to teach the Universities? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | or shall any man Judg but he that is appointed thereto by the Church, that is, by the Civill Soveraign that representeth it? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | or that beleeves the Law can hurt him; that is, Words, and Paper, without the Hands, and Swords of men? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | or when I have preached, shall not I answer their doubts, and expound the Scriptures to them; that is shall I not Teach? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | or who feedeth a flock, and eatheth not of the milke of the flock?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | such stumbling at every little asperity of their own fortune, and every little eminence of that of other men? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | to have rebuked the winds? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | to rebuke a Fever? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | was a Prophet; but some of the company asked Jehu,"What came that mad- man for?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | was it not thine? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | were it against Reason so to get it, when it is impossible to receive hurt by it? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | what Science is there at this day acquired by their Readings and Disputings? |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | why also are they Baptized for the dead?" |
hobbes-leviathan-1519 | would have it) at the Resurrection; what reason is there for Christians ever since the Resurrection to say in their prayers,"Let thy Kingdome Come"? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Shall we fight or nurse our lives, seeing the dead have no honours? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | ( Uncovering the corpse) Mark well the body now laid bare; is not this a sight to fill thee with wonder, and upset thy hopes? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON By whom was he slain? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Dost mean the captives, the booty of the Hellenes? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Hadst thou any son besides those, lady? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Hecuba, why art thou delaying to come and bury thy daughter? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON How are women to master men? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON How? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Was she seeking it, or bent on other tasks? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Well, but why dost thou call me to thy aid? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON What is thy desire? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Where did he place him apart from all the sons he then had? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Where didst find him? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Where then was he, when his city was being destroyed? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Which of thy sons is he, poor sufferer? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON Why dost thou turn thy back towards me and weep, refusing to say, what has happened, or who this is? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON With Polymestor, the king of this country? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | AGAMEMNON( addressing HECUBA) What hast thou to say? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Again, what interest hadst thou to further by thy zeal? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Art thou not come, as I had thought, to fetch me to my doom, but to announce ill news? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | But tell me, what kind of cleverness did they think it, when against this child they passed their bloody vote? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | But what boots it to bemoan these things, when it brings one no nearer to heading the trouble? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | But what need hast thou of me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | But why art thou come, bringing hither to me the corpse of Polyxena, on whose burial Achaea''s host was reported to be busily engaged? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Can thy dream- lore tell us that? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Dost know then what to do? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Dost see this corpse, for whom my tears now flow? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Doth any hearken, or will no man help me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Ah me, what shall I do? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA And did he tell thee nothing of thy present trouble? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA By whom but by this man? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Did Helen recognize thee and tell me only? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Didst thou embrace my knees in all humility? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Dost know what I wish to say to thee and thy children? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Dost remember the day thou camest to spy on Ilium, disguised in rags and tatters, while down thy cheek ran drops of blood? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Dost thou grieve? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA First tell me of the child Polydorus, whom thou art keeping in thy halls, received from me and his father; is he yet alive? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Hath he any recollection of me his mother? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA How knowest thou of my transformation? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA I am avenged on thee; have I not cause for joy? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Is it not just for thy atrocious crime? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Is the gold safe, which he brought with him from Troy? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Shall I die or live, and so complete my life on earth? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Was it I that saved and sent thee forth again? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Well, dost thou know where stands the shrine of Trojan Athena? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA What saidst thou then, when in my power? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA What? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA Who will force me to take the leap? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA With wings upon my back, or by what means? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA( aside) Can it be that in estimating this man''s feelings I make him out too ill- disposed, when he is not really so? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA( chanting) Cast up on the smooth sand, or thrown there after the murderous blow? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA( chanting) O my son, child of a luckless mother, what was the manner of thy death? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | HECUBA( rising) Good friend, art come because the Achaeans are resolved to slay me to at the grave? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Hearken then; dost see this corpse? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | How can I escape reproach if I judge the not guilty? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | How did ye end her life? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | How now? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | How shall anyone hereafter hope for prosperity? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Is not this a foul reproach to treat a man as a friend in life, but, when he is gone from us, to treat him so no more? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Is then the difference due to birth or bringing up? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Heard ye, friends, that Thracian''s cry of woe? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS What now, thou wretched bird of boding note? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | LEADER Who slew him then? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Nay, villain, in the first place how could the barbarian race ever be friends with Hellas? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | ODYSSEUS How so? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR Die shalt thou; and to thy tomb shall be given a name- HECUBA Recalling my form, or what wilt thou tell me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR Is it this thou wouldst tell thy son? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR Is the gold there? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR Is there aught else thou wouldst tell me about the place? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR It is safe to enter? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR The joy will soon cease, in the day when ocean''s flood- HECUBA Shall convey me to the shores of Hellas? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR What is it that I and my children are to learn? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR What need then of these children''s presence? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR What next wouldst learn of me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR Where can it be? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYMESTOR Where? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYXENA What message can I take for thee to Hector or thy aged lord? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYXENA Why dost thou tell me this? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | POLYXENA Why this ominous address? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Shall we force an entry? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Sons, and city- where are they? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | TALTHYBIUS Where can I find Hecuba, who once was queen of Ilium, ye Trojan maidens? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | To whose house shall I be brought, to be his slave and chattel? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Was it duty led them to slay a human victim at the tomb, where sacrifice of oxen more befits? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Was it thou that didst this deed, as he avers? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Was not this the queen of wealthy Phrygia, the wife of Priam highly blest? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | What champion have I? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | What words, or cries, or lamentations can I utter? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Where are now the laws''twixt guest and host? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Where is any god or power divine to succour me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Where shall I stay or turn my steps? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Which path shall I take first, this or that, eager as I am to clutch those Trojan murderesses that have destroyed me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Which way am I to go, or this or that? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Whither can I turn or go? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Whither shall I turn my steps? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Who did the deed? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Who will take thy part? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Whom dost thou expect to persuade into believing that? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Why didst send for me to come hither from my house? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Why do still ponder the matter? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Why do ye delay? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Why should I prolong my days? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Wilt thou be thrown down, be roughly thrust aside and wound thy aged skin, and in unseemly wise be torn from me by youthful arms? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | Wilt thou give naught to her that showed such peerless bravery and spirit?" |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | and there with the maids of Delos shall I hymn the golden snood and bow of Artemis their goddess? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | are there no men about? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | art so eager to find sorrow? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | but as best I can; and what will that be? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | could he have been so eager for the treasure? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | did he slay him to get the gold? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | did not women slay the sons of Aegyptus, and utterly clear Lemnos of men? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | for by thy voice I know thee, Agamemnon, dost see my piteous state? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | hapless Polymestor, who hath stricken thee? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | hast thou foiled the Thracian, and is the stranger in thy power, mistress mine? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | how canst thou speak of such a horror? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | in naming thee I name myself; O Hecuba, what shall do? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | inside thy dress, or hast thou it hidden? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | is all thy threat now brought to pass? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | is she somewhere near? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | madman, what wouldst thou? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | my words gall thee? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | or did some one bring his corpse? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | or did ye deal ruthlessly with her as though your victim were a foe, old man? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | or does Achilles, if claiming the lives of those who slew him as his recompense, show his justice by marking her out for death? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | or that we hold this false opinion all to no purpose, thinking there is any race of gods, when it is chance that rules the mortal sphere? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | or was it likely that they would sail hither again and destroy thy country''s crops? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | shall crawl upon my hands like a wild four- footed beast on their track? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | sirrah, art thou mad? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | that thine eye is over man? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | thinkst thou I grieve not for my son? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | thou art not surely bringing hither mad Cassandra, the prophetic maid? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | thou, Hecuba, that hast ventured on this inconceivable daring? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | throw myself here at Agamemnon''s knees, or bear my sorrows in silence? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | to be set free? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | to some haven in the Dorian land, or in Phthia, where men say Apidanus, father of fairest streams, makes fat and rich the tilth? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | to what corner have ye fled cowering before me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | was any mercy shown? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | was it to form some marriage, or on the score of kin, or, prithee, why? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what can I say? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what death o''ertook him? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what is that? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what is there to mark it? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what lays thee dead at my feet? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what man is this I see near the tents, some Trojan''s corpse? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what news is it thou hast proclaimed, scaring me, like a cowering bird, from my chamber by this alarm? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what of me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what will they say, if once more there comes gathering of the host and a contest with the foe? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what wilt thou do? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what wilt thou say? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what wilt thou say? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | what woman was ever born to such misfortune? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | when will ye sack the citadel of Ilium, and seek your homes?" |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | whence can I? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | whence wilt thou procure friends? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | where rest? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | where shall I end my life? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | where, ladies, is Hecuba, our queen of sorrow, who far surpasses all in tribulation, men and women both alike? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | where, ye Trojan maidens, can I find inspired Helenus or Cassandra, that they may read me my dream? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | whither can I go, where halt, or whither turn? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | whither wilt thou bear me the child of sorrow? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | whither wouldst thou withdraw thy steps from me? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | who art thou that wilt not let my body rest? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | who hath reft thine eves of sight, staining the pupils with blood? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | who hath slain these children? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | why am I thus scared by fearful visions of the night? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | why disturb me in my anguish, whosoe''er thou art? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | why dost thou call so loud? |
euripides-hecuba-1522 | wilt take a sword in thy old hand and slay the barbarian, or hast thou drugs or what to help thee? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | ( Exit) BDELYCLEON What does it matter? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | ( To PHILOCLEON) But you have not finished? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | ( With increasing excitement) As to power, am I not equal to the king of the gods? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | A shrimp or a spider? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | And does this wretch, this Demologocleon dare to say such odious things, just because you tell the truth about our navy? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | And now recall to me what are the advantages you enjoy, you, who pretend to rule over Greece? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | And yet can anyone style himself your benefactor, when he does not cast a morsel to your poor dog? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Are you asleep? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Are you distraught, as if you had just returned from Pluto? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Are you going to talk of cats and rats among high- class people? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Are you mad? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON And there, on the other side, surely that is a girl''s bottom? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON And what did he say to that? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON And what will the suit be about? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON And when Theorus, prone at Cleon''s feet, takes his hand and sings,"Like Admetus, love those who are brave,"what reply will you make him? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Could I not sell it just as well? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Did you steal it from a shrine? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Do you see what lawsuits you are drawing upon yourself with your drunkenness? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON For outrage? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Is it not the worst of all slaveries to see all these wretches and their flatterers, whom they gorge with gold, at the head of affairs? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Is this a torch? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Noman? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Now where are you going? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Now why this lamentation? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Now, will you know how to talk gravely with well- informed men of good class? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Really? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Smoke? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Then he is acquitted? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON What do you mean? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON What for? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON What is it? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON What is that? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON What is this? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON What will you say to them? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON What? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Whatever are you talking about? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON When they are afraid, they promise to divide Euboea among you and to give each fifty bushels of wheat, but what have they given you? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Who, who? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Why, whatever for? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Will neither of you come here? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Will you have done with this fooling? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON Will you never cease showing yourself hard and intractable, and especially to the accused? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON( pointing to the thunder- mug) What is this if it is not a clepsydra? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BDELYCLEON( returning with slaves who are carrying various objects) There, what do you think of that? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BOY But, father, if the Archon should not form a court to- day, how are we to buy our dinner? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | BOY Father, would you give me something if I asked for it? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | But am I not the most unfortunate of men? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | But what was your dream? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | But why this cock? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | But will you pay the debt? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | CHORUS Assuredly, my child, but tell me what nice thing do you want me to buy you? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | CHORUS( singing) But, poor fellow, what is his aim? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | CHORUS( singing) Who is it detains you and shuts you in? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | CHORUS( singing) Why does the old man not show himself before the door? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | CHORUS( singing).... and accomplice of Brasidas, you with your woollen- fringed coat and your long beard? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | DELYCLEON And what is that black part in the middle? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Do n''t you know what sort of animal we are guarding here? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Do you not see it is of several different colours? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Do you see how opportunely I got you away from the solicitations of those fellators, who wanted you to make love to them in their own odd way? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Do you see them, master? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Does he not resemble a she- ass to the life? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Had we not better confer together and come to some understanding? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Has he lost his shoes? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Have you some good hope to offer us or only"Helle''s sacred waves"? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | He was a man and now he has suddenly become a crow; does it not foretoken that he will take his flight from here and go to the crows? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | He went on an embassy to Pharsalus, and there he lived solely among the Thessalian mercenaries; indeed, is he not the vilest of mercenaries himself? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | How can anyone keep such a dog? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | How can one and the same animal have cast away his buckler both on land, in the sky and at sea? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | How? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | I too feel soft sleep spreading over my eyes, XANTHIAS Are you crazy, like a Corybant? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is he really acquitted? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is it not said, that the dicasts, when deceived by lying witnesses, have need to ruminate well in order to arrive at the truth? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is n''t that good? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is not this great power indeed, which allows even wealth to be disdained? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is the old man at it again, escaping through some loophole? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is there a being who lives more in the midst of delights, who is more feared, aged though he be? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is there a pleasure, a blessing comparable with that of a juryman? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is there a slave who has done something wrong? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is there not one? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Is there one? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Is not old age filled with cruel ills? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Why do we delay to let loose that fury, that is so terrible, when our nests are attacked? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Why do you pull out the wick, you little dolt? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Why, what''s the matter, my child? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Of what country? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON A torch? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON And what for? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON And what good is that, if he eats the cheese? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON And where does the rest go then? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON But could I judge as well with my mouth full? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON But if these notice it and want to fish me up and drag me back into the house, what will you do? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON But what is there to judge? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON But what will you say of it, if he should triumph in the debate? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON But what? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON Can it be I am treated thus? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON How must I recline? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON How then? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON I a slave, I, who lord it over all? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON I deceive myself, when I am judging? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON I remember that well enough, but what connection is there with present circumstances? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON Is this the first urn? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON My best feat? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON Then what should I talk about? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON Was it worth while to beget and bring up children, so that this one should now wish to choke me? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON What flute- girl? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON What is the result? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON What''s this? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON Who is the defendant? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON Who is the wretch? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON"Who loiters at the door of the vestibule?" |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON( from within) What are you doing, you wretches? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON( lying on the ground) Like this? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | PHILOCLEON( to XANTHIAS) Will you let me go, you accursed animal? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Pray, is this obeying or being a slave, as you pretended to be able to prove? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | SOSIAS Is n''t this mighty strange? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | SOSIAS So you want to earn trouble for your ribs, eh? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | SOSIAS What is the matter? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | SOSIAS What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | SOSIAS Why? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Say, cock, is not that your opinion too? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Seest thou how these barbarians ill- use me- me, who have many a time made them weep a full bushel of tears? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Shall you know exactly how to take up the songs that are started? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Should we not, friends, make a halt here and sing to call him out? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Strymodorus of Conthyle, you best of mates, where is Euergides and where is Chabes of Phlya? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Stupid old ass, are you weeping because you are going to be sold? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Then Alcibiades said to me in his lisping way,"Do you thee? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What I love is down there, down there I want to be, there, where the herald cries,"Who has not yet voted? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What case shall we bring up first? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What do the allies do? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What do you gain thereby? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What do you want to do? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What does this mean? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What has become of my strength? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What is your most brilliant feat? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What means this silence? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | What will become of me? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Where are his puppies? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Where is the chimney cover? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Where is the net? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Where is the plaintiff, the dog of Cydathenaea? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Who are you? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Who ever contested at the pancratium with a breast- plate on? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Who is first on the docket? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Why does he not answer? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Why does he not come to join our party? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Why, what are you moaning and groaning for? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Why, what can have happened to our mate, who lives here? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Will you leave it in my hands to name the indemnity I must pay, if I promise you my friendship as well, or will you fix it yourself? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | Will you not clear off? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | XANTHIAS A rat? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | XANTHIAS AND SOSIAS You will not go? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | XANTHIAS Why? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | XANTHIAS Would you mind that? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | XANTHIAS( waking up) What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | are there woollen ox- guts then at Ecbatana? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | are you seeking to tyrannize, or do you think that Athens must pay you your seasonings as a tribute?" |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | father, what''s the matter, what is it? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | has he stubbed his toe in the dark and thus got a swollen ankle? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | have I fallen ill? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | our pay is not even a tithe of the state revenue? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | smoke of what wood? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | summon me? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | tell me then what you have to be proud of? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | the wretch, where has he crept to? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what are you doing there? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what are you doing, wretched man? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what bit? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what ill does such a dream portend for me? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what is his object? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what is it you are saying? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what is that noise in the chimney? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what must I do? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what sort of a cursed garment is this? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | what''s the matter? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | whence did this brick fall on me? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | where are you? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | where art thou? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | where? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | who are you? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | why did you let me see this day? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | you dare to speak so? |
aristophanes-wasps-1791 | you rascal, how can I kill you? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is not the possession of what belongs to your god Chamos lawfully your due? |
rousseau-social-2320 | [ E3] I agree that it is so; but in what sense? rousseau-social-2320 All power comes from God, I admit; but so does all sickness: does that mean that we are forbidden to call in the doctor? rousseau-social-2320 And what is the surest mark of their preservation and prosperity? rousseau-social-2320 And, if royal education necessarily corrupts those who receive it, what is to be hoped from a series of men brought up to reign? rousseau-social-2320 As soon as any man says of the affairs of the State What does it matter to me? rousseau-social-2320 But are we never to have an explanation of this phrase? rousseau-social-2320 But how are they to regulate them? rousseau-social-2320 But if great princes are rare, how much more so are great legislators? rousseau-social-2320 But if it is very small, it will be conquered? rousseau-social-2320 But if its abuse is inevitable, does it follow that we should not at least make regulations concerning it? rousseau-social-2320 But if, according to Plato,[25] theking by nature"is such a rarity, how often will nature and fortune conspire to give him a crown? |
rousseau-social-2320 | But is it not an obvious disadvantage for an equal product to contain less nourishment? |
rousseau-social-2320 | But what kind of right is that which perishes when force fails? |
rousseau-social-2320 | But what, after all, is a law? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Do subjects then give their persons on condition that the king takes their goods also? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Does it follow from this that the general will is exterminated or corrupted? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Does not Providence know better than they what is meet for them? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Does not this condition alone, in the absence of equivalence or exchange, in itself involve the nullity of the act? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Even if an agreement were come to on these and similar points, should we have got any further? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Father de Carri � es translates:"Do you not regard yourselves as having a right to what your god possesses?" |
rousseau-social-2320 | Has it ever been said that a man who throws himself out of the window to escape from a fire is guilty of suicide? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Has man''s nature changed? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Has such a crime ever been laid to the charge of him who perishes in a storm because, when he went on board, he knew of the danger? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Has the body politic an organ to declare its will? |
rousseau-social-2320 | How are the opponents at once free and subject to laws they have not agreed to? |
rousseau-social-2320 | How did this change come about? |
rousseau-social-2320 | How have a hundred men who wish for a master the right to vote on behalf of ten who do not? |
rousseau-social-2320 | If Sparta and Rome perished, what State can hope to endure for ever? |
rousseau-social-2320 | In granting the right of first occupancy to necessity and labour, are we not really stretching it as far as it can go? |
rousseau-social-2320 | In what sense can it be a duty? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is a simple or a mixed government the better? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is it not clear that we can be under no obligation to a person from whom we have the right to exact everything? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is it possible to leave such a right unlimited? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is it to be by common agreement, by a sudden inspiration? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is it to be enough that a man has the strength to expel others for a moment, in order to establish his right to prevent them from ever returning? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is it to be enough to set foot on a plot of common ground, in order to be able to call yourself at once the master of it? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is liberty maintained only by the help of slavery? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Is the sovereign authority to be divided? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Lacking the same advantages, how can you preserve the same rights? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Nonne ea qu � possidet Chamos deus tuus, tibi jure debentur? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Or how is it to announce them in the hour of need? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Or is it to be concentrated in a single town to which all the rest are made subject? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Shall we never see in the maxims books lay down the vulgar interest that makes their writers speak? |
rousseau-social-2320 | THE INSTITUTION OF GOVERNMENT UNDER what general idea then should the act by which government is instituted be conceived as falling? |
rousseau-social-2320 | THE MARKS OF A GOOD GOVERNMENT THE question"What absolutely is the best government?" |
rousseau-social-2320 | The first is:"Does it please the Sovereign to preserve the present form of government?" |
rousseau-social-2320 | The second is:"Does it please the people to leave its administration in the hands of those who are actually in charge of it?" |
rousseau-social-2320 | This, I shall be told, may do for a single town; but what is to be done when the State includes several? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Tranquillity is found also in dungeons; but is that enough to make them desirable places to live in? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What are we to think of a doctor who promises miracles, and whose whole art is to exhort the sufferer to patience? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What can make it legitimate? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What do they gain, if the very tranquillity they enjoy is one of their miseries? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What does it matter whether they win or lose? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What has been done to prevent these evils? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What is the end of political association? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What people, then, is a fit subject for legislation? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What then is government? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What then? |
rousseau-social-2320 | What, then, strictly speaking, is an act of Sovereignty? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Whence then does it get what it consumes? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Who can give it the foresight to formulate and announce its acts in advance? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Why are so many vegetables eaten in Italy? |
rousseau-social-2320 | Why then is so much respect paid to old laws? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | ( 4) And wo n''t we laugh? aristophanes-peace-1743 ( 1) What is he going to tell us? aristophanes-peace-1743 ( 1) f(1) Before sacrificing, the officiating person asked,Who is here?" |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | ( TO PEACE) What now? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | A BREASTPLATE- MAKER Good gods, what am I going to do with this fine ten- minae breastplate, which is so splendidly made? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | A SICKLE- MAKER Trygaeus, where is Trygaeus? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | A TRUMPET- MAKER What is to be done with this trumpet, for which I gave sixty drachmae the other day? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | A fatted bull? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Again you come back without it? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Are there any good men? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | BREASTPLATE- MAKER But how can you wipe, idiot? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | BREASTPLATE- MAKER So you would pay ten minae(1) for a night- stool? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | But I bethink me, shall I give her something to eat? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | But is it my death you seek then, my death? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | But what is my master doing? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | But where was she then, I wonder, all the long time she spent away from us? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | CHORUS But not to Ares? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | CHORUS Nor doubtless to Enyalius? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | CHORUS Why does not the work advance then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | CREST- MAKER What do you bid for them? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Come then, what must be done? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Do n''t you know all that a man should know, who is distinguished for his wisdom and inventive daring? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Do you think I have been long? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Do you think I would sell my rump for a thousand drachmae? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Do you turn your nose towards the cesspools? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Dost thou not see this, that our cities will soon be but empty husks? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | FIRST SEMI- CHORUS What shall we do to her? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | FIRST SERVANT But perhaps some spectator, some beardless youth, who thinks himself a sage, will say,"What is this? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | FIRST SERVANT For what purpose? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | FIRST SERVANT Who was it then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | First of all, how is Sophocles? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES And how could she speak to the spectators? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES And why? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES And wise Cratinus,(1) is he still alive? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES Do n''t you know that Zeus has decreed death for him who is surprised exhuming Peace? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES How then did Cleonymus behave in fights? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES How? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES Into Simonides? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES Is it then a smell like a soldier''s knapsack? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES Rash reprobate, what do you propose doing? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES She asks, what will be the result of such a choice of the city? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES Tell me, my dear, what are your feelings with regard to them? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES What for? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES What then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES Why do you come? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES Your country? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HERMES Your father? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HIEROCLES And that is? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HIEROCLES And what am I to do? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HIEROCLES To whom are you sacrificing? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HIEROCLES What are you laughing at? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HIEROCLES What oracle ordered you to burn these joints of mutton in honour of the gods? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HIEROCLES What sacrifice is this? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | HIEROCLES You will not give me any meat? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Has he done eating? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Has the lash rained an army of its thongs on you and laid your back waste?" |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | How so? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Is he crazy? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Is it true? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Is that your grievance against them? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | LITTLE DAUGHTER And if it fell into the watery depths of the sea, could it escape with its wings? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | LITTLE DAUGHTER And what harbour will you put in at? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | LITTLE DAUGHTER But how will you make the journey? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | LITTLE DAUGHTER Why not saddle Pegasus? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Master, have you got garlic in your fist, I wonder? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | No one? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Nothing is more pleasing, when the rain is sprouting our sowings, than to chat with some friend, saying,"Tell me, Comarchides, what shall we do? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS What shall we do to her? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SECOND SERVANT And if he does n''t tell you? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SECOND SERVANT But what is your purpose? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SECOND SERVANT( TO TRYGAEUS) But why start up into the air on chance? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT And those stars like sparks, that plough up the air as they dart across the sky? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT And why not? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT But tell me, who is this woman? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT But where then did you get these pretty chattels? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT Did you see any other man besides yourself strolling about in heaven? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT He has a self- important look; is he some diviner? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT Is it true, what they tell us, that men are turned into stars after death? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT Is that you, master? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT Pots of green- stuff(1) as we do to poor Hermes-- and even he thinks the fare but mean? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT Then who is that star I see over yonder? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT Well then, what must be done now? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT What has happened to you? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SERVANT What were they doing up there? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SON OF LAMACHUS My father? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SON OF LAMACHUS Then what should I sing? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SON OF LAMACHUS"The meal over, they girded themselves..."TRYGAEUS With good wine, no doubt? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | SPEAR- MAKER What will you give? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS A great fat swine then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS A sheep? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS And do you see with what pleasure this sickle- maker is making long noses at the spear- maker? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS And what is he going to do with his mortar? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS And when I lie beside her and caress her bosoms? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS And why have the gods moved away? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS And''twas with justice too; did they not break down my black fig tree, which I had planted and dunged with my own hands? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS But not the women? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS But where will the poor wretch get his food? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS But why have they left you all alone here? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Come, come, what are you asking for these two crests? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Come, who wishes to take the charge of her? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Do n''t I look like a diviner preparing his mystic fire? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Do you not hear them wheedling you, mighty god? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS How shall we set about removing these stones? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS How, you cursed animal, could the wolf ever unite with the sheep? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS In short, where are they then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Is it not a shame? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Let us see, who of you is steady enough to be trusted by the Senate with the care of this charming wench? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS My father? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS On what day? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Tell me, what is War preparing against us? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Tell me, you little good- for- nothing, are you singing that for your father? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Then what should be done? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS To what part of the earth? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Very well then, but how am I going to descend? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS What are they? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS What do I bid? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS What other victim do you prefer then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS What reason have they for treating us so? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS What will you offer them? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Where has he gone to then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Where? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Where? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Who is it? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Why is there not the harbour of Cantharos at the Piraeus? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Why not? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Why, where am I likely to be going across the sky, if it be not to visit Zeus? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Why, where has she gone to then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS Will you never stop fooling the Athenians? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS You believe so? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS You have thrown it? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS You? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TRYGAEUS( TO THE AUDIENCE) What is going to happen, friends? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TUMULT What do you want? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | TUMULT( WHO HAS RETURNED) Well, what? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Tell me, Hermes, my master, do you think it would hurt me to love her a little, after so long an abstinence? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | WAR How, varlet? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | WAR Well? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | WAR What is it? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | WAR You have brought back nothing? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | What I to do with them? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | What are you up to? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | What does the beetle mean?" |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | What is your next bidding? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | When his trouble first began to seize him, he said to himself,"By what means could I go straight to Zeus?" |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Where is the table? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Who is here? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Who is your father then? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Who rules now in the rostrum? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Who was her greatest foe here? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Why, what plague is this? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Will anything that it behooves a wise man to know escape you? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Will no one open? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Will you not bury that right away and pile a great heap of earth upon it and plant wild thyme therein and pour perfumes on it? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Zeus, what art thou going to do for our people? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | Zeus,"he cries,"what are thy intentions? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | and furthermore, had she a friend who exerted himself to put an end to the fighting? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | but what shall I be, when you see me presently dressed for the wedding? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | do n''t shout, I beg you, dear little Hermes.... And what are you doing, comrades? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | do n''t you see, little fool, that then twice the food would be wanted? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | do you see that armourer yonder coming with a wry face? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | do you wipe with both hands? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | how did you come here? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | in the name of the gods, what possesses you? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | must I really and truly die? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | my good friend, did you have a good journey? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | of the earth, did you say? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | tell me... TRYGAEUS What? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | to what god are you offering it? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | venerated goddess, who givest us our grapes, where am I to find the ten- thousand- gallon words(1) wherewith to greet thee? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | what are you doing? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | what are you drawing there? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | what do you reckon to sing? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | what is this I hear? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | what is to become of us, wretched mortals that we are? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | where is the doorkeeper? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | who is this man, crowned with laurel, who is coming to me? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | who will buy them? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | why art thou silent? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | wo n''t the crests go any more, friend? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | would you mock me? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | you are so ignorant you do n''t understand the will of the gods and you make a treaty, you, who are men, with apes, who are full of malice? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | you down there, what are you after now? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | you would leave me, you would vanish into the sky, you would go to the crows? |
aristophanes-peace-1743 | your name? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | ( Then seriously) What? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | ( To the CHORUS) But tell me, friends, where is my mistress''s husband? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | A MAN( looking out of the window of the house next door) Who''s that? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Am I not truly unfortunate? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Amynon? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | And what will you do with the urns? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | And why libations, why so many ceremonies, if wine plays no part in them? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Aphrodite, why dost thou fire me with such delight in her? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Are you an ape plastered with white lead, or the ghost of some old hag returned from the dark borderlands of death? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Are you looking for me? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Are you mad, I ask you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Are you moving or are you going to pawn your stuff? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Are you never going to be done? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And do n''t you know the decrees that have been voted? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And everything that used to be the men''s concern has been given over to the women? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And how about the man who has no land, but only gold and silver coins, that can not be seen? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And how? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And it was voted? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And my shoes and staff, those too went off with you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And the citizen whom the lot has not given a letter showing where he is to dine will be driven off by everyone? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And what for? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And what was decided? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And what will the speaker''s platform be used for? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And where will the meals be served? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And who avers the contrary? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS And why did you not take your mantle? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Are we going to banquet? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS But how do you mean for all? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS But how shall we obtain clothing? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS But if we live in this fashion, how will each one know his children? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS But is it not the biggest robbers that have all these things? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS But what about us oldsters? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS But what kind of life is it you propose to set up? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS But why is that? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Could you not have told me? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS D''you know you have made us lose a sextary of wheat, which I should have bought with the triobolus of the Assembly? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Did I not tell you of it yesterday? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Did you get the triobolus? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS I alone? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS I shall no longer have to tire myself out with work from daybreak onwards? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Is it already over then? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS It''s very well conceived for you women, for every wench''s hole will be filled; but what about the men? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Mine? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS No, that you may rule... PRAXAGORA What? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Now another point: if the magistrates condemn a citizen to the payment of a fine, how is he going to do it? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS People will not be robbed any more at night? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Resistance to what? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS That wo n''t worry him much, for has he not gained them by perjury? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS There will be no more playing at dice? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS There will be no more thieves then, eh? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Thus it will be my wife who will go to the courts now in my stead? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Thus ugly Lysicrates''nose will be as proud as the handsomest face? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS To cram himself there like a capon? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Well, what I fear for us fellows now is, that, holding the reins of government, they will forcibly compel us... CHREMES To do what? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS What does this mean? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS What? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Who? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Why did you go off at early dawn with my cloak? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Why so? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Why? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS Wo n''t the dung be common too? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | BLEPYRUS( eagerly) And what did he say? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But has the Assembly taken place then? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But how am I to work two oars at once? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But how are we going to remember to lift our arms in the Assembly when it''s our legs we are used to lifting? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But if Cephalus belches forth insults against you, what answer will you give him in the Assembly? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But what can have attracted such a crowd at that early hour? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But where are you coming from? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But where shall I find a place where I can take a crap? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But where, pray, did you learn all these pretty things? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | But who will till the soil? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES Am I mad? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES And if the women have you beaten? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES And if they laugh in your face? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES And if we are not able? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES And where are you going to, since you have not deposited your belongings? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES Because I obey the law? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES But if admission is forbidden you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES But it would be far worse, were... BLEPYRUS Were what? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES Do n''t you propose taking what belongs to you to the common stock? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES First he said you were a rogue... BLEPYRUS And you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES How do you mean? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES Must the laws not be obeyed then? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES Wait a minute!... and a thief... BLEPYRUS I alone? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES What for? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES What''s this? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES When? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES Why? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CHREMES Why? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN And do you remember that about the copper coinage? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN And if it does? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN And what if they oppose it? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN And what if they prove the stronger? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN And what if they sell them for you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN Are you really going to carry them in? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN But what if they do n''t? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN I shall stand near the door... CHREMES And then? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN Is that the duty of a smart man? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN What else should I do? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN What laws, you poor fellow? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN Why then are you setting all these things out in line? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN Why? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN Will Callimachus, the chorus- master, contribute anything? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN( in an incredulous tone) You are really bent on contributing, then? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | CITIZEN( insistently) But anyhow, what if they do n''t? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Call a doctor; but who is the cleverest in this branch of the science? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Can it be Cinesias who has befouled you so? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Can some friend have invited her to a feast? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Do n''t you remember the one reducing the price of salt? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Do you want me to die of hunger? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN And who is he? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN Can anything be new to an old woman? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN Of whom? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN What''s his name? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN Why do you come with that torch in your hand? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN Why do you speak to me at all? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN Will you buy a chaplet for me too? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN( leaning out of the window of one house) How is this? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST OLD WOMAN( reappearing suddenly) What are you knocking for? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST WOMAN And ca n''t you see Geusistrate, the tavern- keeper''s wife, with a lamp in her hand? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST WOMAN And if the blear- eyed Neoclides comes to insult you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST WOMAN And if they fly at you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | FIRST WOMAN( in a tragic style) But where shall we find orators in an Assembly of women? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | He, however, shouted louder than all of them, and looking at them asked,"Why, what ought I to have done?" |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | How can we fail then to be mistaken for men? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | I weary you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | If the Scythians drag you away, what will you do? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | If we have to lay the old women first, how can we keep our tools from failing before we get into the Promised Land? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Is it a procession that you are starting off to Hiero, the public crier? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Is it not laughable? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Is it not said that the cleverest speakers are those who get made love to most often? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Is that not my neighbour Blepyrus? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Is there a man of sense who will do such a thing? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Is there some man following us? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Is there talk of equipping a fleet? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Is this not a fine one? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | It''s not merely for the present that I am frightened; but when I have eaten, where is my crap to find an outlet now? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | MAID- SERVANT But why do you tarry, Blepyrus? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | MAID- SERVANT Where are you off to? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | MAN And where is your cloak? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | MAN And why did you not ask your wife for it? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | MAN Is it the one which Thrasybulus spoke about to the Lacedaemonians? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | MAN What are you doing, making well- ropes? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | MAN What does it mean? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | No, by the two goddesses... PRAXAGORA What? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Not to wait to see what the others do, and then... CHREMES Well, and then what? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Now, who wishes to speak? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Out of the public funds? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA Besides, my dear, why should there be lawsuits? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA But where will the lender get the money to lend, if all is in common? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA During the Assembly, wretched woman? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA Have you the beards that we had all to get ourselves for the Assembly? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA How does that concern you, dear? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA How laughable? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA Oh, my dear, would you have me caring nothing for a poor woman in that plight? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA To do what- to spin? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA What object will there be in playing? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA What, the club that makes him fart with its weight? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA Who else wishes to speak? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA Why steal, if you have a share of everything? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA You do n''t think I have come from a lover''s? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | PRAXAGORA( to the other women) And you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | SECOND OLD WOMAN Why? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | SECOND WOMAN Before drinking? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | SECOND WOMAN Do n''t you see Melistice, the wife of Smicythion, hurrying hither in her big shoes? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | SECOND WOMAN Why, what else is the meaning of this chaplet? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | THIRD OLD WOMAN Do n''t you know? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Tell me, what''s all that yellow about you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Well, tell me, does that picture suit you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | What do you think of it? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Whatever am I to do? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Where does this hag come from? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Where is my strap? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Where is the sunshade carrier? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Why not? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Why should I delay, since the state commands me? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Why, have they not been able then to procure the false beards that they must wear, or to steal their husbands''cloaks? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | Wretched woman, where are your senses? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG GIRL And why do you place yourself at the window? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG GIRL Can you have any other lover than that old fop Geres? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG GIRL( running out of her house) Where are you dragging this unfortunate man to? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG MAN But if a fellow- citizen, a friend, came to pay my ransom? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG MAN But if you kill me at the outset, how shall I afterwards go to find this beautiful girl of mine? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG MAN But may I not enter an excuse? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG MAN Is it absolutely necessary? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG MAN Of which one must I rid myself first? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG MAN What need for buying hooks? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | YOUNG MAN What''s that? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | You''re not crapping, are you? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | do n''t the men drink then in the Assembly? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | friend, what are you doing there? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | friend, what means this display of goods? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | friend, where are you off to with that woman? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | friend, where are you running to? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | if Athens only acted thus, if it did not take delight in ceaseless innovations, would not its happiness be assured? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | is there ever a one among us can not use her tongue? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | no men are coming? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | shall I hear any less well if I am doing a bit of carding? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | the Assembly? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | unless he steals it out of the treasury? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | what am I saying? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | what is to be done? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | what is to become of me? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | what?... |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | where are you coming from? |
aristophanes-ecclesiazusae-2610 | where are you taking that young man to, in defiance of the law? |
plato-charmides-1424 | ), said he; did I ever acknowledge that those who do the business of others are temperate? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Admitting this view, I ask of you, what good work, worthy of the name wise, does temperance or wisdom, which is the science of itself, effect? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And are not we looking and seeking after something more than is to be found in her? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And are they temperate, seeing that they make not for themselves or their own business only? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And are you about to use violence, without even going through the forms of justice? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And can that be good which does not make men good? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And do they make or do their own business only, or that of others also? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And does not he who does his duty act temperately or wisely? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And he who does so does his duty? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And he who judges rightly will judge of the physician as a physician in what relates to these? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And he who would enquire into the nature of medicine must pursue the enquiry into health and disease, and not into what is extraneous? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And in all that concerns either body or soul, swiftness and activity are clearly better than slowness and quietness? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And in leaping and running and in bodily exercises generally, quickness and agility are good; slowness, and inactivity, and quietness, are bad? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And in playing the lyre, or wrestling, quickness or sharpness are far better than quietness and slowness? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And is it not better to teach another quickly and energetically, rather than quietly and slowly? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And is not shrewdness a quickness or cleverness of the soul, and not a quietness? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And is temperance a good? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And medicine is distinguished from other sciences as having the subject- matter of health and disease? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And that knowledge which is nearest of all, I said, is the knowledge of what? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And the inference is that temperance can not be modesty-- if temperance is a good, and if modesty is as much an evil as a good? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And the odd and even numbers are not the same with the art of computation? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And the same holds in boxing and in the pancratium? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And the temperate are also good? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And they are right, and you would agree with them? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And to read quickly or slowly? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And was there anything meddling or intemperate in this? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And what if I am? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And what is it? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And what is the meaning of a man doing his own business? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And which is better, to call to mind, and to remember, quickly and readily, or quietly and slowly? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And which, I said, is better-- facility in learning, or difficulty in learning? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And why, he replied, will not wisdom be of use? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And will wisdom give health? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And yet if reading and writing are the same as doing, you were doing what was not your own business? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And yet were you not saying, just now, that craftsmen might be temperate in doing another''s work, as well as in doing their own? |
plato-charmides-1424 | And you would infer that temperance is not only noble, but also good? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Are not these, my friend, the real advantages which are to be gained from wisdom? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Are you right, Charmides? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But can any one attain the knowledge of either unless he have a knowledge of medicine? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But is knowledge or want of knowledge of health the same as knowledge or want of knowledge of justice? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But must the physician necessarily know when his treatment is likely to prove beneficial, and when not? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But of what is this knowledge? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But surely we are assuming a science of this kind, which, having no subject- matter, is a science of itself and of the other sciences? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But temperance, whose presence makes men only good, and not bad, is always good? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But then what profit, Critias, I said, is there any longer in wisdom or temperance which yet remains, if this is wisdom? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But what matter, said Charmides, from whom I heard this? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But which is best when you are at the writing- master''s, to write the same letters quickly or quietly? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But which most tends to make him happy? |
plato-charmides-1424 | But why do you not call him, and show him to us? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Can you show me any such result of them? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Can you tell me? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Chaerephon called me and said: What do you think of him, Socrates? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Could there be any desire which is not the desire of any pleasure, but of itself, and of all other desires? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Did you ever observe that this is what they say? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Do you admit that? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Do you mean a knowledge of shoemaking? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Do you mean that this doing or making, or whatever is the word which you would use, of good actions, is temperance? |
plato-charmides-1424 | For is not the discovery of things as they truly are, a good common to all mankind? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Has he not a beautiful face? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Have we not long ago asseverated that wisdom is only the knowledge of knowledge and of ignorance, and of nothing else? |
plato-charmides-1424 | He will consider whether what he says is true, and whether what he does is right, in relation to health and disease? |
plato-charmides-1424 | How can you think that I have any other motive in refuting you but what I should have in examining into myself? |
plato-charmides-1424 | How is that? |
plato-charmides-1424 | How so? |
plato-charmides-1424 | How then can wisdom be advantageous, when giving no advantage? |
plato-charmides-1424 | How will wisdom, regarded only as a knowledge of knowledge or science of science, ever teach him that he knows health, or that he knows building? |
plato-charmides-1424 | I asked; do you mean to say that doing and making are not the same? |
plato-charmides-1424 | I have no particular drift, but I wish that you would tell me whether a physician who cures a patient may do good to himself and good to another also? |
plato-charmides-1424 | I said, or without my consent? |
plato-charmides-1424 | I said; is not this rather the effect of medicine? |
plato-charmides-1424 | I was, he replied; but what is your drift? |
plato-charmides-1424 | In order, then, that I may form a conjecture whether you have temperance abiding in you or not, tell me, I said, what, in your opinion, is Temperance? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Is it of him you are speaking or of some one else? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Is not medicine, I said, the science of health? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Is not that true? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Is not that true? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Is not that true? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Is that true? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Is the scribe, for example, to be regarded as doing nothing when he reads or writes? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Just as that which is greater is of a nature to be greater than something else? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Let us consider the matter in this way: If the wise man or any other man wants to distinguish the true physician from the false, how will he proceed? |
plato-charmides-1424 | May I infer this to be the knowledge of the game of draughts? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Now, I want to know, what is that which is not wisdom, and of which wisdom is the science? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or can you imagine a wish which wishes for no good, but only for itself and all other wishes? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or did you ever know of a fear which fears itself or other fears, but has no object of fear? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or does wisdom do the work of any of the other arts,--do they not each of them do their own work? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or if there be a double which is double of itself and of other doubles, these will be halves; for the double is relative to the half? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or in wool, or wood, or anything of that sort? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or is there a kind of hearing which hears no sound at all, but only itself and other sorts of hearing, or the defects of them? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or of an opinion which is an opinion of itself and of other opinions, and which has no opinion on the subjects of opinion in general? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or of computation? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or of health? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or of working in brass? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Or would you say that there is a love which is not the love of beauty, but of itself and of other loves? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Please, therefore, to inform me whether you admit the truth of what Critias has been saying;--have you or have you not this quality of temperance? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Shall I tell you the nature of the difficulty? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Shall I tell you, Socrates, why I say all this? |
plato-charmides-1424 | That is your meaning? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then I suppose that modesty is and is not good? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then he who is ignorant of these things will only know that he knows, but not what he knows? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then how will this knowledge or science teach him to know what he knows? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then not he who does evil, but he who does good, is temperate? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then temperance, I said, will not be doing one''s own business; not at least in this way, or doing things of this sort? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then, I said, in all bodily actions, not quietness, but the greatest agility and quickness, is noblest and best? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then, as would seem, in doing good, he may act wisely or temperately, and be wise or temperate, but not know his own wisdom or temperance? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then, before we see his body, should we not ask him to show us his soul, naked and undisguised? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Then, in reference to the body, not quietness, but quickness will be the higher degree of temperance, if temperance is a good? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Think over all this, and, like a brave youth, tell me-- What is temperance? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Very good, I said; and are you quite sure that you know my name? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Very good, I said; and did you not admit, just now, that temperance is noble? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Very good, I said; and now let me repeat my question-- Do you admit, as I was just now saying, that all craftsmen make or do something? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Was he a fool who told you, Charmides? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Was he right who affirmed that? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Was not that your statement? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Was not this, Critias, what we spoke of as the great advantage of wisdom-- to know what is known and what is unknown to us? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Well then, this science of which we are speaking is a science of something, and is of a nature to be a science of something? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Well, I said; but surely you would agree with Homer when he says,''Modesty is not good for a needy man''? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Were we not right in making that admission? |
plato-charmides-1424 | What do you mean? |
plato-charmides-1424 | What do you mean? |
plato-charmides-1424 | What is that? |
plato-charmides-1424 | What makes you think so? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Which is less, if the other is conceived to be greater? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Who is he, I said; and who is his father? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Why not, I said; but will he come? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Why not? |
plato-charmides-1424 | With my consent? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Yes, I said; and facility in learning is learning quickly, and difficulty in learning is learning quietly and slowly? |
plato-charmides-1424 | Yet I should like to know one thing more: which of the different kinds of knowledge makes him happy? |
plato-charmides-1424 | You sirs, I said, what are you conspiring about? |
plato-charmides-1424 | and in what cases do you mean? |
plato-charmides-1424 | or do all equally make him happy? |
plato-charmides-1424 | or must the craftsman necessarily know when he is likely to be benefited, and when not to be benefited, by the work which he is doing? |
plato-charmides-1424 | the knowledge of what past, present, or future thing? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Have the exorbitant profits of the merchants of Cadiz and Lisbon augmented the capital of Spain and Portugal? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Have they alleviated the poverty, have they promoted the industry, of those two beggarly countries? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Have they contributed to encourage the diligence, and to improve the abilities, of the teachers? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Have those public endowments contributed in general, to promote the end of their institution? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | How can it be supposed that he should be the only rich man in his dominions who is insensible to pleasures of this kind? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | How is it possible to draw from them what they have not? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | In what way, therefore, has the policy of Europe contributed either to the first establishment, or to the present grandeur of the colonies of America? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Is this improvement in the circumstances of the lower ranks of the people to be regarded as an advantage, or as an inconveniency, to the society? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Or, if it ought to give any, what are the different parts of education which it ought to attend to in the different orders of the people? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Ought the public, therefore, to give no attention, it may be asked, to the education of the people? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | What are those which Europe has derived from the discovery and colonization of America? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | What goods could bear the expense of land- carriage between London and Calcutta? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Why should the dealers in one sort of goods, it seems to have been thought, be more favoured than those in another? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Why should we imagine that the precious metals are likely to do so? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | Would it be a reasonable law to prohibit the importation of all foreign wines, merely to encourage the making of claret and Burgundy in Scotland? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | and in what manner ought it to attend to them? |
smith-inquiry-5795 | or why should the merchant exporter be more favoured than the merchant importer? |
euripides-electra-1642 | ''Tis God will have it so.... Is this the joy of battle, or wild woe? |
euripides-electra-1642 | ''Tis thy message? |
euripides-electra-1642 | A scar? |
euripides-electra-1642 | After these years Doth my low plight still stir thy memories? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Ah me, what have I? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Ah, who knows thee as I know? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Alas, what would ye? |
euripides-electra-1642 | All hail to thee, Greybeard!--Prithee, what man of all the King Trusted of old, is now this broken thing? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And I? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And did he give Some privy message? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And didst thou bear, Bear in thy bitter pain, To life, thy murderer? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And do I hold thee fast, Unhoped for? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And fearest still to throw Thine arms round him thou lovest? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And how this jar Hath worn my earth- bowed head, as forth and fro For water to the hillward springs I go? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And if I tell her, where shall be The death in this? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And if he sought To slay, how should he come at his desire? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And now wilt say''Twas wrought in justice for thy child laid low At Aulis?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | And of this Thy virgin life-- Aegisthus knows it? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And stole from death thy brother? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And then, that thou wert happy, when thy days Were all one pain? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And this wild So far from aid? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And thou, O Right, that seest all, Art come at last?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | And thy mood Unchanging? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And what should Phoebus seek with me, Or all God''s oracles that be, That I must bear my mother''s blood? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And what to him, thy brother, half so dear As thou? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And what woe, What tears are like an exile''s tears? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And whither turn, to wreak My will on them that hate us? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And who hath said There should be likeness in a brother''s tread And sister''s? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And why a sword? |
euripides-electra-1642 | And ye two still are living in his thought, Thou and his father? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Are they friends to thee? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Aye, me And this my brother, loveless, solitary? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But hast thou nothing...? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But hold: is this thy husband from the plain, His labour ended, hasting home again? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But how find him? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But speak; how did he fall? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But was it his to kill me, or to kill The babes I bore? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But what end seeks Aegisthus, by such art Of shame? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But when? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But why this dwelling place, this life Of loneliness? |
euripides-electra-1642 | But... where is she? |
euripides-electra-1642 | By day or night? |
euripides-electra-1642 | CLYTEMNESTRA What, is thy cot so friendless? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Comest thou, comest thou now, Chained by the years and slow, O Day long sought? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Dark shepherdess of many a golden star, Dost see me, Mother Night? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Deemest thou this thy woe Shall rise unto God as prayer, Or bend thine haters low? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Did there come... Nay, mark me now... Thy brother in the dark, last night, to bow His head before that unadorèd tomb? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Did ye hear a cry Under the rafters? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Didst thou say Kill her? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Dost hear us yet, O thou in deadly wrong, Wronged by my mother? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Dost know me not? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Dost thou fear To see thy mother''s shape? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Doth God for thy pain have care? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Doth any deem me fool, to hold a fair Maid in my room and seek no joy, but spare Her maidenhood? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Doth he give Thy tomb good tendance? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Doth his heart not leap for pride? |
euripides-electra-1642 | For Troy, that was burned with fire And forgetteth not? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Forgotten? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Ha, friends, was that a voice? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Ha, see: above the roof- tree high There shineth... Is some spirit there Of earth or heaven? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Ha, who be these? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Hast thou a city, is there a door That knows thy footfall, Wandering One? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Hath he some vow to keep? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Have I not chid thee oft, And thou wilt cease not, serving without end? |
euripides-electra-1642 | He had due rites and tendance? |
euripides-electra-1642 | He is dead, verily dead, My father''s murderer...? |
euripides-electra-1642 | He lacketh not For bread? |
euripides-electra-1642 | He trembles for Orestes''wrath? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Her heart had still an answer for her lord Murdered, but if the child''s blood spoke, what word Could meet the hate thereof? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How brings it ill To thee, to raise our father from the dust? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How can I once come near him? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How can I strike her? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How dost thou know...? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How hath the battle ended? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How if some fiend of Hell, Hid in God''s likeness, spake that oracle? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How sayst thou? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How swooped the wing of death?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | How then can I set My snare for wife and husband in one breath? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How time? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How? |
euripides-electra-1642 | How? |
euripides-electra-1642 | I also, sons of Tyndareus, My kinsmen; may my word be said? |
euripides-electra-1642 | I cried for dancing of old, I cried in my heart for love: What dancing waiteth me now? |
euripides-electra-1642 | If I did weave some clout Of raiment, would he keep the vesture now He wore in childhood? |
euripides-electra-1642 | If he came this day And sought to show thee, is there no one sign Whereby to know him?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | If thy God be blind, Shalt thou have light? |
euripides-electra-1642 | In God''s own house? |
euripides-electra-1642 | In what land weareth he His exile? |
euripides-electra-1642 | In what place? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Is he a man, and Agamemnon''s son? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Is it he, Orestes? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Is it not time? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Is it pity? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Is the road so nigh? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Is there a son New born to him, or doth he pray for one That cometh? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Is this the man that shields thy maidenhood Unknown, and will not wrong thy father''s blood? |
euripides-electra-1642 | It bringeth little profit, speech like this... Why didst thou call me hither? |
euripides-electra-1642 | It hath?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | It reached thee, My word that a man- child is born to me? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Lest there grow From thee the avenger? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Living or dead? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Mad, that I see Thy brother? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Must thou heap thy bed With gold of murdered men, to buy to thee Thy strange man''s arms? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Nay, art thou flown To strife again so quick, child? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Nay, when all the tale is told Of blood for blood, what murder shall we make, I and Orestes, for our father''s sake? |
euripides-electra-1642 | None dearer.--But what ails the man? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Not a rescue from the town Thou seëst? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Not any that aught know my face, Or guess? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Not his serfs alone? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Not slain for me whom doubly he hath slain, In living death, more bitter than of old My sister''s? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Nothing?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | Now know''st thou not thine own ill furniture, To bid these strangers in, to whom for sure Our best were hardship, men of gentle breed? |
euripides-electra-1642 | O faithful unto death, Thou goest? |
euripides-electra-1642 | O what are crowns, that runners wear For some vain race? |
euripides-electra-1642 | O, hath time made thee mad? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Of Argive anguish!--Brother, is it thou? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Of all the things I crave, The thousand things, or all that others have, What should I pray for? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Of what city sprung, And whither bound?" |
euripides-electra-1642 | Old heart, old heart, is this a wise man''s mood?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | Or is all forgot?" |
euripides-electra-1642 | Or is it done To scorn thee? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Or some dream sound Of voices shaketh me, as underground God''s thunder shuddering? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Or stay: though he lie cold Long since, there lives another of thy fold Far off; there might be pity for thy son? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Or think''st thou of Orestes, where he lies In exile, and my father? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Or up, where all the vultures of the air May glut them, pierce and nail him for a sign Far off? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Orestes cried:"thou fear''st an exile''s plot, Lord of a city? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Perchance to rouse on mine own head The sleeping hate of the world? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Phoebus, God, was all thy mind Turned unto darkness? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Saw''st thou her raiment there, Sister, there in the blood? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Say, Have I in Argos any still to trust; Or is the love, once borne me, trod in dust, Even as my fortunes are? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Sayest thou? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Sees he some likeness here? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Seest thou not? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Shall I be thrust From men''s sight, blotted with her blood? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Shall I speak out? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Shall it be said Once more? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Should my weaving grow As his limbs grew?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | So moveless in time past, Hath Fortune girded up her loins at last? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Some news is brought? |
euripides-electra-1642 | The thrall, methinks, whose hand Stole him from death-- or so the story ran? |
euripides-electra-1642 | The watchers of men''s birth? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Then spake Orestes:"Why art thou Cast down so sudden?" |
euripides-electra-1642 | These bondwomen are all I keep in mine own house.... Deemst thou the cost Too rich to pay me for the child I lost-- Fair though they be? |
euripides-electra-1642 | This that I bear, Is it meet for the King my sire, And her whom the King begot? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Thou couldst break me this bondage sore, Only thou, who art far away, Loose our father, and wake once more.... Zeus, Zeus, dost hear me pray?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | Thou saw''st him? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Thy mother stays Unmoved''mid all thy wrong? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Unhappy woman, could thine eye Look on the blood, and see her lie, Thy mother, where she turned to die? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Was it agony Like this, she boded in her last wild cry? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What Prince of Argos...? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What ails thine eyes, old friend? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What bodes it now that forth they fare, To men revealèd visibly? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What boots this cruse that I carry? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What care Hath she for thee, or pain of thine? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What charge laid he on thee? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What clime shall hold My evil, or roof it above? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What cunning hast thou found to fill Thy purpose? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What fear of God hath he? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What first flood of hate To loose upon thee? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What force was with him? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What have I still of wreathing for the head Stored in my chambers? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What last curse to sate My pain, or river of wild words to flow Bank- high between?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | What love that shall kiss my brow Nor blench at the brand thereof? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What must we do? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What profits loathing ere ye know? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What shall it be, then? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What should be nearer to me than those two? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What was it but the spear Of war, drove me forth too? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What word have they Of him? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What would she with a cheek So bright in strange men''s eyes, unless she seek Some treason? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What would they at this lonely door? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What would we with our mother? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What wouldst thou now, my sad one, ever fraught With toil to lighten my toil? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What wouldst thou? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What? |
euripides-electra-1642 | What? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Where are they? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Where is my little Princess? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Who are ye? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Who art thou? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Who seeks for friendship sake A beggar''s house? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Who shall break bread with me? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Who shall do judgment on me, when she dies? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Who tended thee? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Who wrought thee any ill, That thou shouldst make me fatherless? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Who, that is clean, shall see And hate not the blood- red hand, His mother''s murderer? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Whom shall I seek? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Why didst render not Back unto us, the children of the dead, Our father''s portion? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Why dost thou keep thine husband ever hot Against me? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Why goeth not my mother straight Forth at her husband''s side? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Why is not he Who cast Orestes out, cast out again? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Why lurk''st thou by my house? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Will he ever now Come back and see his sister bowed so low? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Wilt softly hear, and after work me ill? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Wilt thou have it so? |
euripides-electra-1642 | With watchers doth he go Begirt, and mailèd pikemen? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Women?... |
euripides-electra-1642 | Wouldst thou dare with him, if he came, thou too, To slay her? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Wouldst thou fling This lord on the rotting earth for beasts to tear? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Wouldst thou lay Hand on a body that is not for thee? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Wouldst thou more? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Ye Gods, ye brethren of the dead, Why held ye not the deathly herd Of Kêres back from off this home? |
euripides-electra-1642 | Yea, and beyond, beyond, Roaming-- what rest is there? |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And how, Socrates,''she said with a smile,''can Love be acknowledged to be a great god by those who say that he is not a god at all?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And is that which is not wise, ignorant? |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And is this wish and this desire common to all? |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And not only the possession, but the everlasting possession of the good?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And what does he gain who possesses the good?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And what may that be?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And what,''I said,''is his power?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And who are they?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And who,''I said,''was his father, and who his mother?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And you admitted that Love, because he was in want, desires those good and fair things of which he is in want?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''And you mean by the happy, those who are the possessors of things good or fair?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''But how can he be a god who has no portion in what is either good or fair?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''But who then, Diotima,''I said,''are the lovers of wisdom, if they are neither the wise nor the foolish?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''But why of generation?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''By those who know or by those who do not know?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''Do you know what I am meditating? |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''How can that be?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''Hush,''she cried;''must that be foul which is not fair?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''Right opinion,''she replied;''which, as you know, being incapable of giving a reason, is not knowledge( for how can knowledge be devoid of reason? |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''Still,''she said,''the answer suggests a further question: What is given by the possession of beauty?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''Then if this be the nature of love, can you tell me further,''she said,''what is the manner of the pursuit? |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''Then love,''she said,''may be described generally as the love of the everlasting possession of the good?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''To which must be added that they love the possession of the good?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''What are you meditating?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''What do you mean, Diotima,''I said,''is love then evil and foul?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''What is he, Diotima?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''What then is Love?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''What then?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''What then?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''Why, then,''she rejoined,''are not all men, Socrates, said to love, but only some of them? |
plato-symposium-1494 | ''Will you have a very drunken man as a companion of your revels? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And I remember her once saying to me,''What is the cause, Socrates, of love, and the attendant desire? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And Socrates, looking at Eryximachus, said: Tell me, son of Acumenus, was there not reason in my fears? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And am I not right in asserting that there are two goddesses? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And are you not a flute- player? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And as you have spoken so eloquently of his nature, may I ask you further, Whether love is the love of something or of nothing? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And does he possess, or does he not possess, that which he loves and desires? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And first tell me, he said, were you present at this meeting? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And if this is true, Love is the love of beauty and not of deformity? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And now, said Socrates, I will ask about Love:--Is Love of something or of nothing? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And suppose further, that when he saw their perplexity he said:''Do you desire to be wholly one; always day and night to be in one another''s company? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And the admission has been already made that Love is of something which a man wants and has not? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And when you say, I desire that which I have and nothing else, is not your meaning that you want to have what you now have in the future?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | And would you call that beautiful which wants and does not possess beauty? |
plato-symposium-1494 | And you would say the same of a mother? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Are they not all the works of his wisdom, born and begotten of him? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Are we to have neither conversation nor singing over our cups; but simply to drink as if we were thirsty? |
plato-symposium-1494 | But before the many you would not be ashamed, if you thought that you were doing something disgraceful in their presence? |
plato-symposium-1494 | But first tell me; if I come in shall we have the understanding of which I spoke( supra Will you have a very drunken man? |
plato-symposium-1494 | But what have you done with Socrates? |
plato-symposium-1494 | By Heracles, he said, what is this? |
plato-symposium-1494 | By all means; but who makes the third partner in our revels? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Can you tell me why?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | Consider then: How can the drinking be made easiest? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Do you expect to shoot your bolt and escape, Aristophanes? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Eryximachus said: What is this, Alcibiades? |
plato-symposium-1494 | First, is not love of something, and of something too which is wanting to a man? |
plato-symposium-1494 | For he who is anything can not want to be that which he is? |
plato-symposium-1494 | For what lover would not choose rather to be seen by all mankind than by his beloved, either when abandoning his post or throwing away his arms? |
plato-symposium-1494 | He must agree with us-- must he not? |
plato-symposium-1494 | I am especially struck with the beauty of the concluding words-- who could listen to them without amazement? |
plato-symposium-1494 | I asked;''Is he mortal?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | I said,''O thou stranger woman, thou sayest well; but, assuming Love to be such as you say, what is the use of him to men?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | I was astonished at her words, and said:''Is this really true, O thou wise Diotima?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | I will also tell, if you please-- and indeed I am bound to tell-- of his courage in battle; for who but he saved my life? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Is he not like a Silenus in this? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Is that the meaning of your praise? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Is there anything?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | Man may be supposed to act thus from reason; but why should animals have these passionate feelings? |
plato-symposium-1494 | May I say without impiety or offence, that of all the blessed gods he is the most blessed because he is the fairest and best? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Of what am I speaking? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Or shall I crown Agathon, which was my intention in coming, and go away? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Or who would desert his beloved or fail him in the hour of danger? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Or who would not have such children as Lycurgus left behind him to be the saviours, not only of Lacedaemon, but of Hellas, as one may say? |
plato-symposium-1494 | See you how fond he is of the fair? |
plato-symposium-1494 | She said to me:''And do you expect ever to become a master in the art of love, if you do not know this?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | So I gave him a shake, and I said:''Socrates, are you asleep?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | That is, of a brother or sister? |
plato-symposium-1494 | The same to you, said Eryximachus; but what shall we do? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Then Love wants and has not beauty? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Then in wanting the beautiful, love wants also the good? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Then it must have been a long while ago, he said; and who told you-- did Socrates? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Then would you still say that love is beautiful? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Then, said Glaucon, let us have the tale over again; is not the road to Athens just made for conversation? |
plato-symposium-1494 | What are you about? |
plato-symposium-1494 | What do you suppose must have been my feelings, after this rejection, at the thought of my own dishonour? |
plato-symposium-1494 | What do you think, Eryximachus? |
plato-symposium-1494 | What do you think? |
plato-symposium-1494 | What do you want? |
plato-symposium-1494 | What say you to going with me unasked? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Who will deny that the creation of the animals is his doing? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Who would not emulate them in the creation of children such as theirs, which have preserved their memory and given them everlasting glory? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Who, if not you, should be the reporter of the words of your friend? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Who, when he thinks of Homer and Hesiod and other great poets, would not rather have their children than ordinary human ones? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Why, my dear friend, said Socrates, must not I or any one be in a strait who has to speak after he has heard such a rich and varied discourse? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Will that be agreeable to you? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Will you drink with me or not?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | Will you laugh at me because I am drunk? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Would he who is great, desire to be great, or he who is strong, desire to be strong? |
plato-symposium-1494 | Would that be an ignoble life?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | Yet let me ask you one more question in order to illustrate my meaning: Is not a brother to be regarded essentially as a brother of something? |
plato-symposium-1494 | You were quite right in coming, said Agathon; but where is he himself? |
plato-symposium-1494 | and do all men always desire their own good, or only some men?--what say you?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | and was I not a true prophet when I said that Agathon would make a wonderful oration, and that I should be in a strait? |
plato-symposium-1494 | and what is the object which they have in view? |
plato-symposium-1494 | do you not see that there is a mean between wisdom and ignorance?'' |
plato-symposium-1494 | etc.)? |
plato-symposium-1494 | said Alcibiades: shall I attack him and inflict the punishment before you all? |
plato-symposium-1494 | said Socrates; are you going to raise a laugh at my expense? |
plato-symposium-1494 | what are they doing who show all this eagerness and heat which is called love? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | ( To CARIO) But tell me, where is Plutus now? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | ( To CARIO) For instance, what is the basis of the power that Zeus wields over the other gods? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | ( To HERMES) But why does he want to treat us in that scurvy fashion? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | And by what means will these slaves be got? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | And by what right, pray? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | And have you not done me the most deadly injury by seeking to banish me from every country? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | And that Lais is kept by Philonides? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | And yet what is the use of being rich, if you are to be deprived of all these enjoyments? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Are going to leave me here? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Are not you the cause of Pamphilus''sufferings? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Are these the mighty benefits with which you pretend to load mankind? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Are two men to run away from one woman? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Are we in a condition to show fight? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS And where is he? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS And you do n''t send him to us, to your friends? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS But what weapons have we? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS But who could listen to such words without exclaiming? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS Do what? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS Have you really grown rich as they say? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS Indoors? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS Is he then really blind? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS Might it be the tavern- keeper in my neighbourhood, who is always cheating me in measure? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS Must we not go and seek a physician? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS My share of what, pray? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS Restore whom his sight? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS The god of the sea? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS What are you saying? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS What do you say? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS What has happened then? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS What risk? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS What? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS Where? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | BLEPSIDEMUS You have Plutus? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | But do you deem it fitting to make us run like this before ever telling us why your master has called us? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | But what brings you here? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | But who are you? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | But would you not prefer to live quietly and free from all care and anxiety? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | But you, Cario, run quick... CARIO Where? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO A just man then? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO And since then you have been living in misery? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO And this footwear? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO And what''s it all about? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO And where would your offering be better bestowed than on the shoulders of a rascal and a thief? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO And who feed our mercenaries at Corinth? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO And who was the first one you met? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO And you were quickly ruined? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO And you wish to dedicate them too? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO But how could we employ you here? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO But we are rich; why should we keep a baggling Hermes? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO But whom has he thus ill- used? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO Can you smell anything, rascal? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO Do you deem me so brazen as all that, and my words mere lies? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO Is it not evident to the blind, that nowadays to do nothing that is right is the best way to get on? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO It is not because of you that Agyrrhius farts so loudly? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO Not even the happiness that has come to you? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO Were you initiated into the Great Mysteries in that cloak? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO What then? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO Who''s this? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO You would leave the gods to stop here? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO( opening the door) Who is knocking at the door? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO( to CHREMYLUS) Do you understand who he says he is? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO( to CHREMYLUS) Is it not he who lends the Great King all his pride? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CARIO( with ironic gravity) And with what responding tones did the sacred tripod resound? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS An honest lad, indeed What do you expect? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And did he not do this every night? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And is he not doing this now by leaving you to grope your wandering way? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And of the needle- seller''s with Pamphilus? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And tell me, is it not you who equip the triremes? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And that Philepsius rolls off his fables? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And that is? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And what did he generally ask of you? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And what is the cause of that, pray? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And what of the Corinthian whores? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And who are you? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS And who gives it to him? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS But if you lose your case, what punishment will you submit to? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS But tell me, how come you''re so squalid? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS But your infirmity; how did that happen? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Could we do anything worse than leave the god in the lurch and fly before this woman without so much as ever offering to fight? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Do you think twenty deaths a sufficiently large stake? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Does it not seem that everything is extravagance in the world, or rather madness, when you watch the way things go? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Have you drunk up your money then? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS How dare you talk like this, you impudent hussy? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS If sacrifices are offered to him, is not Plutus their cause? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Indeed? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Is Beggary not Poverty''s sister? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Is this doing you harm, that we shower blessings on all men? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS It is a long time, then, since he saw you? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Plutus''very own self? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Seek physicians at Athens? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Then tell me this, why does all mankind flee from you? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Therefore, if ever you recovered your sight, you would shun the wicked? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS To see if you were being buried? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Well, what should he do? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS What do you mean? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS What does this mean? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS What makes you think that? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS What''s that you say? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Why do n''t you take your share of those offerings? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Why not? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Why not? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Why should I hide the truth from you? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Why, have you not got the Barathrum left? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Why? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Will thou speak then? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Will you say that Zeus can not discern what is best? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS Yes, by the gods I BLEPSIDEMUS Are you telling the truth? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS You would visit the good? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS''WIFE( coming out of the house) What mean these shouts? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | CHREMYLUS( emerging from the house) What would you with him, friend? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Can anything better be conceived for the public weal? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Can you be a female informer? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Could you do mankind a greater harm? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Do you insult me thus before this crowd? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Does not everything depend on wealth? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | HERMES Do you forget, then, how I used to take care he knew nothing about it when you were stealing something from your master? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | HERMES So then, you admit me on these terms? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | HERMES( in tragic style) Would you render service to the friend that loves you? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Have you then stolen so much as all that? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | I can do so many things by myself and unaided? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | I had sent him this cake with the sweetmeats you see here on this dish and let him know that I would visit him in the evening... CHREMYLUS Well? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | I have not the right to dedicate myself entirely to my country''s service? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | INFORMER And who is the prosecutor before the dicasts? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | INFORMER Concerning what? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | INFORMER D''ye take me for a fool? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | INFORMER What, you fool? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | INFORMER You deny it? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Is it not he who draws the citizens to the Assembly? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Is there good news? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Is there no chance of sharing? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Is this not opposed to all good sense? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | JUST MAN A merchant? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | JUST MAN And what then shall be done with these shoes? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | JUST MAN Are you a husbandman? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | JUST MAN Do you ply any trade? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | JUST MAN Is the country served by vile intrigue? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | JUST MAN Then how do you live, if you do nothing? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | JUST MAN Thus you will not change your mode of life? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | JUST MAN You do? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS And how is he going to manage that? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS My good fellow, what has happened to your friends? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Why, do n''t you see we are speeding as fast as men can, who are already enfeebled by age? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | OLD WOMAN A long time? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | OLD WOMAN And I, what am I to do? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | OLD WOMAN And what about the object of my coming? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | OLD WOMAN What game is this? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | OLD WOMAN( coyly) My dear old men, am I near the house where the new god lives, or have I missed the road? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | OLD WOMAN( eagerly) Where, naughty boy? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | OLD WOMAN( in a puzzled tone) What was that he said? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | PLUTUS And how so? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | PLUTUS Did I not tell you, you were going to plague me? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | PLUTUS How could I use this power, which you say I have? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | PLUTUS I mightier than he? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | PLUTUS Is he in the plot then? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | PLUTUS So it''s because of me that sacrifices are offered to him? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | PLUTUS Why? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY And what do you think will ensure their happiness? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY But first say, who will sell them, if everyone is rich? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY But where shall I go? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY Dare you reply, you scoundrels, you who are caught red- handed at the most horrible crime? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY Do you think it is doing me no harm to restore Plutus to the use of his eyes? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY Drive me out? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY Indeed? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY Who do you think I am? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY Why such wrath and these shouts, before you hear my arguments? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY You will not be able to sleep in a bed, for no more will ever be manufactured; nor on carpets, for who would weave them, if he had gold? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | POVERTY You wo n''t escape, for is there indeed a single valid argument to oppose me with? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | PRIEST Can anyone tell me where Chremylus is? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Plutus in your house? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | That troops are sent to succour the Egyptians? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | To- day things are better than yesterday; let us share, for are you not my friend? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE And did not the god come? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE And what did the god do? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE But how could you see all this, you arch- rascal, when you say you were hiding all the time? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE Do you refuse these gifts? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE Doubtless the god pulled a wry face? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE Had any other folk come to beseech the deity? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE He must then be a pretty coarse kind of god? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE Of stone? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | WIFE Where are they? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | What are you daring to do, you pitiful, wretched mortals? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | What are you saying? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | What rich man would risk his life to devote himself to this traffic? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Whence, how has Chremylus suddenly grown rich? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Where did you steal that new cloak from? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Where is the breastplate, the buckler, that this wretch has not pawned? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Which one? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Whither are you flying? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Why do n''t you go there? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | Why, why must fortune deal me such rough blows? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | YOUTH Accuses me of what? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | You have done no man an injury? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | am I not deserving of pity? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | and had you no fear of the god? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | assuredly not I BLEPSIDEMUS But, great gods, what am I to think? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | but what means are there to buy anything if you are not there to give the money? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | do you hear what he says?" |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | friend, was it you who knocked so loudly? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | is it really and truly as you say? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | we jostle each other at the Assembly for three obols, and am I going to let Plutus in person be stolen from me? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | we shall really all become rich? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | what can you object to In that? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | what do you want? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | what has overtaken this man? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | what is to become of me? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | whither shall I fly? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | who are but a mortal? |
aristophanes-plutus-1918 | you would desert Do you think that is honest? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | But why,they will insist,"was the wind blowing, and why was the man at that very time walking that way?" |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | ), men in so far as they agree in nature, would be at variance one with another? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | And who, I ask, can know that he understands anything, unless he do first understand it? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | And why should all be so fitted into one another as to leave no vacuum? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | For what is the perception of a winged horse, save affirming that a horse has wings? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | For why is it more lawful to satiate one''s hunger and thirst than to drive away one''s melancholy? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Further, I should much like to know, what degree of motion the mind can impart to this pineal gland, and with what force can it hold it suspended? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Further, how comes it that men have false ideas? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Further, what can there be more clear, and more certain, than a true idea as a standard of truth? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | How would it be possible, if salvation were ready to our hand, and could without great labour be found, that it should be by almost all men neglected? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | I will, therefore, consider this opinion, asking first, why it obtains general credence, and why all men are naturally so prone to adopt it? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | If all things follow from a necessity of the absolutely perfect nature of God, why are there so many imperfections in nature? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | If anyone asks me the further question, Why are we naturally so prone to divide quantity? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | If this instance seems incredible, what shall we say of infants? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | In other words, who can know that he is sure of a thing, unless he be first sure of that thing? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Lastly, how can anyone be sure, that he has ideas which agree with their objects? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Note.--Someone may ask how it would be, if the highest good of those who follow after virtue were not common to all? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Now I should like to know whether there be in the mind two sorts of decisions, one sort illusive, and the other sort free? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Proof.--If it be asked: What should a man''s conduct be in a case where he could by breaking faith free himself from the danger of present death? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | What clear and distinct conception has he got of thought in most intimate union with a certain particle of extended matter? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | What does he understand, I ask, by the union of the mind and the body? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Will he perish of hunger and thirst? |
spinoza-ethics-1348 | Would not his plan of self-- preservation completely persuade him to deceive? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ( antistrophe) Say, sisters, say, with duteous zeal Shall we this secret to our queen reveal? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ATTENDANT Athenian dames, where shall I find our queen, The daughter of Erechtheus? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Ah me, what grief, What piercing grief is mine I TUTOR Say, by what name Did he address his son, if thou hast heard it? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Are our designs Of secret ruin to this youth disclosed? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Attendants on what house? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Be that as fate requires In things which threaten death, what shall we do? |
euripides-ion-1232 | But to me What is the daughter of Erechtheus? |
euripides-ion-1232 | But who is president here? |
euripides-ion-1232 | But why distress me for the oracle Given to our lords? |
euripides-ion-1232 | But, as''tis thine to tend This temple, let me ask thee, is it lawful, Leaving our sandals, its interior parts To visit? |
euripides-ion-1232 | But, tell me, from Trophonius what reply Bearest thou; what means whence offspring may arise? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CHORUS What is his name? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CHORUS Whether this temple''s site Be the earth''s centre? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CHORUS Yet may we make inquiries of thee? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA A child brought hither, or in riper years? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Ah, whither shall I fly? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA And to my wretched friend what is not ill? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA And wilt thou make a childless house thy spoil? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Are riches thine? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Be witness, thou by whom the Gorgon died,- ION What means this adjuration? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA But who art thou? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Dost thou surmise what enters now my thoughts? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Hast thou made no attempt to trace thy birth? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Hast thou thy dwelling here, or in some house? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA How shall a mortal''gainst a god prevail? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA How was this oracle accomplish''d? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA How? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA How? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA I go with speed: but where shall it be done? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Presented by some state, or sold to this? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA This drop, which from her hollow vein distill''d,- TUTOR To what effect applied? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA To him while yet an infant Pallas gave- TUTOR What? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What Delphian dame sustain''d thee at her breast? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What claim hath there the race of Aeolus? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What hast thou said? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What mean thy words? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What means this strain of woe? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What says my son? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What should I do? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What will that avail me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What wouldst thou ask? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA What wouldst thou ask? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Where on the cliffs the nightingale attunes Her songs, Apollo- ION Why Apollo named? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Who to these manly years gave thee support? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Who, hapless youth? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Why dost thou ask? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Why, thine head cover''d, dost thou pour these tears? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA Ye wide- expanded rays of heavenly light, What notes, what high- raised strains shall tell my joy? |
euripides-ion-1232 | CREUSA( chanting) How, o my soul, shall I be silent, how Disclose this secret? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Can I bid farewell To modesty? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Dost thou hate the place dear to the god? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Doth any praise the childless state? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Hath not my husband wrong''d me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | How meet him? |
euripides-ion-1232 | How shall I know it? |
euripides-ion-1232 | How? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Am I the son then of the son of Jove? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And Macrai call you not the fatal place? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And did Minerva raise him from the earth? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And did the yawning earth swallow thy father? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And didst thou first meet me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And gave him as the picture represents? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And hast thou yet a fear, Holding me, not to hold me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And thou of all thy sisters saved alone? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And why conceal''d, as long since thou received''st me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION And wilt thou name them to me, ere thou see them? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Art thou, stranger, Well in thy wits? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Born so, or by some other Presented? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Bull- visaged sire Cephisus, what a viper Hast thou produced? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION But say, who art thou? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION But tell me, is it true what fame has blazon''d? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION But tell me, is this truth, or a vain rumour? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION But what Athenian, lady, wedded thee? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION By some public host received? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Comest thou with him to Delphi, or alone? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Confederate in the war, thence wedded thee? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Devolves my father then no share to me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Did I against thy country march in arms? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Did not the god inform thee? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Didst thou e''er before Visit the Pythian rock? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION For the earth''s fruits consult you, or for children? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Hast thou e''er mounted an unlawful bed? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Hast thou ne''er borne a child, that thou hast none? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Hast thou preserved these things by charge, or how? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Hast thou yet heard their wily trains to kill me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION How came I hither then? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION How shall the god what he would hide reveal? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION How then am I thine? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION How then came I to the temple? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION How weds a stranger an Athenian born? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION How, then, by thy monition should I act? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION If not alive, how probably destroyed? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Is not this strange? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Is that no more his will? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Is there aught else besides this happy proof? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Is this vase empty, or contains it aught? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION It can not be; for who shall dare to give The oracle? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION O my dear mother, when shall I behold Thy face? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Observed she drops of blood distain the path? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Owe I then my birth to that? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Seest thou what most the inquiry will suppress? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Shalt thou unpunish''d meditate my death? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Should I not ruin those that sought my life? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Speak; What wouldst thou know? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Sprung the first author of thy line from the earth? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION The gift of Pallas, who thus nurtures children? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION The virgins ope''d the interdicted chest? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION This exposed child, where is he? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION This fortune whence? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Those that gave me birth Do I embrace? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Thy sisters did Erechtheus sacrifice? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION To view it, or consult the oracle? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Was I brought From some far distant part? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Was that before Thy marriage with the daughter of Erechtheus? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What else Would we? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What figure wrought? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What follow''d, if she knew the god''s embrace? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What gain imports this to me, or what loss? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What ground hath she on which to build that thought? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What is his name? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What is it? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What pleasure mid these sacred wreaths to die? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What right hast thou to plead Apollo''s name? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What say''st thou? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What the event to him? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What time hath pass''d since thus the child was lost? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What torch, what brands, what flames had I prepared? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What were the words of Phoebus? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION What wilt thou say to me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Who are you call''d? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Who declares this? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Who is my mother? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Who? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Why does this stranger always thus revile With obscure speech the god? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Why give his son then to another father? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Why, lady, this inexplicable grief? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Why? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Why? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Wilt thou not keep thee distant, ere Thou hast my arrow in thy heart? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION With what design? |
euripides-ion-1232 | ION Wouldst thou, through fear of what might happen, kill me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Is it through love Of her, for whom she asks? |
euripides-ion-1232 | LEADER Dost thou, my honoured mistress, call to mind The youth that swept the temple? |
euripides-ion-1232 | LEADER How were our dark devices brought to light? |
euripides-ion-1232 | LEADER How? |
euripides-ion-1232 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS And for what cause, my fellow- slave? |
euripides-ion-1232 | LEADER Whither wouldst thou fly, But to this altar? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Lady, next to thee: Absent so long, have I not caused thee fear? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Look, what strange bird comes onwards; wouldst thou fix Beneath the battlements thy straw- built nest? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Of what charge dost thou implead The god? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Or does it rest in silence, yet unknown? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Or shall the flying bark unfurl its sails? |
euripides-ion-1232 | PRIESTESS Seest thou the vase I hold beneath mine arm? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Rending his robes, the son of Phoebus given Sprung from the table, and aloud exclaim''d,-"What wretch design''d to kill me? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Shall we, who plann''d the deathful deed, Be caught within the toils we spread, While justice claims severe her chast''ning part? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR And dost thou bear this gore blended in one? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR And of what mother? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR And on the human frame what power have these? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR And what induced thee to expose thy child? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR At his decease then they devolved to thee? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Born of some other woman Is this child yet to come, or did the god Declare one now in being? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR But how can this, my child, annoy thy foes? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Didst thou in silence mourn this secret ill? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Hadst thou none with thee conscious to this deed? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR How durst thou in a cavern leave thy son? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR In succour of her sons to annoy the gods? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR In what around the infant''s body hung? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Seeking the breast, or reaching to thine arms? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR The other drop, what faculties hath that? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR This love of Phoebus how didst thou conceal? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Till we learn- CREUSA To me what tidings? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Was this, my daughter, such as I suppose? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR What fierce and dreadful form did she then wear? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Where? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Where? |
euripides-ion-1232 | TUTOR Whose hands exposed him? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Tell me With clearest circumstance: who is this youth? |
euripides-ion-1232 | This pleasure whence, this unexpected transport? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Thou hallow''d matron, From whom didst thou receive my infant child? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Thy dark reply delights not me; Lurking beneath close fraud I see: Where will this end? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Towards the altar, see, A swan comes sailing: elsewhere wilt thou move Thy scarlet- tinctured foot? |
euripides-ion-1232 | War I not against The pleasure of the god, who saved for me These pledges of my mother? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What am I doing? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What bless''d hand brought him to Apollo''s shrine? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What brings this sorrow, lady? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What else restrains my tongue? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What flight shall save me from this death, Borne on swift pinions through the air, Sunk to the darksome cave beneath, Or mounted on the rapid car? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What god above the hallow''d dome unveils His radiant face that shines another sun? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What is its power? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What means Thy hasty foot? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What means this voice divine, Son of Latona, fate- declaring power? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What say''st thou? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What son hast thou brought forth? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What thoughts hast thou recall''d?, ION Does Phoebus, do his lightnings honour it? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What thoughts hast thou recall''d?, ION Does Phoebus, do his lightnings honour it? |
euripides-ion-1232 | What tidings dost thou bring? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Whence are these fears? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Where behold him? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Where may we hope for right, If by the injustice of your power undone? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Where placed him A feast for vultures? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Who was declared? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Whom did the husband of this wretch first meet? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Why is thine eye thus fixed upon the ground? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Why on thy brow that cloud? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Why say that I was born the son of Xuthus? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Why this? |
euripides-ion-1232 | With what an eye would she, who hath no child, Look on thy child? |
euripides-ion-1232 | XUTHUS And with the Maenades Of Bacchus- ION In the temperate hour, or warm With wine? |
euripides-ion-1232 | XUTHUS That who first Should meet me- ION How?-what meeting? |
euripides-ion-1232 | XUTHUS Who with the Delphian damsels- ION To the orgies Led thee, or how? |
euripides-ion-1232 | XUTHUS Why fly me, When thou shouldst own what is most fond of thee? |
euripides-ion-1232 | Ye sacred garlands, what have you so long Conceal''d: ye bands, that keep these precious relics? |
euripides-ion-1232 | and by what name may we address thee? |
euripides-ion-1232 | and the ungrateful Phoebus gives no aid? |
euripides-ion-1232 | doth he live? |
euripides-ion-1232 | for what use? |
euripides-ion-1232 | how so? |
euripides-ion-1232 | or hath the god''s displeasure Bereft thee of thy reason? |
euripides-ion-1232 | or to conceal Some secret of importance? |
euripides-ion-1232 | or wast thou alone? |
euripides-ion-1232 | shall we speak, or bury this in silence? |
euripides-ion-1232 | what country boasts Thy birth? |
euripides-ion-1232 | what may this be? |
euripides-ion-1232 | what wouldst thou say? |
euripides-ion-1232 | whence? |
euripides-ion-1232 | who assisted? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Am I being snared by some trick of Proteus''impious son? |
euripides-helen-1430 | And the ship ran down with blood; while Helen from her seat upon the stern thus cheered them on:"Where is the fame ye won in Troy? |
euripides-helen-1430 | And why this stern resolve? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Are ye here to help bury dead Atreus''son, whose missing body this lady, daughter of Tyndareas, is honouring with a cenotaph?" |
euripides-helen-1430 | Best for her to die; but how shall I die a noble death? |
euripides-helen-1430 | But before thou hast right knowledge, what shall sorrow avail thee? |
euripides-helen-1430 | But from whom wilt thou say thou hadst tidings of my death? |
euripides-helen-1430 | But how camest thou, poor husband, safe from Troy? |
euripides-helen-1430 | But how can he recover me if he be slain? |
euripides-helen-1430 | But say, who art thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | By what name am I to call thee? |
euripides-helen-1430 | CHORUS What boots this meaningless appeal? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Can there be a man that hath the name of Zeus by the banks of Nile? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Couldst find a nearer and a dearer? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Did Theonoe tell thee this? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Did not my mother bear me to be a monster to the world? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Dost thou consent to be dead in word, though not really so? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Doth he still behold the light turning towards the sun- god''s chariot and the stars in their courses? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN And after that, doth no man know of Menelaus''arrival? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN And did ye capture that Spartan dame? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN And how much longer did ye abide in Troy? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Are the sons of Tyndareus still alive or not? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Are you so sure this fancy was reliable? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Art thou then a sufferer by woes that he inflicted? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN At which of the barbarian''s gates wert thou standing? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN But why? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Did not all the Argives make the passage together? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Didst thou thyself behold that unhappy one? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Dost know thy part? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Dost mean the phantom- form of cloud? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Dost not believe thou seest in me thy wife? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Dost see the wretched station I have kept at this tomb? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Good friends, to what a fate am I united? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Hath Menelaus reached his home by this time with his wife? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN How long is it since the city was sacked? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN How shall we die so as to gain fame? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN How so? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN I might; but what escape is there for us who know nothing of the country and the barbarian''s kingdom? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN In Hellas we have a custom, whene''er one is drowned at sea- THEOCLYMENUS What is your custom? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN In what quarter of the broad ocean? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Is Troy already fired and utterly by flames consumed? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Nay, who art thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Observe me well; what need hast thou of clearer proof? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Shall not he command the ship who is ordering the funeral? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN So thou camest, sir stranger, to Ilium''s famous town? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Surely thou wert not begging food? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN That is happy news; but what is the other rumour? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Then by thy knees, since thou art my friend indeed,- THEOCLYMENUS What art so bent on winning, that to me thou stretchest out a suppliant hand? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Then why art thou visiting these meadows by the Nile? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Thine must be a piteous lot; who from thy country drives thee out? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN To what words or advice art thou leading up? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN To wrest the promise of Cypris- MENELAUS How now? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Was he mad? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Was it Helen''s shame that caused her death? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Well, if he did, what harm herein to Ajax? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN What can I say? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN What dost thou mean thereby? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN What is the fate of my poor husband? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN What other woman calls thee lord? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Which is the more credible report? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Who art thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Who then shall teach thee, unless it be thine own eyes? |
euripides-helen-1430 | HELEN Why jeer at me? |
euripides-helen-1430 | His reason never ask to know; my lips are sealed; for what could word of mine avail thee? |
euripides-helen-1430 | How could thy sire restore the living to the dead? |
euripides-helen-1430 | If thou abide here in this seat, what prospect hast thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Is he to escape when he hath come? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Is the daughter of Thestius alive? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Is there a grief in life that thou hast not endured? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Is there any land of the same name as Lacedaemon or Troy? |
euripides-helen-1430 | LEADER What friends hast thou within the palace? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Am I to enter the palace with thee, or are we to sit here at the tomb quietly? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Am I to let them bind my hands, and say nothing? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS And where may he be? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Art thou from Hellas, or a native of this land? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Can it be my mind is wandering, my sight failing? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Come, then; only, suppose she reject our proposals? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Couldst thou persuade one of those who have charge of cars and steeds to furnish us with a chariot? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Egypt? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS For want of an altar, or because it is the barbarians''way? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Hath he, then, a body which steel can not wound? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Hera? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS His reason, pray, for this enmity? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS How so? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS How then couldst thou have been here, and in Troy, at the same time? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS How wilt thou convince me of this? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Is he some private prince, or a ruler of this land? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Is the king, of whom thou speakest, here within? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Leaving thee behind? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS May I not then even bear thee homeward on my ship? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Pray, who fashions living bodies? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Some voice divine within the secret chambers of his house? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Suppose he grant it; how, e''en then, are we to escape without a ship, after having committed me to my empty tomb? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Suppose we persuade her, can we get away? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Tell me, I adjure thee, how wert thou from my home conveyed? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Then she gave him a phantom in thy stead, as thou tellest me? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS To what end? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What can I think or say? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What deity or fate tore thee from thy country, then? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What god''s handiwork? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What have I done to merit such a fate? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What land is this? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What mean''st thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What meanest thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What meanest thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What news? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS What saving remedy doth this afford us twain? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS When? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Whence came she? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Who art thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Why did Hera visit thee with evil regarding this verdict? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS Will gold, or daring deeds, or winning words procure it? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MENELAUS ary one tell him it is I? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MESSENGER How so? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MESSENGER Is this real woman, then, thy wife? |
euripides-helen-1430 | MESSENGER Was it not then in her power to decide all the trouble in Troy? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Omit the rest, and tell me only this; how long wert thou a weary wanderer o''er the wide sea''s face? |
euripides-helen-1430 | One cried,"There is treachery in this voyage; why should we now sail to Nauplia? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Or among the dead, beneath the earth, is he to death consigned? |
euripides-helen-1430 | PORTRESS Pray, what fault hast thou to find with the race of Nile? |
euripides-helen-1430 | PORTRESS Who stands before the door? |
euripides-helen-1430 | PORTRESS Why are thy eyes with tear- drops wet? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Shall I choose marriage as an alternative of evils, and dwell with a barbarian lord, seated at his sumptuous board? |
euripides-helen-1430 | She who betrayed me? |
euripides-helen-1430 | TEUCER Dost speak of Leda? |
euripides-helen-1430 | TEUCER Who is lord and master of this fenced palace? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS And next, how do ye pour these offerings into the billows? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Are thy tears in genuine sorrow for this calamity? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Blood of what? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Borne aloft on soaring wings, or treading still the earth? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS By giving my bride to another? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Canst thou not perform these rites well enough without Helen? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Did this fellow leave thy husband unburied, or consign him to the grave? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS From what country is this fellow? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS He is lost; but on what vessel came this man? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS How do ye bury those who have been drowned at sea? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS How far from the shore does the ship put out? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS How knowest thou? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS How now? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS How then? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS How was it this man did not perish if he was with him aboard? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS How was it? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS In what misfortune art thou plunged? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Is it thy wish that I should escort thee in person with active aid? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS It shall be so; what else is it customary to add? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS On what part of the savage ocean was he sailing? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS On what terms? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Shalt thou, a slave, control thy master? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS What am I to give thee then for thy dead husband? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS What kind of death doth he declare that Menelaus died? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS What tomb can be bestowed on lost bodies? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Where left he the wreck, on coming hither? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Where then is that ill thing that was sent to Troy in thy stead? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Wherefore hast thou shorn the tresses of thy golden hair? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Who and where is he? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Who hath any rights o''er mine? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS Why so? |
euripides-helen-1430 | THEOCLYMENUS"Righteous?" |
euripides-helen-1430 | Then why do we employ these prophets? |
euripides-helen-1430 | To what vain hope art thou leading me? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Well, supposing I conceal myself in the palace and slay the king with this two- edged sword? |
euripides-helen-1430 | What Muse shall I approach with tears or songs of death or woe? |
euripides-helen-1430 | What evil is not thine? |
euripides-helen-1430 | What fortune have I still in store? |
euripides-helen-1430 | What hath happened? |
euripides-helen-1430 | What means this business? |
euripides-helen-1430 | What mortal heart could e''er have had such hope? |
euripides-helen-1430 | What of my prophecy, Helen? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Whence comest? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Where is there a Sparta in the world save where Eurotas glides between his reedy banks? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Wherefore art flying? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Who sent thee thither? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Why art thou so insatiate in mischief, employing every art of love, of fraud, and guileful schemes, and spells that bring bloodshed on families? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Why should I tell thee of our losses in the Aegean, or of the beacon Nauplius lighted on Euboea? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Why so sad? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Why then do I prolong my life? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Why, then, do I prolong my life? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Wilt thou bury a shade? |
euripides-helen-1430 | Wilt thou still make this tomb thy abode? |
euripides-helen-1430 | a bed of straw; but what hast thou to do with it? |
euripides-helen-1430 | abroad, or in the house? |
euripides-helen-1430 | canst thou not let the dead man be? |
euripides-helen-1430 | come, thy news? |
euripides-helen-1430 | dost swear to die and never to another husband yield? |
euripides-helen-1430 | for who with sense endowed would bring himself to this? |
euripides-helen-1430 | hath one arrived who actually announces this for certaint? |
euripides-helen-1430 | how can I say it? |
euripides-helen-1430 | how stands it now? |
euripides-helen-1430 | is our daughter Hermione yet alive? |
euripides-helen-1430 | is some man bent on wedding my wife? |
euripides-helen-1430 | on what bloody thought intent? |
euripides-helen-1430 | or art thou speaking from hearsay? |
euripides-helen-1430 | or of my visits to Crete and the cities of Libya, or of the peaks of Perseus? |
euripides-helen-1430 | son of Peleus? |
euripides-helen-1430 | surely you are not being spoiled by the barbarians? |
euripides-helen-1430 | surely''twas not thy sword that stole his life away? |
euripides-helen-1430 | there, who keeps the gate and will come forth to bear my tale of woe into the house? |
euripides-helen-1430 | was it then for this we vainly toiled? |
euripides-helen-1430 | what is it thou hast said? |
euripides-helen-1430 | what mournful tidings shall hear? |
euripides-helen-1430 | what piteous dirge shall I strive to utter, now that I am beginning my strain of bitter lamentation? |
euripides-helen-1430 | what ship conveyed her from these shores? |
euripides-helen-1430 | what sight is here? |
euripides-helen-1430 | what wilt thou tell? |
euripides-helen-1430 | when shall I see thee come? |
euripides-helen-1430 | whence comest thou to visit this land? |
euripides-helen-1430 | whence landed he here? |
euripides-helen-1430 | where are now those famous troops of mine? |
euripides-helen-1430 | wherefore doth Hellas observe this custom? |
euripides-helen-1430 | wherefore should she afflict us twain? |
euripides-helen-1430 | whither away so fast, my lord? |
euripides-helen-1430 | who is this? |
euripides-helen-1430 | who was ever more unfortunate than I? |
euripides-helen-1430 | who was that Phrygian, who was he, that felled that pine with sorrow fraught for Ilium, and for those that came from Hellas? |
euripides-helen-1430 | whom do I behold in thee, lady? |
euripides-helen-1430 | whose is the palace? |
euripides-helen-1430 | why, poor man, whoe''er thou art, dost thou turn from me, loathing me for those troubles Helen caused? |
euripides-helen-1430 | wilt leave me, and take that phantom bride away? |
euripides-helen-1430 | yet what use to fly? |
euripides-helen-1430 | your Achaean ship where wrecked? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Am I not right, Phaedrus? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Am I not right, sweet Phaedrus? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | And do you tell me, instead, what are plaintiff and defendant doing in a law court-- are they not contending? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | And if I am to add the praises of the non- lover what will become of me? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | And if he came to his right mind, would he ever imagine that the desires were good which he conceived when in his wrong mind? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | And now, dear Phaedrus, I shall pause for an instant to ask whether you do not think me, as I appear to myself, inspired? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | And so, Phaedrus, you really imagine that I am going to improve upon the ingenuity of Lysias? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But I should like to know whether you have the same feeling as I have about the rhetoricians? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But how much is left? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But if I am to read, where would you please to sit? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But if this be true, must not the soul be the self- moving, and therefore of necessity unbegotten and immortal? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But let me ask you, friend: have we not reached the plane- tree to which you were conducting us? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But of the heaven which is above the heavens, what earthly poet ever did or ever will sing worthily? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But what do you mean? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But what pleasure or consolation can the beloved be receiving all this time? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But why did you make your second oration so much finer than the first? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | But will you tell me whether I defined love at the beginning of my speech? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Can I be wrong in supposing that Lysias gave you a feast of discourse? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Do you ever cross the border? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Do you not perceive that I am already overtaken by the Nymphs to whom you have mischievously exposed me? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Do you think that a lover only can be a firm friend? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Do you? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Does he not define probability to be that which the many think? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | For lovers repent--''SOCRATES: Enough:--Now, shall I point out the rhetorical error of those words? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | For what should a man live if not for the pleasures of discourse? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Is not the discourse excellent, more especially in the matter of the language? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Is there any principle in them? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Lysias then, I suppose, was in the town? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | May I reckon the wise to be the wealthy, and may I have such a quantity of gold as a temperate man and he only can bear and carry.--Anything more? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Nor, until they adopt our method of reading and writing, can we admit that they write by rules of art? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Now I have no leisure for such enquiries; shall I tell you why? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Now in what way is the lover to be distinguished from the non- lover? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Now what is that sort of thing but a regular piece of authorship? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Now, Socrates, what do you think? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: About what conclusion? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: And is this the exact spot? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: And what are these arguments, Socrates? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Do you see the tallest plane- tree in the distance? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Had not Protagoras something of the same sort? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: How do you mean? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: How so? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: How so? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: How so? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: I have never noticed it; but I beseech you to tell me, Socrates, do you believe this tale? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: I think that I understand you; but will you explain yourself? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: In what direction then? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: In what way? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Isocrates the fair:--What message will you send to him, and how shall we describe him? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Need we? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Not yet, Socrates; not until the heat of the day has passed; do you not see that the hour is almost noon? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Show what? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Then why are you still at your tricks? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: There is a great deal surely to be found in books of rhetoric? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What are they? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What do you mean, my good Socrates? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What do you mean? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What do you mean? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What error? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What gifts do you mean? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What is our method? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What is the other principle, Socrates? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What is there remarkable in the epitaph? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What name would you assign to them? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What of that? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What shall we say to him? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What would you prophesy? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: What? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Who are they, and where did you hear anything better than this? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Whom do you mean, and what is his origin? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: Will you go on? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | PHAEDRUS: You mean the living word of knowledge which has a soul, and of which the written word is properly no more than an image? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: About the just and unjust-- that is the matter in dispute? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: And can we suppose that he who knows the just and good and honourable has less understanding, than the husbandman, about his own seeds? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: And do you think that you can know the nature of the soul intelligently without knowing the nature of the whole? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: And how did he entertain you? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: And when he speaks in the assembly, he will make the same things seem good to the city at one time, and at another time the reverse of good? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: And when men are deceived and their notions are at variance with realities, it is clear that the error slips in through resemblances? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: And will not Sophocles say to the display of the would- be tragedian, that this is not tragedy but the preliminaries of tragedy? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: And will you go on with the narration? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: And you will be less likely to be discovered in passing by degrees into the other extreme than when you go all at once? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: But when any one speaks of justice and goodness we part company and are at odds with one another and with ourselves? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Can this be said of the discourse of Lysias? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Do you know how you can speak or act about rhetoric in a manner which will be acceptable to God? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Do you mean that I am not in earnest? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Does not your simplicity observe that I have got out of dithyrambics into heroics, when only uttering a censure on the lover? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: He, then, who would deceive others, and not be deceived, must exactly know the real likenesses and differences of things? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: I have now said all that I have to say of the art of rhetoric: have you anything to add? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: In good speaking should not the mind of the speaker know the truth of the matter about which he is going to speak? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: In which are we more likely to be deceived, and in which has rhetoric the greater power? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: It was foolish, I say,--to a certain extent, impious; can anything be more dreadful? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Let me put the matter thus: When will there be more chance of deception-- when the difference is large or small? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: May not''the wolf,''as the proverb says,''claim a hearing''? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: My dear Phaedrus, whence come you, and whither are you going? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Now to which class does love belong-- to the debatable or to the undisputed class? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Shall I tell you what I will do? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Shall we discuss the rules of writing and speech as we were proposing? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Should we not offer up a prayer first of all to the local deities? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then as to the other topics-- are they not thrown down anyhow? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then do you think that any one of this class, however ill- disposed, would reproach Lysias with being an author? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then in some things we agree, but not in others? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Well, and is not Eros the son of Aphrodite, and a god? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: When any one speaks of iron and silver, is not the same thing present in the minds of all? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Who is he? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | SOCRATES: Why, do you not know that when a politician writes, he begins with the names of his approvers? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Shall we say a word to him or not? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | These are the commonplaces of the subject which must come in( for what else is there to be said?) |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Well, the teacher will say, is this, Phaedrus and Socrates, your account of the so- called art of rhetoric, or am I to look for another? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | What would they say if they saw that we, like the many, are not conversing, but slumbering at mid- day, lulled by their voices, too indolent to think? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Who, for example, could speak on this thesis of yours without praising the discretion of the non- lover and blaming the indiscretion of the lover? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Why do I say so? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Why do you not proceed? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Why should the next topic follow next in order, or any other topic? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Will he not choose a beloved who is delicate rather than sturdy and strong? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Would they not have a right to laugh at us? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | Yes; but is not even a ridiculous friend better than a cunning enemy? |
plato-phaedrus-1340 | and will not Acumenus say the same of medicine to the would- be physician? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Where are you going? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | ( As Andromeda, singing) Oh Nymphs, ye virgins who are so dear to me, how am I to approach him? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | ( As CHORUS) To what divinity is your homage addressed? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | ( To AGATHON) And you yourself, who are you? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | A young maiden, beautiful as the immortals, chained to this rock like a vessel in port?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | AGATHON And what can I do for you in the matter? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | AGATHON But why not go and defend yourself? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | AGATHON Have you not said in one of your pieces,"You love to see the light, and do n''t you believe your father loves it too?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | AGATHON What are you asking? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | AGATHON Why? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | About the door? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Among the last year''s Senators, who have just yielded their office to other citizens, is there one who equals Eubule? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | And because I have uttered what I thought right in favour of Euripides, do you want to depilate me for my trouble? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | And have you not heard what a dandy Phrynichus was and how careful in his dress? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | And in truth am I not really bound? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | And the belt? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | And the old man, where is he? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | And then? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | And when we bestow our favours on slaves and muleteers for want of better, does he mention this? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Are these not our everyday tricks? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Are you a woman? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Are you afraid of the Scythian? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Because he has known and shown up two or three of our faults, when we have a thousand? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Before I lose my spleen antirely, Euripides, can you at least tell me where you are leading me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But answer me; are you the mother of this brat? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But how are you going to get out of the mess? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But if we are truly such a pest, why marry us? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But might she not stay with me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But now your name, what is it?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But what do you want to do with me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But what does this mean? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But what''s your name? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | But where can a place be found for hearing well? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | By which of his pieces does he set most store? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CHORUS( singing) And what immortal would protect you for your crime? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES And she who carries the child? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES They say that Euripides has sent an old man here to- day, one of his relations.... LEADER OF THE CHORUS With what object? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES What are you chattering about cress? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES What shall we do with him? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES Who is your tent companion? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES Whom do you mean? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES( also peering from behind) Where has it gone to now? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES( looking MNESILOCHUS square in the eye) Tell me, who is your husband? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | CLISTHENES( to the LEADER OF THE CHORUS) Do you know this woman? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Do you know a certain individual at Cothocidae...? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Do you pretend to be a man? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Do you want any more? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Do you want to see yourself? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Does he not repeat that we are all vice, that we are the curse of our husbands? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Does she let some vase drop while going or returning to the house? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Does; he not style us adulterous, lecherous, bibulous, treacherous, and garrulous? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES And a short mantle? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES And what am I to do? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Are you mocking me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES But what prevents your going there? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Do you see that little door? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Do you see yourself? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Have you never seen him? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES He''s a certain Agathon.... MNESILOCHUS Swarthy, robust of build? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Well then, do you agree? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Well? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES What are you houting for? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES What are you jabbering about? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES What can be done? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES What need for you to hear what you are going to see? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Whence comes this voice? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Where are you running to now? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Where are you running to? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Why? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES Will you give a drachma? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES You are chattering still? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES"And why remain sitting on this tomb, wrapped in this long veil, oh, stranger lady?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES"Are you Grecian or born in this country?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES"But what do I behold? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES"Do you propose to prevent me from taking my wife, the daughter of Tyndareus, to Sparta?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES"Is Proteus in these parts?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES"What are you saying? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES"What is this shore whither the wind has driven our boat?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES"Who is the old woman who reviles you, stranger lady? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | EURIPIDES( as Menelaus)"To what master does this splendid palace belong? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | FIRST WOMAN And then? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | FIRST WOMAN What shall we do? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | FIRST WOMAN Where are you flying to? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | FIRST WOMAN You ask me who I am? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Has he not hit us enough, calumniated us sufficiently, wherever there are spectators, tragedians, and a chorus? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Has it seen the feast of cups thrice or four times? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Have I said how we use the hollow bandles of our brooms to draw up wine unbeknown to our husbands? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Have we not the right to speak frankly at this gathering? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | He has a big beard? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Hold still, wo n''t you? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | I am not astonished at these outbursts of fiery rage; how could your bile not get inflamed against Euripides, who has spoken so ill of you? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | I must neither see nor hear? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Is a maiden unwell? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Is a woman weaving a garland for herself? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Is there no one has any spirit at all? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS And what impels you to make these overtures? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS Are you asking for the old woman who carried the lyre? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS But how would a man fail to be recognized amongst women? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | LEADER OF THE CHORUS What is it, my child? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Let me see, whom could I best send to him? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Let''s see, have you ever been here before? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MAGISTRATE Is this the rascal Clisthenes told us about? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MAGISTRATE What favour? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS And what is he to do there? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS And what is to become of me, poor unfortunate man that I am? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS And who are you whom my misfortunes have moved to pity? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS And you will repeat them? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS But how? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Does it suit me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Great gods, what is the matter now? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Have I told how you attributed to yourself the male child your slave had just borne and gave her your little daughter? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS How is that? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS How much does it hold? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS How old is it? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS How, in the gods''name? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS In what way distinct? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Keep my courage, when I''m being burnt up? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS No, by Apollo, not unless you swear to me.... EURIPIDES What? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Pay attention and be silent about the door? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Seeing and hearing? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Silence about what? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS So small? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS What have they against you? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS What is it? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS What is this wiseacre stuff you are telling me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS What shall I take? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS What subtle trill, I wonder, is he going to warble to us? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Where, where? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Who is this Agathon? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Why not rather swear it by the sons of Hippocrates? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Will they fit me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS Would be present or secretly? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS You carried it? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS"And you, what is your name? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS"But what sweet hope is this that sets my heart a- throb? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS( aside) Wherever am I to stow myself? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS( embarrassed) My husband? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS( singing)"Why is it necessary that Andromeda should have all the woes for her share? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS.... Have I mentioned the woman who killed her husband with a hatchet? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | MNESILOCHUS.... who buried her father beneath the bath? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Now who asks to speak? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Of another, who caused hers to lose his reason with her potions? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Ought you not rather to rejoice and give thanks to the gods? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN Dressed in a long robe? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN Is that enough? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN What, are you talking about the head of Gorgos, the scribe? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN Whence comes this voice? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN Where are you running to? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN Yes, yes; have you seen her? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN You are chattering still? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN( to MNESILOCHUS) Are you mocking me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SCYTHIAN( waking) What is this music that makes me so blithe? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SECOND WOMAN Of what Proteus? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SECOND WOMAN What are you ruminating about now? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SECOND WOMAN What belongs to the priestess? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SERVANT Who is the rustic that approaches this sacred enclosure? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SERVANT Whose voice is that? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | SERVANT.... for Agathon, our master, the sweet- voiced poet, is going.... MNESILOCHUS.... to be made love to? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Then where are your breasts? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Three cotylae? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | To begin with you; who are you? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What are you grumbling and groaning for? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What are you running away for? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What could be more contradictory? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What country gave birth to such an audacious woman? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What do you keep pushing that thing down for? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What has he done now, friends, what has he done? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What is his country? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What is his idea? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What man is fool enough to let himself be depilated? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What relation has a mirror to a sword? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What was done first? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What was done first? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | What will attract him? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Whence comes this androgyne? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Where can this man have hidden himself to escape our notice? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Where is it running to then? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Where is the cloak, the footgear that belong to that sex? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Where is the old woman then? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Where is your tool, pray? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Where might I find some oars? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Which way has she fled? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Who are you?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Who has robbed you of your daughter, your beloved child? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Who is keeping him? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Why are you rolling up your eyes? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Why are you trying to make yourself so small? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Why be so bent on his ruin? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Why do I still live?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Why do you want to fidget about like this? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Why forbid us to go out or show ourselves at the window? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | Will he welcome strangers who have been tried on the billows of the sea by storm and shipwreck?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | after you have given us this delightful son?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | are you going to strip a mother of nine children naked? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | his dress? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | how can I escape the sight of this Scythian? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | how can I secure safety? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | is it just that the mother of Hyperbolus should sit dressed in white and with loosened tresses beside that of Lamachus and lend out money on usury? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | to what barbarian land has my swift flight taken me? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | venerable Moirai, what fresh attack is this? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what are you jabbering about? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what arguments can I use? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what can I think of? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what can be done? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what device can I hit on? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what do I see? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what hast thou in store for me to- day? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what have you done? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what''s to be done? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | what? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | where are you going? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | where are you running to now? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | where has she unearthed all that? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | where is the old woman? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | where lie his ashes?" |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | who would not be moved at the sight of the appalling tortures under which I succumb? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | why mm, mm? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | will the swallow never appear to end the winter of my discontent? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | wretch, why tell such shameful lies? |
aristophanes-thesmophoriazusae-3084 | you are again becoming a woman, before we have punished you for having pretended it the first time? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | ''Twas shameful, was it not? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | (_ Calling._) Who else for the boat? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | A boy? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | A funny sight, I own: but where''s the sense? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | A man? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | A slave, a mortal, act Alcmena''s son? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | A slave? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Ah me, whence fall these evils on my head? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Air, Zeus''s chamber, or the Foot of Time? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Alas, poor witling, and ca n''t you see That for mighty thoughts and heroic aims, the words themselves must appropriate be? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | An ass, no doubt: what made him do it though? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And blabbing them abroad? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And do what? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And do you dare look in my face, after that shameful deed? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And fought? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And how am I to cross? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And how did you manage to make them so grand, exalted, and brave with your wonderful verse? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And how do you make_ your_ prologues? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And how has this disturbed our Aeschylus? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And how, if I decide? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And tell me this: of all the roads you know Which is the quickest way to get to Hades? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And then? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And this beside his murdered father''s grave Orestes speaks? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And this to ME, thou chattery- babble- collector, Thou pauper- creating rags- and- patches- stitcher? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And this? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And to speak great Lycabettuses, pray, And massive blocks of Parnassian rocks, is_ that_ things honest and pure to say? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And what do_ you_ propose? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And what does Pluto now propose to do? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And what of overhearing Your master''s secrets? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And what say_ you?_ AESCH. |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And what wilt thou reply? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And who are they? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | And who''s to be the judge? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Any fault there? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Ay, truly, never now a man Comes home, but he begins to scan; And to his household loudly cries,_ Why, where''s my pitcher? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Aye, little brother? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Before I''ve put them down? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Bless the sprat, Who nibbled off the head of that? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But Agathon, where is he? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But Phaedras and Stheneboeas? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But Sophocles, How came not he to claim the tragic chair? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But have you not a shoal of little songsters, Tragedians by the myriad, who can chatter A furlong faster than Euripides? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But tell me, did you see the parricides And perjured folk he mentioned? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But were n''t_ you_ frightened at those dreadful threats And shoutings? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But were there none to side with Aeschylus? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But what of Xenocles? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But where are you going really? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | But why these tears? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | CORP. Two drachmas for the job? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Can any of you tell Where Pluto here may dwell, For we, sirs, are two strangers who were never here before? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Caused by a woman? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Claim it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Come now, that comical joke? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Come then, if you''re so_ very_ brave a man, Will you be I, and take the hero''s club And lion''s skin, since you''re so monstrous plucky? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Creative? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Dancing- girls? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Did n''t you hear it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Did n''t you? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Did you observe? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Do you mean below, to Hades? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Does not the donkey bear the load you''re bearing? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Does she love the bad? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Done me? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Done? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Eh? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Eh? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | For such an outrage was not death your due? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | From Marathon, or Where picked you up these cable- twister''s strains? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Gentleman? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Given the victor''s prize To Aeschylus; why not? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Go whither? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Go, hang yourselves; for what care I? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Going to? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Gone where? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Hang it, what''s that? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Has it a copper leg? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Have you e''er felt a sudden lust for soup? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Have you no heart? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Hear him? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Hemlock, do you mean? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How about grumbling, when you have felt the stick, And scurry out of doors? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How about prying? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How came they thither? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How can one save a city such as this, Whom neither frieze nor woollen tunic suits? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How can you bear, when you are borne yourself? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How can you test us fairly? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How can you when you''re riding? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How so? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How so? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How twice? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | How? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | I buy of_ him_? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | I? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | If I ca n''t find one? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | If go you must, there''s Sophocles-- he comes Before Euripides-- why not take_ him_? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | In truth to the Ravens? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Is it Xanthias there? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Is it bricks they are making? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Is the thing clear, or must I speak again? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Its name? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Like it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Love it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | May I not say I''m overburdened so That if none ease me, I must ease myself? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Mercy o''me, what''s this? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Mind it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Not hurt you, did I? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Nothing else smart? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Now is n''t it a shame the man should strike And he a thief besides? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Now is not this too bad? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Now really should a cock be brought into a tragic play? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | O drop that, ca n''t you? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | O, what''s it like? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | O, what''s up now? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | O, where? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | O, whither I? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | O, whither shall I flee? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | O, ye golden gods, Lies your heart THERE? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Of what ills is he NOT the creator and cause? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Pythangelus? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | So why not_ you_ be flogged as well as I? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | So? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | So? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Struck me? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Taenarum? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Tell me when? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | The Muse herself ca n''t be a wanton? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | The cowardliest? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | The good and useful? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Then does he mean that when his father fell By craft and violence at a woman''s hand, The god of craft was witnessing the deed? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Then why did n''t I sneeze? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Then you do n''t mind it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Then you''ll effect nothing for which you came? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Theramenes? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | To what end? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Torture him, how? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Was it for Cleisthenes? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Was n''t he pelted? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Was then, I wonder, the tale I told of Phaedra''s passionate love untrue? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Well, would you like a steep and swift descent? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Well? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What am I doing? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What are they? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What are you dreaming of? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What do you say, Euripides, to that? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What does it mean? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What does she think herself about him? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What for? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What from? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What have you there? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What in the act of offering? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What is my fault? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What makes you stamp and fidget so? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What means this hubbub And row? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What on earth for? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What then? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What''s it all about? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What''s shameful, if the audience think not so? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What''s that you are saying? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What''s the next step? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What''s the right way to knock? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What, a new coinage of your own? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What, do n''t I bear? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What,_ I_ get up? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | What? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Whatever''s that? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Whence comes that phlattothrat? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Where have I got one? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Where must I wait? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Where were you going? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Where''s she that bangs and jangles Her castanets? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Where? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Where? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Where? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Which of them will you test? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Which shall I tell you first? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Which will you try? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who banged the door? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who but they would ever have thought of it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who does now? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who gnawed these olives? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who is the god to blame for my destruction? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who knows if death be life, and life be death, And breath be mutton broth, and sleep a sheepskin? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who stole it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who''s for Cerberia? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who''s for the Lethe''s plain? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who''s for the Rest from every pain and ill? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Who''s there? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Why not? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Why"good gracious"? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Why, how am_ I_ to pull? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Why, how came that about? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Why, what''s the matter? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Will it come off? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Would n''t I like to follow on, and try A little sport and dancing? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Would n''t I? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Wretch; would you leave me dead? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | XAN, Frightened? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | Yet wherefore need a lyre For songs like these? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You are really game to go? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You enemy of gods and men, what was_ your_ practice, pray? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You hear him, Aeschylus: why do n''t you speak? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You hear him? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You heard him? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You like that style? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You love it, do you? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You mean the rascals? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You mine with a bottle of oil? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You see this foot? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You two? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You understand? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You''ll prove it? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | You? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | [ Is this_ your_ cleverness or Cephisophon''s? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ DIO. |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ DIO. |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ I will expound( for_ I know it_)_ the omen the chieftains encountered. |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | approachest thou not to the rescue_? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | approachest thou not to the rescue_? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | clap your hand in mine, Kiss and be kissed: and prithee tell me this, Tell me by Zeus, our rascaldom''s own god, What''s all that noise within? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | does not Iophon live? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | how do you mean? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | how? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | or the Ravens? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | the Donkey- shearings? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | weigh out tragedy, like butcher''s meat? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | what are you doing? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | what have you done? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | what now? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | what? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | where''s Xanthias? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | which shall it be? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | why did n''t I fight at sea? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | you there, you deadman, are you willing To carry down our little traps to Hades? |
aristophanes-frogs-1778 | you''re not in earnest, just because I dressed you up, in fun, as Heracles? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Am I not right? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And also the vessel which contains the wine? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And another disputed point is, which is the fairer? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And are they right in saying this? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And can he who is not loved be a friend? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And did you ever behave ill to your father or your mother? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And disease is an enemy? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And disease is an evil? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And do they entrust their property to him rather than to you? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And do they esteem a slave of more value than you who are their son? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And do they then permit you to do what you like, and never rebuke you or hinder you from doing what you desire? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And do they trust a hireling more than you? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And does not this seem to put us in the right way? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And everything in which we appear to him to be wiser than himself or his son he will commit to us? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And friends they can not be, unless they value one another? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And has he a motive and object in being a friend, or has he no motive and object? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And have we not admitted already that the friend loves something for a reason? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And have you not also met with the treatises of philosophers who say that like must love like? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And he is in want of that of which he is deprived? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And he is the friend of the physician because of disease, and for the sake of health? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And he who loves not is not a lover or friend? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And he who wants nothing will desire nothing? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And health is also dear? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And if dear, then dear for the sake of something? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And if neither can be of any use to the other, how can they be loved by one another? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And in like manner thirst or any similar desire may sometimes be a good and sometimes an evil to us, and sometimes neither one nor the other? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And in matters of which you have as yet no knowledge, can you have any conceit of knowledge? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And is he a slave or a free man? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And is he a slave? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And is health a friend, or not a friend? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And is the object which makes him a friend, dear to him, or neither dear nor hateful to him? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And may not the same be said of the friend? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And must not a man love that which he desires and affects? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And shall we be friends to others, and will any others love us, in as far as we are useless to them? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And shall we further say that the good is congenial, and the evil uncongenial to every one? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And sickness is an evil, and the art of medicine a good and useful thing? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And surely this object must also be dear, as is implied in our previous admissions? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And that of which he is in want is dear to him? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And that something dear involves something else dear? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And the body is compelled by reason of disease to court and make friends of the art of medicine? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And the good is loved for the sake of the evil? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And the hated one, and not the hater, is the enemy? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And the hater will be the enemy of that which is hated? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And the more vain- glorious they are, the more difficult is the capture of them? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And the same of thirst and the other desires,--that they will remain, but will not be evil because evil has perished? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And there is Ctesippus himself: do you see him? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And we shall be allowed to throw in salt by handfuls, whereas the son will not be allowed to put in as much as he can take up between his fingers? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And what does he do with you? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And what is this building, I asked; and what sort of entertainment have you? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And what of health? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And which is the nobler? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And who is yours? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And why do you not ask him? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And yet there is a further consideration: may not all these notions of friendship be erroneous? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And yet whiteness would be present in them? |
plato-lysis-1044 | And, if so, not the lover, but the beloved, is the friend or dear one? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Answer me now: Are you your own master, or do they not even allow that? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Are you disposed, he said, to go with me and see them? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Aye, I said; and about your neighbour, too, does not the same rule hold as about your father? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But I dare say that you may take the whip and guide the mule- cart if you like;--they will permit that? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But do you think that any one is happy who is in the condition of a slave, and who can not do what he likes? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But does he therefore value the three measures of wine, or the earthen vessel which contains them, equally with his son? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But if the lover is not a friend, nor the beloved a friend, nor both together, what are we to say? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But if this can not be, the lover will be the friend of that which is loved? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But is there any reason why, because evil perishes, that which is not evil should perish with it? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But now our view is changed, and we conceive that there must be some other cause of friendship? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But say that the like is not the friend of the like in so far as he is like; still the good may be the friend of the good in so far as he is good? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But see now, Lysis, whether we are not being deceived in all this-- are we not indeed entirely wrong? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But surely, I said, he who desires, desires that of which he is in want? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But that would not make them at all the more white, notwithstanding the presence of white in them-- they would not be white any more than black? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But the human body, regarded as a body, is neither good nor evil? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But the sick loves him, because he is sick? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But then again, will not the good, in so far as he is good, be sufficient for himself? |
plato-lysis-1044 | But what if the lover is not loved in return? |
plato-lysis-1044 | By heaven, and shall I tell you what I suspect? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Can they now? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Do any remain? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Do they want you to be happy, and yet hinder you from doing what you like? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Do you agree? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Do you agree? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Do you mean, I said, that if only one of them loves the other, they are mutual friends? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Do you mean, I said, that you disown the love of the person whom he says that you love? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Do you not agree with me? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Do you not agree? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Here, intending to revise the argument, I said: Can we point out any difference between the congenial and the like? |
plato-lysis-1044 | How can such persons ever be induced to value one another? |
plato-lysis-1044 | How do you mean? |
plato-lysis-1044 | How do you mean? |
plato-lysis-1044 | How so? |
plato-lysis-1044 | I mean, for instance, if he knew that his son had drunk hemlock, and the father thought that wine would save him, he would value the wine? |
plato-lysis-1044 | I said, may we not have been altogether wrong in our conclusions? |
plato-lysis-1044 | I shall not ask which is the richer of the two, I said; for you are friends, are you not? |
plato-lysis-1044 | I turned to Menexenus, and said: Son of Demophon, which of you two youths is the elder? |
plato-lysis-1044 | If he is satisfied that you know more of housekeeping than he does, will he continue to administer his affairs himself, or will he commit them to you? |
plato-lysis-1044 | In such a case, is the substance which is anointed the same as the colour or ointment? |
plato-lysis-1044 | In that case, the one loves, and the other is loved? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Is not that true? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Is not that true? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Is not this rather the true state of the case? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Is not this the nature of the good-- to be loved by us who are placed between the two, because of the evil? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Is that also a matter of dispute? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Is that good or evil, or neither? |
plato-lysis-1044 | May we then infer that the good is the friend? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Nay, but what do you think? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Neither can he love that which he does not desire? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Neither can your father or mother love you, nor can anybody love anybody else, in so far as they are useless to them? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Now is not that ridiculous? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Or is, perhaps, even hated? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Or may we suppose that hunger will remain while men and animals remain, but not so as to be hurtful? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Or rather is there anything to be done? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Or rather shall I say, that to ask what either will be then or will not be is ridiculous, for who knows? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Thank you, I said; and is there any teacher there? |
plato-lysis-1044 | That I may make a fool of myself? |
plato-lysis-1044 | The sick man, as I was just now saying, is the friend of the physician-- is he not? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then if you are friends, you must have natures which are congenial to one another? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then nothing which does not love in return is beloved by a lover? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then now we know how to answer the question''Who are friends?'' |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then one half of the saying is untrue, if the wicked are like one another? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then that which is neither good nor evil becomes the friend of good, by reason of the presence of evil? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then that which is neither good nor evil is the friend of the good because of the evil and hateful, and for the sake of the good and the friend? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then that which is neither good nor evil may be in the presence of evil, but not as yet evil, and that has happened before now? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then the friend is a friend for the sake of the friend, and because of the enemy? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then we are to say that the greatest friendship is of opposites? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then what can be the reason, Lysis, I said, why they allow you to do the one and not the other? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then what is to be done? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then which is the friend of which? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then you have a master? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then, I said, may no one use the whip to the mules? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then, even if evil perishes, the desires which are neither good nor evil will remain? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Then, even if evil perishes, there may still remain some elements of love or friendship? |
plato-lysis-1044 | They will then proceed to ask whether the enemy is the friend of the friend, or the friend the friend of the enemy? |
plato-lysis-1044 | This we do know, that in our present condition hunger may injure us, and may also benefit us:--Is not that true? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Well, I said; look at the matter in this way: a friend is the friend of some one; is he not? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Well, but is a just man the friend of the unjust, or the temperate of the intemperate, or the good of the bad? |
plato-lysis-1044 | What do the rest of you say? |
plato-lysis-1044 | What do you mean? |
plato-lysis-1044 | What do you mean? |
plato-lysis-1044 | What should you say of a hunter who frightened away his prey, and made the capture of the animals which he is hunting more difficult? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Who are you, I said; and where am I to come? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Who is Lysis? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Whom are we to call friends to one another? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Whom then will they allow? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Why do you say so? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Will not the Athenian people, too, entrust their affairs to you when they see that you have wisdom enough to manage them? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Will you tell me by what words or actions I may become endeared to my love? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Yes, I said; but I should like to know first, what is expected of me, and who is the favourite among you? |
plato-lysis-1044 | Yes, Menexenus; but will not that be a monstrous answer? |
plato-lysis-1044 | You do not mean to say that your teachers also rule over you? |
plato-lysis-1044 | You remember that? |
plato-lysis-1044 | You think not? |
plato-lysis-1044 | You think that he is right? |
plato-lysis-1044 | You will agree to that? |
plato-lysis-1044 | You would agree-- would you not? |
plato-lysis-1044 | and allow him to do what he likes, when they prohibit you? |
plato-lysis-1044 | and at the time of making the admission we were of opinion that the neither good nor evil loves the good because of the evil? |
plato-lysis-1044 | and do they pay him for this? |
plato-lysis-1044 | and may he do what he likes with the horses? |
plato-lysis-1044 | and may not the other theory have been only a long story about nothing? |
plato-lysis-1044 | but may not that which is neither good nor evil still in some cases be the friend of the good? |
plato-lysis-1044 | how can you be making and singing hymns in honour of yourself before you have won? |
plato-lysis-1044 | will you tell me, I said, whether if evil were to perish, we should hunger any more, or thirst any more, or have any similar desire? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | And for that riches where is my deserving? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | And fortify yourself in your decay With means more blessed than my barren rhyme? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | And what is''t but mine own when I praise thee? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | And wherefore say not I that I am old? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Because he needs no praise, wilt thou be dumb? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Being your slave, what should I do but tend Upon the hours and times of your desire? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | But what''s so blessed- fair that fears no blot? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | But wherefore do not you a mightier way Make war upon this bloody tyrant, Time? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | But wherefore says she not she is unjust? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | But why of two oaths''breach do I accuse thee, When I break twenty? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | C. Where art thou, Muse, that thou forget''st so long To speak of that which gives thee all thy might? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Do I not think on thee, when I forgot Am of myself, all tyrant, for thy sake? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Dost thou desire my slumbers should be broken, While shadows like to thee do mock my sight? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | For how do I hold thee but by thy granting? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | For where is she so fair whose unear''d womb Disdains the tillage of thy husbandry? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | How can I then return in happy plight, That am debarr''d the benefit of rest? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | How can it? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | If that be fair whereon my false eyes dote, What means the world to say it is not so? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Is it for fear to wet a widow''s eye That thou consumest thyself in single life? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Is it thy will thy image should keep open My heavy eyelids to the weary night? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Is''t not enough to torture me alone, But slave to slavery my sweet''st friend must be? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Love is a babe; then might I not say so, To give full growth to that which still doth grow? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Love is too young to know what conscience is; Yet who knows not conscience is born of love? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Music to hear, why hear''st thou music sadly? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Nay, if thou lour''st on me, do I not spend Revenge upon myself with present moan? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | O truant Muse, what shall be thy amends For thy neglect of truth in beauty dyed? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | O, from what power hast thou this powerful might With insufficiency my heart to sway? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | O, how can Love''s eye be true, That is so vex''d with watching and with tears? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | O, how thy worth with manners may I sing, When thou art all the better part of me? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | O, what excuse will my poor beast then find, When swift extremity can seem but slow? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | On whom frown''st thou that I do fawn upon? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Or mine eyes seeing this, say this is not, To put fair truth upon so foul a face? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Or on my frailties why are frailer spies, Which in their wills count bad what I think good? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Or what strong hand can hold his swift foot back? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Or whether doth my mind, being crown''d with you, Drink up the monarch''s plague, this flattery? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Or who his spoil of beauty can forbid? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Or who is he so fond will be the tomb Of his self- love, to stop posterity? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Or, if they have, where is my judgment fled, That censures falsely what they see aright? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Profitless usurer, why dost thou use So great a sum of sums, yet canst not live? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Shall I compare thee to a summer''s day? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Shall hate be fairer lodged than gentle love? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Shall will in others seem right gracious, And in my will no fair acceptance shine? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Shall worms, inheritors of this excess, Eat up thy charge? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Spend''st thou thy fury on some worthless song, Darkening thy power to lend base subjects light? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Take all my loves, my love, yea, take them all; What hast thou then more than thou hadst before? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | The forward violet thus did I chide: Sweet thief, whence didst thou steal thy sweet that smells, If not from my love''s breath? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Then how, when nature calls thee to be gone, What acceptable audit canst thou leave? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Then, beauteous niggard, why dost thou abuse The bounteous largess given thee to give? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Thou blind fool, Love, what dost thou to mine eyes, That they behold, and see not what they see? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Thus can my love excuse the slow offence Of my dull bearer when from thee I speed: From where thou art why should I haste me thence? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | To make me give the lie to my true sight, And swear that brightness doth not grace the day? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Unthrifty loveliness, why dost thou spend Upon thyself thy beauty''s legacy? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Was it his spirit, by spirits taught to write Above a mortal pitch, that struck me dead? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Were it not sinful then, striving to mend, To mar the subject that before was well? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | What can mine own praise to mine own self bring? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | What is your substance, whereof are you made, That millions of strange shadows on you tend? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | What''s in the brain that ink may character Which hath not figured to thee my true spirit? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | What''s new to speak, what new to register, That may express my love or thy dear merit? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | When day''s oppression is not eased by night, But day by night, and night by day, oppress''d? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Who hateth thee that I do call my friend? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Who is it that says most? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Who taught thee how to make me love thee more The more I hear and see just cause of hate? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Who will believe my verse in time to come, If it were fill''d with your most high deserts? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Why is my verse so barren of new pride, So far from variation or quick change? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Why lovest thou that which thou receivest not gladly, Or else receivest with pleasure thine annoy? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Why should false painting imitate his cheek And steal dead seeing of his living hue? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Why should he live, now Nature bankrupt is, Beggar''d of blood to blush through lively veins? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Why should my heart think that a several plot Which my heart knows the wide world''s common place? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Why should poor beauty indirectly seek Roses of shadow, since his rose is true? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Why so large cost, having so short a lease, Dost thou upon thy fading mansion spend? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Why with the time do I not glance aside To new- found methods and to compounds strange? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | Wilt thou, whose will is large and spacious, Not once vouchsafe to hide my will in thine? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | is this thy body''s end? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | say I love thee not, When I against myself with thee partake? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | where, alack, Shall Time''s best jewel from Time''s chest lie hid? |
shakespeare-sonnets-1878 | which can say more Than this rich praise, that you alone are you? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | And particularly, whether they were ever admitted as members in the lower senate?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Before we took shipping, I was often asked by some of the crew, whether I had performed the ceremony above mentioned? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | But repeating his visits often, expressing his joy to find I me in good health, asking,"whether I were now settled for life?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Do these miserable animals presume to think, that I am so degenerated as to defend my veracity? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | For, indeed, who is there alive that will not be swayed by his bias and partiality to the place of his birth? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | He asked me,"what were the usual causes or motives that made one country go to war with another?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | He asked me,"who made the ship, and how it was possible that the_ Houyhnhnms_ of my country would leave it to the management of brutes?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | He asked me,"who were our creditors; and where we found money to pay them?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | He asked, what business we had out of our own islands, unless upon the score of trade, or treaty, or to defend the coasts with our fleet?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | He asked,"What time was usually spent in determining between right and wrong, and what degree of expense? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | I again desired leave to depart, and was gently moving to my canoe; but they laid hold of me, desiring to know,"what country I was of? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | I asked him,"whether it were the custom in his country to say the thing which was not?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | I then asked the captain,"how far he reckoned we might be from land?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | One day, in much good company, I was asked by a person of quality,"whether I had seen any of their_ struldbrugs_, or immortals?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Or if I escaped these dangers for a day or two, what could I expect but a miserable death of cold and hunger? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | She asked,"whether I could be content to live at court?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | She then asked my master,"whether he was willing to sell me at a good price?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | The question to be debated was,"whether the_ Yahoos_ should be exterminated from the face of the earth?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Therefore he desired I would let him know,"what these costly meats were, and how any of us happened to want them?" |
swift-gullivers-2290 | What course was taken to supply that assembly, when any noble family became extinct? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Whether advocates and orators had liberty to plead in causes manifestly known to be unjust, vexatious, or oppressive? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Whether party, in religion or politics, were observed to be of any weight in the scale of justice? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Whether they had ever, at different times, pleaded for and against the same cause, and cited precedents to prove contrary opinions? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Whether they or their judges had any part in penning those laws, which they assumed the liberty of interpreting, and glossing upon at their pleasure? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Whether they received any pecuniary reward for pleading, or delivering their opinions? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Whether they were a rich or a poor corporation? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Whether they were always so free from avarice, partialities, or want, that a bribe, or some other sinister view, could have no place among them? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | Whether those pleading orators were persons educated in the general knowledge of equity, or only in provincial, national, and other local customs? |
swift-gullivers-2290 | whence I came?" |
thucydides-history-4067 | How then could we put our trust in such friendship or freedom as we had here? thucydides-history-4067 Again, was there ever city rebelling that did not believe that it possessed either in itself or in its alliances resources adequate to the enterprise? thucydides-history-4067 And after all, as I have often asked, what would you have, young men? thucydides-history-4067 And how, pray, could it turn out as good for us to serve as for you to rule? thucydides-history-4067 And what could be fairer than to tell them to evacuate Boeotia if they wished to get what they asked? thucydides-history-4067 And what is this but to make greater the enemies that you have already, and to force others to become so who would otherwise have never thought of it? thucydides-history-4067 Besides, why should they grant a truce for Athenian ground? thucydides-history-4067 But do you consider that there is no security in the policy which we indicate? thucydides-history-4067 But how can it be right that citizens of the same state should be held unworthy of the same privileges? thucydides-history-4067 How can you avoid making enemies of all existing neutrals who shall look at case from it that one day or another you will attack them? thucydides-history-4067 If this was not abominable, what is? thucydides-history-4067 Is it in our money? thucydides-history-4067 Is it in our ships? thucydides-history-4067 Or what, pray, is the meaning of their reception of Corcyra by fraud, and their holding it against us by force? thucydides-history-4067 Suppose that we were islanders; can you conceive a more impregnable position? thucydides-history-4067 The herald replied:Then they are not the arms of those who fought with us?" |
thucydides-history-4067 | What power in Hellas stood higher than we did? |
thucydides-history-4067 | What then is to be our war? |
thucydides-history-4067 | Who then merit the detestation of the Hellenes more justly than you, you who sought their ruin under the mask of honour? |
thucydides-history-4067 | Why doubt this? |
thucydides-history-4067 | Would you hold office at once? |
thucydides-history-4067 | wherein is our trust that we should rush on it unprepared? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | ''; and( 4) in virtue of what has he inferred wrongly, or inferred?'' |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | ''animal''and''two- footed''? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | ''what did the fight come from?'' |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | ( 3) In general, do all substances fall under one science or under more than one? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | ( 4) Further, must we say that sensible substances alone exist, or that there are others besides these? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | ( 5) Further, does our investigation deal with substances alone or also with their attributes? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | ( For how else is one to learn or to teach another? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | ( Further, what sort of movement is primary? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | 2 Further, must we suppose something apart from individual things, or is it these that the science we are seeking treats of? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | 2( 1) First then with regard to what we mentioned first, does it belong to one or to more sciences to investigate all the kinds of causes? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | 6 To return to the difficulty which has been stated with respect both to definitions and to numbers, what is the cause of their unity? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Above all one might press the question''if each unit is one, what does it come from?'' |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | After all, why does not one of the supporters of the Ideas produce a definition of an Idea? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, are the first units greater or smaller, and do the later ones increase or diminish? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, as to the 2 being an entity apart from its two units, and the 3 an entity apart from its three units, how is this possible? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, besides the 3-itself and the 2-itself how can there be other 3''s and 2''s? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, by virtue of what, and when, will mathematical magnitudes be one? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, does each unit come from the great and the small, equalized, or one from the small, another from the great? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, from many numbers one number is produced, but how can one Form come from many Forms? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, how is it possible to solve the questions which we have already enumerated in our discussion of difficulties? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, how is it with the units in the 3-itself? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, how is one to come to know what all things are made of, and how is this to be made evident? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, if number can exist separately, one might ask which is prior- 1, or 3 or 2? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, if the Forms are numbers, how can they be causes? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, if we are always changing and never remain the same, what wonder is it if to us, as to the sick, things never appear the same? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, is he in error who judges either that the thing is so or that it is not so, and is he right who judges both? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Again, there both are and come to be certain things of which there are no Forms; why, then, are there not Forms of them also? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And how could we learn the elements of all things? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And how do they consist of prior and posterior units? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And how? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And if it is not the business of the philosopher, to whom else will it belong to inquire what is true and what is untrue about them? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And if of another, what will be the science that investigates the attributes of substance? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And if the boundaries come into being and cease to be, from what do they come into being? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And in general to what purpose would one suppose them to exist indeed, but to exist in perceptible things? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And is water potentially wine and vinegar? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And knowledge becomes impossible; for how can one apprehend things that are infinite in this way? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And why is this individual thing, or this body having this form, a man? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | And; again, what is it that they move into? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Are there not some things about which it is incredible that it should think? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But are the substances many and different? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But does the matter not make things other in species, when it is other in a certain way, or is there a sense in which it does? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But how are the attributes- white and sweet and hot- numbers? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But how can lines be substances? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But if number is finite, how far does it go? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But if the science of substance and the science which deals with the axioms are different, which of them is by nature more authoritative and prior? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But if the two sciences are different, what is each of them and which is Wisdom? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But if they differ, will there be no other 5''s in the 10 but only these two, or will there be others? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But in the case of so- called self- subsistent things, is a thing necessarily the same as its essence? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But in the case of the subjects of mathematics, which are divisible and are quantities, what is the cause of their being one and holding together? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But is being- a- cloak an essence at all? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But is the matter an element even in the formula? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But there is no order in the substance; for how are we to think the one element posterior and the other prior? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But this is impossible; for why should it rather rest, or move, down, up, or anywhere, rather than anywhere else? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But while the usual exists, can nothing be said to be always, or are there eternal things? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But why need these numbers be causes? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But why? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But will these magnitudes be Ideas, or what is their manner of existence, and what do they contribute to things? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | But with regard to incomposites, what is being or not being, and truth or falsity? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | By intermixture? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | By juxtaposition, like a syllable? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Does it come from its contrary, its contrary not persisting? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Does it matter, then, or not, whether it thinks of the good or of any chance thing? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Does number come, then, from its elements as from seed? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | E.g what is the cause of eclipse? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For from what principles will the Ideas come? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For how will there be movement, if there is no actually existing cause? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For if it thinks of nothing, what is there here of dignity? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For to what is this to be added? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For what intermediate could there be between knowledge and knowable? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For what is it that works, looking to the Ideas? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For what is it that works, looking to the Ideas? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For what sort of number will man- himself or animal- itself or any other Form be? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For when we apprehend the unity in 2, or in general in a number, do we apprehend a thing- itself or something else?). |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For whence is there to be another one besides unity- itself? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For why does a man walk to Megara and not stay at home, when he thinks he ought to be walking there? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For why is this horse other than this man in species, although their matter is included with their definitions? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | For''Why does one walk?'' |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | From what, then, is this 2 produced? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | From what, then? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, are the principles the same in kind or in number? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, does Wisdom investigate all substances or not? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, does it deal with substances only or also with their attributes? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, from what is this''animal''in each species derived, and how will it be derived from animal- itself? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, from what principle will the presence of the points in the line be derived? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, how are we to suppose that there is a substance of unity and the point? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, how can an infinite exist by itself, unless number and magnitude also exist by themselvess- since infinity is an attribute of these? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, how could we know the objects of sense without having the sense in question? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, how will perishable things exist, if their principles are to be annulled? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, if thinking and being thought of are different, in respect of which does goodness belong to thought? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, is it the business of one science, or of more than one, to examine the first principles of demonstration? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, is there anything apart from the concrete thing( by which I mean the matter and that which is joined with it), or not? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, when the doctor orders people to take some particular food, why do they take it? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, whether its substance is the faculty of thought or the act of thinking, what does it think of? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further, why is a number, when taken all together, one? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Further,( 2) how can all things have the same elements? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | How are we to think of''two'', and each of the other numbers composed of units, as one? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | How could it belong to one science to recognize the principles if these are not contrary? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | How then is 1 the starting- point? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | How then, in view of this, can number consist of few and many? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | How, on the other hand, could a line or a plane be animate? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | How, then, can this condition be fulfilled? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If he is right, what can they mean by saying that the nature of existing things is of this kind? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If it is not one, what sort of sciences are those with which it is to be identified? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If it is not to share in them, what is the relation implied when one says the animal is two- footed or possessed of feet? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If not, how will they come to be known? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If of more, what sort of sciences must these be said to be? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If of one, why of this rather than of any other? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If on the other hand it is not as they say, with what sort of things must the mathematician be supposed to deal? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If there are not, this is paradoxical; and if there are, what sort of 10 will consist of them? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | If they are the same, how are some things perishable and others imperishable, and for what reason? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | In what respect is''this is bread''truer than''this is not bread''? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | In which respect then is love a principle? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | In which way, then, is 1 the starting- point? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Is it then because the number is the kind of number it is, that the champions were seven or the Pleiad consists of seven stars? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Is number the cause, then, and does the thing exist because of its number, or is this not certain? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Is there, then, a sphere apart from the individual spheres or a house apart from the bricks? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | It can not be the negation or privation of one of the two; for why of the great rather than of the small? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | It is not contrary either to one alone or to both; for why should it be contrary to the greater rather than to the less? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Next, by what is it produced? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Next, what is the affection- that of the proximate subject, not of the whole animal? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Now( a) this will consist of differentiated units; and will it be prior to the 3 or posterior? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Of which individual then will this be the substance? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Or has''definition'', like''what a thing is'', several meanings? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Or how can this''animal'', whose essence is simply animality, exist apart from animal- itself? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Or how will it differ from the unit? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Or how will part of the infinite be down and part up, or part extreme and part middle? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Or why must they be intermediate between the things in this sensible world and the things- themselves? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Or( 2) is it because harmony is a ratio of numbers, and so is man and everything else? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Secondly, of what sort of non- being and being do the things that are consist? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Shall we say that it is immobility of such and such a kind? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Shall we say that it is the animal? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Shall we say''the menstrual fluid''? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Shall we say''the seed''? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | The final cause? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | The formal cause? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | The''why''is always sought in this form--''why does one thing attach to some other?'' |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Therefore if all existent things were colours, existent things would have been a number, indeed, but of what? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Therefore there is practically no difference, but the same difficulties will follow,-is it intermixture or position or blending or generation? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | This also is unreasonable.-At the same time, how does the matter become each of the individuals, and how is the concrete thing these two elements? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | This being so, when is what is called truth or falsity present, and when is it not? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | This is the same as''why is sound produced in the clouds?'' |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | This is why they identify the odd with 1; for if the odd implied 3 how would 5 be odd? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | To''centre''or to''plane''or to all the parts of the definition? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What does this imply? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What is a calm? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What is its matter? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What is moving cause? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What is the essence of cloak? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What is the material cause? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What is the moving cause which extinguished the light? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What is the reason, then, why there is a plurality of these? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What need then is there to seek for other principles? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What sort of being and non- being, then, by their union pluralize the things that are? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What then does being made uniform imply? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What then is its rest or its movement? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What then will this common element be? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What will this be, then,-what is it that becomes movement or becoming, as body or soul is that which suffers alteration? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | What, then, causes this- that which was potentially to be actually- except, in the case of things which are generated, the agent? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why are the angles of the triangle equal to two right angles? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why are these one and not many? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why do we observe him guarding against this, evidently because he does not think that falling in is alike good and not good? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why does he not walk early some morning into a well or over a precipice, if one happens to be in his way? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why is the angle in a semicircle in all cases a right angle? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why should one suppose men or horses to have it, more than either the other animals or even all lifeless things? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why then are the one set of numbers causes of the other set? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why then should they be capable of existing apart? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Why, then, should not some of these numbers be squares, some cubes, and some equal, others double? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Will A exist or not? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Will the clod occupy the whole place, then? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | With which of these, then, will the mathematical sciences deal? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Yes, but to what process in the proximate subject is this due? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Yet how are we to believe in these things? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Yet how is this possible? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Yet how then can either the plane contain a line, or the solid a line or a plane? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Yet why should not some things be their essences from the start, since essence is substance? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | Yet why, after all, do they not name earth also, as most men do? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | a continuum, to be produced out of unextended parts? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | animal+ biped, especially if there are, as some say, an animal- itself and a biped- itself? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | bricks and stones, a house? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | if 3 is man- himself, what number will be the horse- itself? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | if the body is potentially healthy, and disease is contrary to health, is it potentially both healthy and diseased? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | if there were a clod which were part of an infinite body, where will this move or rest? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | in 10,000, how is it with the units? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | is animal or man the first principle and the more independent of the individual instance? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | is earth potentially a man? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | of all men, be one? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | one number is man, another is Socrates, another Callias? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | or''for what end has he come? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | or''what is the cause of the inference, or of the wrong inference? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | the form of man is always found in flesh and bones and parts of this kind; are these then also parts of the form and the formula? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | what being is, is just the question, what is substance? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | what is eclipse? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | what is still weather? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | what is the material cause of man? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | what is the proximate subject? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | why are not the semicircles included in the formula of the circle? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | why are these materials a house? |
aristotle-metaphysics-2113 | why does it thunder? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Cruel Alexis, heed you naught my songs? virgil-eclogues-1444 Why, Daphnis, upward gazing, do you mark The ancient risings of the Signs? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Wilt ever make an end? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | All with one accord exclaim:"From whence this love of thine?" |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | And what so potent cause took you to Rome? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | And when I cried,"Where is he off to now? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Apollo came;"Gallus, art mad?" |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | But who this god of yours? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Corydon, Corydon, what hath crazed your wit? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Did I not see you, rogue, in ambush lie For Damon''s goat, while loud Lycisca barked? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Have you no pity? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | How, how repay thee for a song so rare? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Laughing at their guile, And crying,"Why tie the fetters? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Matched with a heifer, who would prate of cups? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | May we believe it, or are lovers still By their own fancies fooled? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Meliboeus? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Nor with the reed''s edge fear you to make rough Your dainty lip; such arts as these to learn What did Amyntas do?- what did he not? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Say whither, Moeris?- Make you for the town, Or on what errand bent? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Than such a boon What dearer could I deem? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Well, then, shall we try our skill Each against each in turn? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | What could I do? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | What groves or lawns Held you, ye Dryad- maidens, when for love- Love all unworthy of a loss so dear- Gallus lay dying? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | What if he also strive To out- sing Phoebus? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | What of the strain I heard you singing once On a clear night alone? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | What was I to do? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Who owns the flock, Damoetas? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Who would not sing for Gallus? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Whom do you fly, infatuate? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | With thieves so daring, what can masters do? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | You out- pipe him? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | Your vine half- pruned hangs on the leafy elm; Why haste you not to weave what need requires Of pliant rush or osier? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | could any of so foul a crime Be guilty? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | for surely then, Let Phyllis, or Amyntas, or who else, Bewitch me- what if swart Amyntas be? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | how else from bonds be freed, Or otherwhere find gods so nigh to aid? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | in the cross- ways used you not On grating straw some miserable tune To mangle? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | shall I ever in aftertime behold My native bounds- see many a harvest hence With ravished eyes the lowly turf- roofed cot Where I was king? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | what may not then We lovers look for? |
virgil-eclogues-1444 | when had you ever pipe Wax- welded? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What must the gods think of the gifts of the impious,said the admirable Plato,"when a good man would blush to receive presents from a villain?" |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Who is there that forms this goodly party? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Would you have us frankly tell you our thoughts? montesquieu-spirit-2470 [ 52] Who could imagine that the same prince could ever have passed two such different judgments? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | After all, what great matter is it, whether they come from me, from the Valesiuses, or from the Bignons? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Alexander, it is true, conquered the Indies; but was it necessary for him to conquer a country in order to trade with it? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | And can we hence conclude that the Franks had any particular regard for the Romans? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | And how came the laws incessantly to corrupt their manners? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | And might not pecuniary penalties be proportioned to people''s fortunes? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | And were he so presumptuous, how could he do it with a crazy or shattered fortune? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | And, in fine, might not infamy be added to those punishments? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | And, indeed, how could it belong to the daughters? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | And, indeed, were we to be directed by such a notion, where would be the end of punishments? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Besides, how is it possible to pay heavy duties in a government that makes no manner of return to the different contributions of the subject? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Besides, if a particular governor should refuse to obey, how could the other answer for his province with his head? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Besides, if the citizens had such a respect for the auspices that they would never repudiate, how came the legislators of Rome to have less than they? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Besides, were the ruins of these cities even still in being, who is it that would venture into the woods and marshes to make the discovery? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But are not the rich afraid of being stripped of their property? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But are the nations descended from Germany the only people in the world that usurped the rights of princes? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But are they capable of conducting an intricate affair, of seizing and improving the opportunity and critical moment of action? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But before what court shall it bring its impeachment? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But how are the nobility to be restrained? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But how comes it that these magistracies are so very different in these two republics? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But how shall we fix this price? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But how shall we reconcile this with their customs and penances so full of barbarity? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But how was it possible for them to doubt it? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But is it for the sake of truth? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But is it not evident that the one was a despotic state and the other a republic? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But is not this confounding the ideas of things? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But is this always right and without exception? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But some will ask, why should music be pitched upon as preferable to any other entertainment? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But to what purpose were these extensions if they never made use of a power to repudiate? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But what do I say? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But what must be done, if oppression and avarice arise to such a height as to usurp all the authority of fathers? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But whence can such a contradiction between those authors arise? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | But who will take up with such slaves? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | By what means shall these poor men gain a livelihood if we take their trade out of their hands?" |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Can there be a greater proof of their wanting common sense? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Could the Carthaginians, a people spread over all the earth, be ignorant of what was transacting in Italy? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Did not Philip assume the power of demolishing towns, under the pretence of their having infringed the laws of the Greeks? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Did they make no advantage of seas which were so near them, of the very seas that washed their coasts? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Do not the mother and wife of Darius weep at the death of Alexander? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Do you cite the example of the Vestal Virgins? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Does he prove that the republic of the Armoricans invited Clovis; or even concluded any treaty with him? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Does not Darius offer him one half of his kingdom? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | For less will a thousand men expose life itself; and yet will not these engage you to take a wife and provide for children?" |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | For what could be the meaning of this capitulary? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | For who is it that in the management even of his domestic affairs would be thus confined? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | For why should education take pains in forming a good citizen, only to make him share in the public misery? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | From all these strictures I shall draw only one reflection: if so great a man was mistaken, how cautiously ought I to tread? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Had not the Persians done this before? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Has it ever been known that kings were not fond of monarchy, or that despotic princes hated arbitrary power? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Has not the invention of printing afforded us great light which those authors wanted? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Have not Rome, Sparta, and Carthage perished? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Have they not been able for a short time to establish an aristocratic government? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Hobbes[3] inquires,"For what reason go men armed, and have locks and keys to fasten their doors, if they be not naturally in a state of war?" |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How can despotism abide with honour? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How can honour, on the other hand, bear with despotism? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How comes it that monks are so fond of their order? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How could Rome, how could the provinces, live? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How could he command their submission? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How could the clergy be sure of their estates, when they were not even safe in their persons? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How dangerous would have been the situation of the republic of Carthage had Hannibal made himself master of Rome? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How shall the man be restrained by laws who believes that the greatest pain the magistrate can inflict will end in a moment to begin his happiness? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How then can they attend to the wants of creatures whose infancy is a continual sickness? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How then can they think of dividing it? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How was it possible for Alexander to have maintained them? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How was it possible for Carthage to maintain her ground? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | How, then, can we reconcile the security of the government to that of the prince''s person? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | I have not even given all these particulars, for who could mention them all without a most insupportable fatigue? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | If the people observe the laws, what signifies it whether these laws are the same? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | If we leave the motions of the heart at liberty, how shall we be able to restrain the weaknesses of the mind? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | In effect, would not the freeing them from the rules of civility be to search out a method for them to indulge their own humours? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | In the Indies it is a most meritorious act to pray to God in the running stream;[43] but how could these things be performed in other climates? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | In those days it was much more difficult to raise than to command the armies; and who but the dispenser of favours could have this authority? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is employing so many people in making clothes for one person the way to prevent a great many from wanting clothes? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is it a good law that all civil obligations passed between sailors in a ship in the course of a voyage should be null? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is it more advisable for it to have the former or the latter advantage? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is it not strange, though true, to say that virtue itself has need of limits? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is it possible that this rule should be bad in every other employment of life, and hold good only in the administration of a republic?" |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is it possible, then, that the most ignorant of all nations should be the most clear- sighted on a point which it most behoves mankind to know? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is not Darius assassinated like a tyrant? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is not the very horror of high treason diminished by giving that name to another crime? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is not this endeavouring to tear from the heart the virtue of love to one''s own parents? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is the demesne of a state or government alienable, or is it not? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Is the evil of changing constantly less than that of suffering? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | May I not say that a plurality of wives leads to that passion which nature disallows? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Might it not be very well expected that Appius on his tribunal should contemn all laws, after having violated that of his own enacting? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Might not our missionaries have been deceived by an appearance of order? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Now, can we imagine that the nation would have borne with grievances so solemnly proscribed, without complaining of their continual repetition? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Now, does the Abbé produce any convincing proofs that the Romans, who were still subject to the empire, called in Clovis? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | On how many surprising things did not this single crime depend? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Or had it better wait to be enriched by its subjects? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Shall goodness consist in excess, and all the relations of things be destroyed? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Since there can be nothing so equivocal and ambiguous as all this, how is it possible to convert it into a crime of high treason? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Taxes ought to be very light in despotic governments: otherwise who would be at the trouble of tilling the land? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | The casualties of fortune are easily repaired; but who can be guarded against events that incessantly arise from the nature of things? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | The whole depends upon a critical moment: shall the state begin with impoverishing the subjects to enrich itself? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | This law insured their liberty; but should not there have been some care also taken to preserve their lives? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Was it a Corinth or Athens that Hanno built on those coasts? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Was there ever such a thing known as the real rights of a dignity founded on the figure of that dignity''s sign? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Were Quintius Curtius, Arrian, or Plutarch, Alexander''s contemporaries? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What could religion do more to inspire them with horror against murder? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What defence could such a weak prince make against the attack of superstition? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What do rhetoric and poetry prove but the use of those very arts? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What does it avail her that Philip sends back her prisoners, if he does not return her men? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What does our author do? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What else is implied by flattering but the weakness of him who is obliged to flatter? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What good might not the Spaniards have done to the Mexicans? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What has become, say they, of the cities described by Hanno, of which even in Pliny''s time there remained no vestiges? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What is there more natural than to take away the difference of fortune in a circumstance and in the very moment which equals all fortunes? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What is this compilation then which goes at present under the name of St. Louis''Institutions? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What kind of citizens then must those have been, who were not registered in the census in which all the freemen of Rome were included? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What legislator could propose a popular government to a people like this? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What must be the consequence if the laws of a republic make a further addition to this servitude and subjection? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What need is there of inducing men by laws to propagation when a fruitful climate yields a sufficient number of inhabitants? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What other information could she give in this situation, so torturing to natural modesty? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What probability is there that the conquering nation should have so little respect for themselves, and so great a regard for the conquered people? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What remedy could a merchant have against a pasha who was determined to confiscate his goods? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What then became of the Salic law? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What was done to reform the abuse of a law which had been mutilated? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What would he not have done in his own country, had he been victorious, he who caused so many revolutions in it after his defeat? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What would they have done with so much land? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | What, therefore, could that foreign renunciation avail to a government already established? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | When the Saracens invaded these provinces, it was by invitation; and who could have invited them but the Jews or the Romans? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | When the whole world, impelled by the force of corruption, is immersed in voluptuousness[5] what must then become of virtue? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Whence could so extraordinary a privilege derive its origin? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Where is the merchant that would dare do any such thing in a country like Turkey? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Which Is More Suitable to the Prince and to the People, the Farming the Revenues, or Managing Them by Commission? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Which shall it choose-- to begin or to end with opulence? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Who can question but such a state would be a gainer, and derive some advantages from the very conquest itself, if it did not prove destructive? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Who does not see that self- defence is a duty superior to every precept? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Who doubts but the clergy were glad of Clovis''s conversion, and that they even reaped great advantages from it? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Who shall oblige us to fulfil our engagements? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Who shall set bounds to us if we monopolise all ourselves? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Why do fathers so carefully deprive those who are to marry their daughters of their company and familiarity? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Why not? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | Would the women of America have refused to bear children had their masters been less cruel? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | [ 112] But who is it that led the feudal lords into the field? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | [ 193] When the intent of a writing is so well known, why should we give it another turn? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | [ 34] How then were the Greeks the first who traded with the Indies by the south? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | [ 3] Shall then the cruellest laws be the best? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | [ 48]"How shall we be able to obtain a victory,"said Gontram,[49]"we who do not so much as keep what our ancestors acquired? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | [ 78] And of that[79] in which he disposes of the census paid by those[80] of whom they are demanded? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | or, in other words, by what piece of money is everything to be represented? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | said Cicero to Atticus;[1]"are they the men of commerce and husbandry? |
montesquieu-spirit-2470 | said the King,"why did he not write against me? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | And shall men be loath To plant, nor lavish of their pains? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Mark you what shivering thrills the horse''s frame, If but a waft the well- known gust conveys? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Move with what tears the Manes, with what voice The Powers of darkness? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Of Aethiop forests hoar with downy wool, Or how the Seres comb from off the leaves Their silky fleece? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Of Libya''s shepherds why the tale pursue? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Of groves which India bears, Ocean''s near neighbour, earth''s remotest nook, Where not an arrow- shot can cleave the air Above their tree- tops? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Of harsh Eurystheus who The story knows not, or that praiseless king Busiris, and his altars? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Or should I celebrate the sea that laves Her upper shores and lower? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Say what was he, what God, that fashioned forth This art for us, O Muses? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Thee, Larius, greatest and, Benacus, thee With billowy uproar surging like the main? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | What more? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | What need to tell of autumn''s storms and stars, And wherefore men must watch, when now the day Grows shorter, and more soft the summer''s heat? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | What now Besteads him toil or service? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | What of like praise can Bacchus''gifts afford? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | What of the spotted ounce to Bacchus dear, Or warlike wolf- kin or the breed of dogs? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | What of the youth, when love''s relentless might Stirs the fierce fire within his veins? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | What should he do? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Where is now Thy love to me- ward banished from thy breast? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Who dare charge the sun With leasing? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Why sing their pastures and the scattered huts They house in? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Why tell how timorous stags the battle join? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | Why trace Things mightier? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | and thee? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | fly whither, twice bereaved? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | he lures the runnel; down it falls, Waking hoarse murmurs o''er the polished stones, And with its bubblings slakes the thirsty fields? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | of man''s skill Whence came the new adventure? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | or by whom Hath not the tale been told of Hylas young, Latonian Delos and Hippodame, And Pelops for his ivory shoulder famed, Keen charioteer? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | or those broad lakes? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | or what wouldst thou hence? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | to have turned The heavy sod with ploughshare? |
virgil-georgics-1440 | wherefore didst thou bid me hope for heaven? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | ( awakening) Pray, father, why are you peevish, and toss about the whole night? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | ( discovering a variety of mathematical instruments) Why, what is this, in the name of heaven? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | ( from within) Who''s there? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | A horse? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | A sword? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | About measures, or rhythms, or verses? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | About what? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | According to the dactyle? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Ah me, what then, pray will become of me, wretched man? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Alektryaina? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Am I to feed upon wisdom like a dog? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And do you now intend, on this account, to deny the debt? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And do you then ask me for your money, being such an ignorant person? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And for what did you come? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And how then, you wretch does this become no way greater, though the rivers flow into it, while you seek to increase your money? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And if he be a blackguard, what harm will he suffer? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And so you look down upon the gods from your basket, and not from the earth? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And to hold converse with the Clouds, our divinities? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And what does it mean? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And what this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And what, pray, have you thought? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And will you be willing to deny these upon oath of the gods? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And will you obey me at all? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And yet, how could you, who are a mortal, have greater power than a god? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And yet, on what principle do you blame the warm baths? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And yet, what is life worth to you if you be deprived of these enjoyments? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And yet, who was more valiant than he? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | And you appear to me, by Hermes, to be going to be summoned, if you will not pay me the money? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Are they not males with you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Are they some heroines? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Are you asleep? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Are you not meditating? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Both the same? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But come, by the Earth, is not Jupiter, the Olympian, a god? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But do you permit him? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But from what class do the public orators come? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But what debt came upon me after Pasias? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But what good will rhythms do me for a living? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But what if he should suffer the radish through obeying you, and be depillated with hot ashes? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But what if, having the worst Cause, I shall conquer you in arguing, proving that it is right to beat one''s mother? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But what is this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But what of that? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But where is Lacedaemon? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But why in the world do these look upon the ground? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | But why should I learn these things, that we all know? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | By doing what clever trick? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | By iron money, as in Byzantium? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | By no means; for how would you call Amynias, if you met him? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | By the gods, do you purpose to besiege me? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | By what do you swear? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | By what gods will you swear? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Can not it? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come now, which of the two shall speak first? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come now; what do you now wish to learn first of those things in none of which you have ever been instructed? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, how am I to believe this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, let me see: nay, what was the first? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, let me see; what do I owe? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, let me see; what do you consider this to be? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, let me see; what do you do if any one beat you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, now, tell me; from what class do the advocates come? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, tell me, which of the sons of Jupiter do you deem to have been the bravest in soul, and to have undergone most labours? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, where have you ever seen him raining at any time without Clouds? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Come, who is this man who is in the basket? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Did you hear the voice, and the thunder which bellowed at the same time, feared as a god? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Did you learn these clever things by going in just now to the Titans? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Did you not, however, know, nor yet consider, these to be goddesses? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do I talk nonsense if I wish to recover my money? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you abuse your teacher? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you beat your father? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you beat your father? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you fly? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you know that I take pleasure in being much abused? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you mean the burning- glass? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you not hear? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you perceive that you are soon to obtain the greatest benefits through us alone of the gods? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you see this little door and little house? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you see what you are doing? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you see? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you see? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Do you wish to know clearly celestial matters, what they rightly are? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Does meditation attract the moisture to the water- cresses? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Even if witnesses were present when I borrowed the money? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For come, where is it? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For ought you not then immediately to be beaten and trampled on, bidding me sing, just as if you were entertaining cicadae? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For what has come into your heads that you acted insolently toward the gods, and pried into the seat of the moon? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For what matter do you summon me? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For what now was the first thing you were taught? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For what purpose a chaplet? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For what, pray, is the thunderbolt? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For what, pray, shall I weep? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | For why ought your body to be exempt from blows and mine not? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | From what class do tragedians come? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Have I done any wrong? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Have you arrived at such a pitch of frenzy that you believe madmen? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Have you ever seen this stone in the chemist''s shops, the beautiful and transparent one, from which they kindle fire? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Have you ever, when you; looked up, seen a cloud like to a centaur, or a panther, or a wolf, or a bull? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Have you got anything? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Have you not heard me, that I said that the Clouds, when full of moisture, dash against each other and clap by reason of their density? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How can this youth ever learn an acquittal from a trial or a legal summons, or persuasive refutation? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How did you get in debt without observing it? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How many courses will the war- chariots run? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How now ought I to call them? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How ought I to call it henceforth? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How then can I awake him in the most agreeable manner? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How then did he measure this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How then is it just that you should recover your money, if you know nothing of meteorological matters? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How would I call? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How, pray? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How, pray? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How, then, being an old man, shall I learn the subtleties of refined disquisitions? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How, then, if justice exists, has Jupiter not perished, who bound his own father? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How, then, will you be able to learn? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | How? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | I do not ask you this, but which you account the most beautiful measure; the trimetre or the tetrameter? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | I will be silent: what else can I do? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | I will pass over to that part of my discourse where you interrupted me; and first I will ask you this: Did you beat me when I was a boy? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | I''ll lay on you, goading you behind, you outrigger? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | I? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | If I be diligent and learn zealously, to which of your disciples shall I become like? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | In what then, pray, shall I obey you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | In what way do I make kardopos masculine? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | In what way? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | In what way? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Is it for this reason, pray, that you have also lost your cloak? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Is it not Jupiter? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Is it not just, however, that they should have their reward, on account of these? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Is it not then with justice, who does not serve in the army? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Is it possible that you consider the sea to be greater now than formerly? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Is not this an insult, pray? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Is the power of speaking, pray, implanted in your nature? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Just Do you deny that it exists? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Kardope in the feminine? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | My good sir, what is the matter with you, O father? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Nay, what could he ever suffer still greater than this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Nay, what was the thing in which we knead our flour? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Nothing at all? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | O Hercules, from what country are these wild beasts? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Of what description? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Of what kind? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Of what two Causes? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Oh, what shall I call you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Pasias( entering with his summons- witness) Then, ought a man to throw away any part of his own property? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Phidippides, my little Phidippides? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Pray where? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Pray, of what nature are they? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Proceed; why do you keep poking about the door? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Seest thou, then, how good a thing is learning? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Shall I bring him into court and convict him of lunacy, or shall I give information of his madness to the coffin- makers? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Shall I then ever see this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell me now, what do you prescribe? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell me now, whether you think that Jupiter always rains fresh rain on each occasion, or that the sun draws from below the same water back again? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell me what is this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell me, O Socrates, I beseech you, by Jupiter, who are these that have uttered this grand song? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell me, by doing what? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell me, do you love me? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell me, pray, if they are really clouds, what ails them, that they resemble mortal women? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell us then boldly, what we must do for you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Tell us what you require? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | The better, or the worse? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | The boys weep, and do you not think it is right that a father should weep? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Then have you perceived that you say nothing to the purpose? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Then what shall I gain, pray? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Then wo n''t you pay me? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | To what do they seem to you to be like? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Vortex? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Was it not then a man like you and me, who first proposed this law, and by speaking persuaded the ancients? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Well, what is it? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Were you ever, after being stuffed with broth at the Panathenaic festival, then disturbed in your belly, and did a tumult suddenly rumble through it? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Were you not therefore justly beaten, who do not praise Euripides, the wisest of poets? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What Jupiter? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What ails you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What am I doing? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What are you about? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What are you doing, fellow? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What are you doing, pray, you fellow on the roof? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What argument will he be able to state, to prove that he is not a blackguard? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What belongs to an allotment? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What do you say? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What do you say? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What do you say? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What do you say? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What do you think he will do? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What do you wonder at? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What else but this finger? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What evil, pray, has Tlepolemus ever done you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What gods? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What good could any one learn from them? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What good, pray, would this do you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What have you made of your slippers, you foolish man? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What is this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What money is this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What must I do? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What must I do? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What names are masculine? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What say you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What shall I do, my father being crazed? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What shall I experience? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What sort of animal is this interest? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then did he contrive for provisions? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then is the use of this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then will you say if you be conquered by me in this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then would you say if you heard another contrivance of Socrates? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then, pray, is this, father? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What then? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What was it? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What was the fist? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What, father? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What, old man? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What, pray, do you fear? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What, really? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What, then, did he say about the gnat? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What, then, do you see? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What, then, will you say? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | What? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Where is Strepsiades? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Where is it? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Where is this man who asks me for his money? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Where, pray, did you ever see cold Herculean baths? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who are they? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who are you? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who is it that compels them to borne along? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who it is that knocked at the door? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who rains then? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who says this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who then? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who''s"Himself"? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Who, O shameless fellow, reared you, understanding all your wishes, when you lisped what you meant? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Whoever is this, who is lamenting? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why are you distressed? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why callest thou me, thou creature of a day? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why did I borrow them? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why did you light the thirsty lamp? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why do you delay? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why do you talk foolishly? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why do you talk nonsense? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why so, pray? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why so? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why then do we admire Thales? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why then does their rump look toward heaven? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why then is it less lawful for me also in turn to propose henceforth a new law for the sons, that they should beat their fathers in turn? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why then, since you imitate the cocks in all things, do you not both eat dung and sleep on a perch? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why thus do I loiter and not knock at the door? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why twelve minae to Pasias? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, how can it be just to beat a father? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, how with justice? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, how, when my money is gone, my complexion gone, my life gone, and my slipper gone? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, how? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, is any day old and new? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, is there any Jove? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, pray, did he add the old day? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, pray, did you laugh at this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, pray, did you not tell me this, then, but excited with hopes a rustic and aged man? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, pray, do you talk nonsense, as if you had fallen from an ass? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, pray? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, then, do the magistrates not receive the deposits on the new moon, but on the Old and New? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, what are these doing, who are bent down so much? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, what else, than chopping logic with the beams of your house? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, what good should I get else from his instruction? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, what shall I learn? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, what, if they should see Simon, a plunderer of the public property, what do they do? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Why, where are my fellow- tribesmen of Cicynna? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Will it never be day? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Will you move quickly? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Will you not pack off to the devil, you most forgetful and most stupid old man? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Will you not quickly cover yourself up and think of something? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Will you not take yourself off from my house? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Will you not then pack off as fast as possible from my door? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Will you not, pray, now believe in no god, except what we believe in-- this Chaos, and the Clouds, and the Tongue-- these three? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Will you overcome me in this? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Wo n''t you march, Mr. Blood- horse? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | Yes, by Jupiter, with justice? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | You destroy me? |
aristophanes-clouds-1883 | whether do you wish to take and lead away this your son, or shall I teach him to speak? |
dante-divine-1740 | And art thou here? |
dante-divine-1740 | And art thou then that Virgil, that well- spring, From which such copious floods of eloquence Have issued? |
dante-divine-1740 | And may that be, if different estates Grow not of different duties in your life? dante-divine-1740 And where,"all doubting, I exclaim''d,"Is Beatrice?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Are these I hear Spirits, O master? |
dante-divine-1740 | Both are of Latium,weeping he replied,"Whom tortur''d thus thou seest: but who art thou That hast inquir''d of us?" |
dante-divine-1740 | But who art thou that question''st of our state, Who go''st to my belief, with lids unclos''d, And breathest in thy talk? |
dante-divine-1740 | Did I advance no further than this point,''How then had he no peer?'' dante-divine-1740 Doth ever any Into this rueful concave''s extreme depth Descend, out of the first degree, whose pain Is deprivation merely of sweet hope?" |
dante-divine-1740 | How chances this? |
dante-divine-1740 | Master,said I,"what land Is this?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Now tell us, I entreat thee, who art thou? dante-divine-1740 Now who art thou, that through our smoke dost cleave? |
dante-divine-1740 | Say who are ye, that stemming the blind stream, Forth from th''eternal prison- house have fled? |
dante-divine-1740 | Speak from whence ye stand:He cried:"What would ye? |
dante-divine-1740 | Tell me ye, Whose bosoms thus together press,said I,"Who are ye?" |
dante-divine-1740 | What aileth thee, that still thou look''st to earth? |
dante-divine-1740 | What art thou, speak, That railest thus on others? |
dante-divine-1740 | What chance or destiny,thus he began,"Ere the last day conducts thee here below? |
dante-divine-1740 | What may the Persians say unto your kings, When they shall see that volume, in the which All their dispraise is written, spread to view? dante-divine-1740 Whence cometh this,"Said I,"my master? |
dante-divine-1740 | Where,said he,"Doth Cianfa lurk?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Wherefore dost bruise me? |
dante-divine-1740 | Who hath conducted, or with lantern sure Lights you emerging from the depth of night, That makes the infernal valley ever black? dante-divine-1740 Who knows on which hand now the steep declines?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Who voucheth to thee of the works themselves,Was the reply,"that they in very deed Are that they purport? |
dante-divine-1740 | Why are thy thoughts thus riveted? |
dante-divine-1740 | Why doth my face,said Beatrice,"thus Enamour thee, as that thou dost not turn Unto the beautiful garden, blossoming Beneath the rays of Christ? |
dante-divine-1740 | Why partest from me, O my strength? |
dante-divine-1740 | Why pensive journey thus ye three alone? |
dante-divine-1740 | ''Gainst which I strive to shield the sight in vain?" |
dante-divine-1740 | ''Let all hope In thee,''so speak his anthem,''who have known Thy name;''and with my faith who know not that? |
dante-divine-1740 | ''Why leavest thou the war?'' |
dante-divine-1740 | ( Whose height what reach of mortal thought may soar?) |
dante-divine-1740 | --"Hast thou seen,"said he,"That old enchantress, her, whose wiles alone The spirits o''er us weep for? |
dante-divine-1740 | --"What to thee is other''s good, If thou neglect thy own?" |
dante-divine-1740 | --What then, And who art thou, that on the stool wouldst sit To judge at distance of a thousand miles With the short- sighted vision of a span? |
dante-divine-1740 | A little space refraining, then she spake:"What dost thou muse on? |
dante-divine-1740 | Against a rock I leant and wept, so that my guide exclaim''d:"What, and art thou too witless as the rest? |
dante-divine-1740 | Ah wherefore tarriest thou not? |
dante-divine-1740 | Ah, wherefore go''st thou on? |
dante-divine-1740 | And how from eve to morn in space so brief Hath the sun made his transit?" |
dante-divine-1740 | And if it be not, wherefore in such guise Are they condemned?" |
dante-divine-1740 | And if our fantasy fail of such height, What marvel, since no eye above the sun Hath ever travel''d? |
dante-divine-1740 | And know''st not thou, whatever is in heav''n, Is holy, and that nothing there is done But is done zealously and well? |
dante-divine-1740 | And one, from whom the cold both ears had reft, Exclaim''d, still looking downward:"Why on us Dost speculate so long? |
dante-divine-1740 | And one, who bore a fat and azure swine Pictur''d on his white scrip, addressed me thus:"What dost thou in this deep? |
dante-divine-1740 | And she, as one Made hasty by her grief;"O sire, if thou Dost not return?" |
dante-divine-1740 | And speak''st of us, as thou thyself e''en yet Dividest time by calends?" |
dante-divine-1740 | And was this semblance thine?" |
dante-divine-1740 | And who Are those twain spirits, that escort thee there? |
dante-divine-1740 | And who is this, that shows to thee the way?" |
dante-divine-1740 | And, be they dead, what privilege allows They walk unmantled by the cumbrous stole?" |
dante-divine-1740 | And,"Whither is she vanish''d?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Are the firm statutes of the dread abyss Broken, or in high heaven new laws ordain''d, That thus, condemn''d, ye to my caves approach?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Are thy just eyes turn''d elsewhere? |
dante-divine-1740 | Ask ye how? |
dante-divine-1740 | Began he on the horrid grunsel standing,"Whence doth this wild excess of insolence Lodge in you? |
dante-divine-1740 | Believ''st not I am with thee, thy sure guide? |
dante-divine-1740 | But I, why should I there presume? |
dante-divine-1740 | But Virgil rous''d me:"What yet gazest on? |
dante-divine-1740 | But resolve me this Who that Gherardo is, that as thou sayst Is left a sample of the perish''d race, And for rebuke to this untoward age?" |
dante-divine-1740 | But say who Art thou, that standest musing on the rock, Haply so lingering to delay the pain Sentenc''d upon thy crimes?" |
dante-divine-1740 | But tell me, if thou know''st, Where is Piccarda? |
dante-divine-1740 | But tell me; in the time of your sweet sighs, By what, and how love granted, that ye knew Your yet uncertain wishes?" |
dante-divine-1740 | But tell, I pray thee, whence the gloomy spots Upon this body, which below on earth Give rise to talk of Cain in fabling quaint?" |
dante-divine-1740 | But tell, why thou art seated upright there? |
dante-divine-1740 | But thou, say wherefore to such perils past Return''st thou? |
dante-divine-1740 | But through all Europe where do those men dwell, To whom their glory is not manifest? |
dante-divine-1740 | But what brings thee Into this bitter seas''ning?" |
dante-divine-1740 | But wherefore soars thy wish''d- for speech so high Beyond my sight, that loses it the more, The more it strains to reach it?" |
dante-divine-1740 | But wherein besteads me that? |
dante-divine-1740 | But who is he Of whom thou spak''st but now?" |
dante-divine-1740 | CANTO VII After their courteous greetings joyfully Sev''n times exchang''d, Sordello backward drew Exclaiming,"Who are ye?" |
dante-divine-1740 | CANTO XIV"Say who is he around our mountain winds, Or ever death has prun''d his wing for flight, That opes his eyes and covers them at will?" |
dante-divine-1740 | CANTO XXVIII WHO, e''en in words unfetter''d, might at full Tell of the wounds and blood that now I saw, Though he repeated oft the tale? |
dante-divine-1740 | Can then their hope be vain, Or is thy saying not to me reveal''d?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Cried I,"and which towards us moving seems?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Dost thou not hear how pitiful his wail, Nor mark the death, which in the torrent flood, Swoln mightier than a sea, him struggling holds?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Encourag''d thus I straight began:"How there can leanness come, Where is no want of nourishment to feed?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Father what ails thee?" |
dante-divine-1740 | For thy ill life what blame on me recoils?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Had mine eyes turn''d, For that offence what plea might have avail''d? |
dante-divine-1740 | Hast thou seen How man may free him of her bonds? |
dante-divine-1740 | He answer thus return''d:"Wherefore in dotage wanders thus thy mind, Not so accustom''d? |
dante-divine-1740 | He fled, Nor utter''d more; and after him there came A centaur full of fury, shouting,"Where Where is the caitiff?" |
dante-divine-1740 | He replied:"Now who art thou, that smiting others''cheeks Through Antenora roamest, with such force As were past suff''rance, wert thou living still?" |
dante-divine-1740 | He shook his forehead; and,"How long,"he said,"Linger we now?" |
dante-divine-1740 | He straight rejoin''d:"Say, were it worse for man, If he liv''d not in fellowship on earth?" |
dante-divine-1740 | He, soon as there I stood at the tomb''s foot, Ey''d me a space, then in disdainful mood Address''d me:"Say, what ancestors were thine?" |
dante-divine-1740 | How can it chance, that good distributed, The many, that possess it, makes more rich, Than if''t were shar''d by few?" |
dante-divine-1740 | How standeth he in posture thus revers''d? |
dante-divine-1740 | I answer''d:"Though I come, I tarry not; But who art thou, that art become so foul?" |
dante-divine-1740 | I answering thus:"Declare, as thou dost wish that I above May carry tidings of thee, who is he, In whom that sight doth wake such sad remembrance?" |
dante-divine-1740 | I began,"Who seest that, which thou didst so believe, As to outstrip feet younger than thine own, Toward the sepulchre? |
dante-divine-1740 | I exclaim''d,"Art thou not Oderigi, art not thou Agobbio''s glory, glory of that art Which they of Paris call the limmer''s skill?" |
dante-divine-1740 | I exclaim''d,"What tongues are these?" |
dante-divine-1740 | I had come Thus far from all your skirmishing secure,"My teacher answered,"without will divine And destiny propitious? |
dante-divine-1740 | I thus:"From Campaldino''s field what force or chance Drew thee, that ne''er thy sepulture was known?" |
dante-divine-1740 | I turning round To the deep source of knowledge, thus inquir''d:"Say what this means? |
dante-divine-1740 | I, though my doubting were as manifest, As is through glass the hue that mantles it, In silence waited not: for to my lips"What things are these?" |
dante-divine-1740 | If I to hear that voice Am worthy, say if from below thou com''st And from what cloister''s pale?" |
dante-divine-1740 | If sweetest thing thus fail''d thee with my death, What, afterward, of mortal should thy wish Have tempted? |
dante-divine-1740 | Is not here below All vapour quench''d?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Is there no touch of mercy in thy breast? |
dante-divine-1740 | It answered:"Thee as in my mortal frame I lov''d, so loos''d forth it I love thee still, And therefore pause; but why walkest thou here?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Laws indeed there are: But who is he observes them? |
dante-divine-1740 | Led by thy lofty genius and profound, Where is my son? |
dante-divine-1740 | Loud he cried:"Why greedily thus bendest more on me, Than on these other filthy ones, thy ken?" |
dante-divine-1740 | May those, Who lie within these sepulchres, be seen? |
dante-divine-1740 | My leader thus:"Then tell us of the partners in thy guilt; Knowest thou any sprung of Latian land Under the tar?" |
dante-divine-1740 | My master said and paus''d,"so that he may Ascend, who journeys without aid of wine?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Near or remote, what there avails, where God Immediate rules, and Nature, awed, suspends Her sway? |
dante-divine-1740 | No longer lives he? |
dante-divine-1740 | O man, why place thy heart where there doth need Exclusion of participants in good? |
dante-divine-1740 | O ye race of men Though born to soar, why suffer ye a wind So slight to baffle ye? |
dante-divine-1740 | Of gold and silver ye have made your god, Diff''ring wherein from the idolater, But he that worships one, a hundred ye? |
dante-divine-1740 | One drench''d in mire before me came, and said;"Who art thou, that thou comest ere thine hour?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Or blame I only shine accustom''d ways?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Raise up thy head, raise up, and see the man, Before whose eyes earth gap''d in Thebes, when all Cried out,''Amphiaraus, whither rushest? |
dante-divine-1740 | Remember thee, remember thee, if I Safe e''en on Geryon brought thee: now I come More near to God, wilt thou not trust me now? |
dante-divine-1740 | Right cruel art thou, if no pang Thou feel at thinking what my heart foretold; And if not now, why use thy tears to flow? |
dante-divine-1740 | Say then, by Heav''n, what blasts ye thus? |
dante-divine-1740 | Say what is this I hear?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Say wherefore hast thou robb''d me? |
dante-divine-1740 | She thus:"Who then amongst us here aloft Hath brought thee, if thou weenest to return?" |
dante-divine-1740 | So early dost thou surfeit with the wealth, For which thou fearedst not in guile to take The lovely lady, and then mangle her?" |
dante-divine-1740 | So to the pleasant world mayst thou return, As thou shalt tell me, why in all their laws, Against my kin this people is so fell?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Sound not loud enough Thy chatt''ring teeth, but thou must bark outright? |
dante-divine-1740 | Strikes not on his eye The blessed daylight?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Such were their words; At hearing which downward I bent my looks, And held them there so long, that the bard cried:"What art thou pond''ring?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Sudden that sound Forth issu''d from a vault, whereat in fear I somewhat closer to my leader''s side Approaching, he thus spake:"What dost thou? |
dante-divine-1740 | Tell me of the fold, That hath Saint John for guardian, what was then Its state, and who in it were highest seated?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Tell us, how is it that thou mak''st thyself A wall against the sun, as thou not yet Into th''inextricable toils of death Hadst enter''d?" |
dante-divine-1740 | That heard, the spirit all did wrench his feet, And sighing next in woeful accent spake:"What then of me requirest? |
dante-divine-1740 | The lady called aloud:"Why thus yet burns Affection in thee for these living, lights, And dost not look on that which follows them?" |
dante-divine-1740 | The sheep, meanwhile, poor witless ones, return From pasture, fed with wind: and what avails For their excuse, they do not see their harm? |
dante-divine-1740 | Then I again inquir''d:"Where flow the streams Of Phlegethon and Lethe? |
dante-divine-1740 | Then I his alter''d hue perceiving, thus:"How may I speed, if thou yieldest to dread, Who still art wo nt to comfort me in doubt?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Then I to him:"If from our world this sluice Be thus deriv''d; wherefore to us but now Appears it at this edge?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Then as the dark blood trickled down its side, These words it added:"Wherefore tear''st me thus? |
dante-divine-1740 | Then he:"My brother, of what use to mount, When to my suffering would not let me pass The bird of God, who at the portal sits? |
dante-divine-1740 | Then heard I:"Wherefore holdest thou that each, The elder proposition and the new, Which so persuade thee, are the voice of heav''n?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Then to me The gentle guide:"Inquir''st thou not what spirits Are these, which thou beholdest? |
dante-divine-1740 | Then to the bard I spake:"Was ever race Light as Sienna''s? |
dante-divine-1740 | Thereat a little stretching forth my hand, From a great wilding gather''d I a branch, And straight the trunk exclaim''d:"Why pluck''st thou me?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Therefore say Which hand leads nearest to the rifted rock?" |
dante-divine-1740 | They their hooks Protruding, one the other thus bespake:"Wilt thou I touch him on the hip?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Those answering,"And why castest thou away?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Thou arguest; if the good intent remain; What reason that another''s violence Should stint the measure of my fair desert? |
dante-divine-1740 | Thy happiness is whole?" |
dante-divine-1740 | To him my guide:"Wherefore exclaimest? |
dante-divine-1740 | To whom the other:"Why hath he conceal''d The title of that river, as a man Doth of some horrible thing?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Unless thy prudence fail thee, dost not mark How they do gnarl upon us, and their scowl Threatens us present tortures?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Upon the ground His eyes were bent, and from his brow eras''d All confidence, while thus with sighs he spake:"Who hath denied me these abodes of woe?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Waitest thou escort to conduct thee hence? |
dante-divine-1740 | Were these, whose heads are shorn, On our left hand, all sep''rate to the church?" |
dante-divine-1740 | What boots it, that thy reins Justinian''s hand Befitted, if thy saddle be unpress''d? |
dante-divine-1740 | What canst thou more, who hast subdued our blood So wholly to thyself, they feel no care Of their own flesh? |
dante-divine-1740 | What compensation therefore may he find? |
dante-divine-1740 | What devil wrings thee?" |
dante-divine-1740 | What guilt exceedeth his, Who with Heaven''s judgment in his passion strives? |
dante-divine-1740 | What is this I hear? |
dante-divine-1740 | What is this comes o''er thee then? |
dante-divine-1740 | What master of the pencil or the style Had trac''d the shades and lines, that might have made The subtlest workman wonder? |
dante-divine-1740 | What moves thee, if the senses stir not? |
dante-divine-1740 | What negligence detains you loit''ring here? |
dante-divine-1740 | What other could I answer save"I come?" |
dante-divine-1740 | What other kind avails, not heard in heaven?"'' |
dante-divine-1740 | What profits at the fays to but the horn? |
dante-divine-1740 | What race Are these, who seem so overcome with woe?" |
dante-divine-1740 | What race is this? |
dante-divine-1740 | What torment breaks forth in this bitter woe?" |
dante-divine-1740 | What wouldst thou have me say? |
dante-divine-1740 | When o''er it he had paus''d, my master spake:"Say who wast thou, that at so many points Breath''st out with blood thy lamentable speech?" |
dante-divine-1740 | When the great sentence passes, be increas''d, Or mitigated, or as now severe?" |
dante-divine-1740 | When thus my solace, turning him around, Bespake me kindly:"Why distrustest thou? |
dante-divine-1740 | Where is good Liziohere Manardi, Traversalo, and Carpigna? |
dante-divine-1740 | Where is now the ice? |
dante-divine-1740 | Where is the justice that condemns him? |
dante-divine-1740 | Where is your escort? |
dante-divine-1740 | Whereat one advanc''d, The others standing firm, and as he came,"What may this turn avail him?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Wherefore doth fasten yet thy sight below Among the maim''d and miserable shades? |
dante-divine-1740 | Wherefore doth fault of ours bring us to this? |
dante-divine-1740 | While yet he spake, the centaur sped away: And under us three spirits came, of whom Nor I nor he was ware, till they exclaim''d;"Say who are ye?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Who in the erring world beneath would deem, That Trojan Ripheus in this round was set Fifth of the saintly splendours? |
dante-divine-1740 | Who would deem, that scent Of water and an apple, could have prov''d Powerful to generate such pining want, Not knowing how it wrought? |
dante-divine-1740 | Why buoy ye up aloft your unfleg''d souls? |
dante-divine-1740 | Why longer sleepst thou? |
dante-divine-1740 | Why open''dst not upon us? |
dante-divine-1740 | Why, why dost thou hang back? |
dante-divine-1740 | Wilt thou this truth more clearly evidenc''d?" |
dante-divine-1740 | With ireful gestures,"Who is this,"They cried,"that without death first felt, goes through The regions of the dead?" |
dante-divine-1740 | With stern voice She utter''d;"Say, O Virgil, who is this?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Yet inform me, ye, who here Are happy, long ye for a higher place More to behold, and more in love to dwell?" |
dante-divine-1740 | Your movements have their primal bent from heaven; Not all; yet said I all; what then ensues? |
dante-divine-1740 | a spirit turn''d his eyes In their deep- sunken cell, and fasten''d then On me, then cried with vehemence aloud:"What grace is this vouchsaf''d me?" |
dante-divine-1740 | already standest there? |
dante-divine-1740 | and what that other light In answer set? |
dante-divine-1740 | and wherefore not with thee?" |
dante-divine-1740 | beseech thee say What water this, which from one source deriv''d Itself removes to distance from itself?" |
dante-divine-1740 | but who are ye, from whom such mighty grief, As now I witness, courseth down your cheeks? |
dante-divine-1740 | day and night with moans:"My Caesar, why dost thou desert my side?" |
dante-divine-1740 | dost not with juster measure guide The appetite of mortals?'' |
dante-divine-1740 | grant me now to know Whom here we view, and whence impell''d they seem So eager to pass o''er, as I discern Through the blear light?" |
dante-divine-1740 | men perverse in every way, With every foulness stain''d, why from the earth Are ye not cancel''d? |
dante-divine-1740 | my guide Exclaim''d,"that thou hast slack''d thy pace? |
dante-divine-1740 | now ye not That we are worms, yet made at last to form The winged insect, imp''d with angel plumes That to heaven''s justice unobstructed soars? |
dante-divine-1740 | of thee this also would I learn; This fortune, that thou speak''st of, what it is, Whose talons grasp the blessings of the world?" |
dante-divine-1740 | or how Imports it thee, what thing is whisper''d here? |
dante-divine-1740 | or is this A preparation in the wond''rous depth Of thy sage counsel made, for some good end, Entirely from our reach of thought cut off? |
dante-divine-1740 | or what other thoughts Possess it? |
dante-divine-1740 | or who Permits it? |
dante-divine-1740 | said''st thou he HAD? |
dante-divine-1740 | say which way can we proceed?" |
dante-divine-1740 | say who are these, interr''d Within these vaults, of whom distinct we hear The dolorous sighs?" |
dante-divine-1740 | say who is he, than all the rest Glancing in fiercer agony, on whom A ruddier flame doth prey?" |
dante-divine-1740 | she began,"Why mak''st thou no attempt at questioning, As thus we walk together?" |
dante-divine-1740 | that old man venerable Exclaiming,"How is this, ye tardy spirits? |
dante-divine-1740 | to whom, As now to thee, hath twice the heav''nly gate Been e''er unclos''d?" |
dante-divine-1740 | was answer''d;"who so wish''d To ascend by night, would he be thence debarr''d By other, or through his own weakness fail?" |
dante-divine-1740 | weeping, he exclaim''d,"Unless thy errand be some fresh revenge For Montaperto, wherefore troublest me?" |
dante-divine-1740 | what agency doth this?" |
dante-divine-1740 | what ancestors Where those you sprang from, and what years were mark''d In your first childhood? |
dante-divine-1740 | what avails it thee,"It cried,"that of me thou hast made thy screen? |
dante-divine-1740 | what desert Of mine, what favour rather undeserv''d, Shows thee to me? |
dante-divine-1740 | what doth aggrieve them thus, That they lament so loud?" |
dante-divine-1740 | what ignorance Besets you? |
dante-divine-1740 | where His blame, if he believeth not?'' |
dante-divine-1740 | wherefore has intemperate ire Driv''n thee to loath thy being? |
dante-divine-1740 | wherefore kick you''gainst that will Ne''er frustrate of its end, and which so oft Hath laid on you enforcement of your pangs? |
dante-divine-1740 | wherefore not this pleasant mount Ascendest, cause and source of all delight?" |
dante-divine-1740 | wherefore tarriest still, Since forth of thee thy family hath gone, And many, hating evil, join''d their steps? |
dante-divine-1740 | who Are these, by the black air so scourg''d?" |
dante-divine-1740 | who are these, that boast Such honour, separate from all the rest?" |
dante-divine-1740 | who to this residence of woe Approachest?" |
dante-divine-1740 | why dost doubt To turn thee into ashes, cumb''ring earth No longer, since in evil act so far Thou hast outdone thy seed? |
dante-divine-1740 | why hast not courage there And noble daring? |
dante-divine-1740 | why hast thou Dealt with us thus? |
dante-divine-1740 | why in thy breast Harbour vile fear? |
dante-divine-1740 | why is not thy succour lent To him, who so much lov''d thee, as to leave For thy sake all the multitude admires? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | ''Am I,''he said,''to expose all your splendid courage and devotion to further risks? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | ''Comrade,''said Galba,''who bade you?'' |
tacitus-histories-1687 | ''Do you imagine,''he said,''that Vitellius will be so hard- hearted as not to show me some gratitude for saving his whole household? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | ''How much further is our ruin to go?'' |
tacitus-histories-1687 | ''Peasants that you are,''he shouted,''have you another emperor, another camp waiting to shelter you, if you are defeated? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | ''What sort of a march would this be? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Am I the man to allow the flower of Rome in all these famous armies to be mown down once again and lost to the country? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Am I to be numbered with Numisius and Herennius? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | And all for what? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | And what am I to call you? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | And what was the cause of war? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | And what was the force that broke through the Vitellians? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | And what will be the issue of your crime, when the Roman legions take the field against you? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | And, if fortune favours, who gains the glory? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Are those who offer it ready to run the risk themselves? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Are you going to allow less than thirty deserters and renegades to bestow the crown? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Are you going to allow this precedent, and by your acquiescence make their crime your own? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Are you going to begin storming the town when you can not possibly see where the ground is level and how high the walls are? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Besides, what good to us are the ramparts of the mountains? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | But now-- are we to go and pray for Otho or for Vitellius? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | But what sort of repute or position would your son Germanicus enjoy? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Could it be the memory of his misdeeds that so oppressed him? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Do you imagine that the stability of this beautiful city consists in houses and edifices built of stone upon stone? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Do you suppose that Vespasian''s is a loftier disposition? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | For his effeminate costume? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | For his swaggering demeanour? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | For if the Romans were driven out-- which Heaven forbid-- what could ensue save a universal state of intertribal warfare? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Had they not but lately crushed the Sarmatians? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Had they not under Mark Antony defeated the Parthians and the Armenians under Corbulo? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Have you forgotten Corbulo''s murder? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | How do you know whether to assault it with engines and showers of missiles, or with penthouses and shelters?'' |
tacitus-histories-1687 | How often have not Roman soldiers chosen to die rather than be driven from their post? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | How then can we suppose that the troops of Otho and Vitellius would have willingly stopped the war? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | If he were a private citizen, why adopt the official tone? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | If we hesitate to touch a mere ex- quaestor, shall we be any bolder when he has been praetor and consul? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | If we wait for day it will be all peace and petitions, and what shall we get for our wounds and our labours? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Is he not the man who without the least excuse butchered thousands of utterly innocent soldiers? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Or do you suppose that the race of tyrants came to an end in Nero? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Shall a Batavian give you the signal for battle? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Suppose the Germans and Gauls lead the way to the walls of Rome, will you turn your arms upon your fatherland? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | The crime was his country''s, he cried; what share had a single soldier in these civil wars? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Then they kept asking them,''Have you got your sword on?'' |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Were we fighting for our country? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What answer can we give when they question us about our victory or our defeat?'' |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What forces are there left in Italy? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What good have we done by slaughtering and burning Roman legions except to bring out others, larger and stronger? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What had they against them? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What have we now? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What if Gaul throws off the yoke? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What if it flourish and prosper? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What is the good of waiting until Otho sets his camp in order and approaches the Capitol, while Galba peeps out of a window? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What province is there in the empire that has not been polluted with massacre? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What though fortune and courage have deserted us for the moment, have we not glorious examples in the past? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What though you and I can talk plainly with each other to- day? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What was the good of killing one youth and one old man? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | What would be the good of all his horse and foot, if one or two traitors should seek the reward the enemy offered and assassinate him then and there? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | When they answered no,''Well,''he said,''could any troops possibly break through walls or undermine them with nothing but swords and javelins? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Where can we get funds and supplies in the meanwhile? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Whom would they have to lead them? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Why not rather wait one night till our siege- train arrives and then carry the victory by force?'' |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Why should all these companies of brave soldiers be commanded by one miserable old invalid? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Why should he deserve to be emperor? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Why should we drag on the war into another summer? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Why take the throne from Nero, if it was to be left to Otho? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Why turn a compliment to the emperor into a slight upon some one else? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Will you stand sentry for the Treviran Tutor? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Will you swell the ranks of German hordes? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | Would their conqueror keep his promises any longer than he liked? |
tacitus-histories-1687 | what the recompense for such a disaster? |
homer-iliad-990 | Aeneas,said he,"why do you stand thus out before the host to fight me? |
homer-iliad-990 | Agamemnon,he cried,"what ails you now, and what more do you want? |
homer-iliad-990 | Alas, my son,she cried,"what have I left to live for now that you are no more? |
homer-iliad-990 | Alas,said he to himself in his dismay,"what will become of me? |
homer-iliad-990 | Alas,said he to himself in the heaviness of his heart,"why are the Achaeans again scouring the plain and flocking towards the ships? |
homer-iliad-990 | Antilochus,said he,"what is this from you who have been so far blameless? |
homer-iliad-990 | Bold vixen,she cried,"how dare you cross me thus? |
homer-iliad-990 | Dread son of Saturn,answered Juno,"what are you talking about? |
homer-iliad-990 | Dread son of Saturn,said she,"what, pray, is the meaning of all this? |
homer-iliad-990 | Father Jove,said she,"are you not angry with Mars for these high doings? |
homer-iliad-990 | Hector,said he,"where is your prowess now? |
homer-iliad-990 | Hero Eurypylus,replied the brave son of Menoetius,"how may these things be? |
homer-iliad-990 | Idomeneus,said he,"lawgiver to the Cretans, what has now become of the threats with which the sons of the Achaeans used to threaten the Trojans?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Is there one,said he,"who for a great reward will do me the service of which I will tell you? |
homer-iliad-990 | Juno,said she,"why are you here? |
homer-iliad-990 | Most dread son of Saturn,she exclaimed,"what are you talking about? |
homer-iliad-990 | Paris,said he,"evil- hearted Paris, fair to see but woman- mad and false of tongue, where are Deiphobus and King Helenus? |
homer-iliad-990 | Sarpedon,said he,"councillor of the Lycians, why should you come skulking here you who are a man of peace? |
homer-iliad-990 | Shame on you, where are you flying to? homer-iliad-990 Sir,"he cried,"draw near; why do you think thus vainly to dismay the Argives? |
homer-iliad-990 | Son of Deucalion,said he,"where would you have us begin fighting? |
homer-iliad-990 | Son of Tydeus,he said,"why stand you cowering here upon the brink of battle? |
homer-iliad-990 | Son of Tydeus,replied Nestor,"what mean you? |
homer-iliad-990 | Sons of Priam,said he,"how long will you let your people be thus slaughtered by the Achaeans? |
homer-iliad-990 | Tell me, Ulysses,said he,"will he save the ships from burning, or did he refuse, and is he still furious?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Tell me,said he,"renowned Ulysses, how did you two come by these horses? |
homer-iliad-990 | Trickster,she cried,"which of the gods have you been taking into your counsels now? |
homer-iliad-990 | Ulysses,he cried,"noble son of Laertes where are you flying to, with your back turned like a coward? |
homer-iliad-990 | What would you have, said he,"daughter of great Jove, that your proud spirit has sent you hither from Olympus? |
homer-iliad-990 | What,said she,"are you about? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who and whence are you,said he,"who dare to face me? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who is it,said he,"that goes thus about the host and the ships alone and in the dead of night, when men are sleeping? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who, my good sir,said he,"who are you among men? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why are you here,said he,"daughter of aegis- bearing Jove? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why, vixen,said he,"have you again set the gods by the ears in the pride and haughtiness of your heart? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why,said he,"Achilles, do you call me? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why,said he,"my dear brother, are you thus arming? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why,said he,"wielder of the lightning, have you called the gods in council? |
homer-iliad-990 | ''Why, Achaeans,''said he,''are you thus speechless? |
homer-iliad-990 | Achilles drew a deep sigh and said,"You know it; why tell you what you know well already? |
homer-iliad-990 | Achilles was deeply moved and answered,"What, noble Patroclus, are you saying? |
homer-iliad-990 | Alexandrus answered,"Hector, why find fault when there is no one to find fault with? |
homer-iliad-990 | Am I to stay with them and wait your coming, or shall I return here as soon as I have given your orders?" |
homer-iliad-990 | And Achilles answered,"Most noble son of Atreus, covetous beyond all mankind, how shall the Achaeans find you another prize? |
homer-iliad-990 | And Achilles answered,"Why, true heart, are you come hither to lay these charges upon me? |
homer-iliad-990 | And Achilles said,"Iris, which of the gods was it that sent you to me?" |
homer-iliad-990 | And Aeneas answered,"Why do you thus bid me fight the proud son of Peleus, when I am in no mind to do so? |
homer-iliad-990 | And Juno answered,"Dread son of Saturn, why should you say this thing? |
homer-iliad-990 | And Juno answered,"Most dread son of Saturn, what is this that you are saying? |
homer-iliad-990 | And Juno said,"Sleep, why do you take such notions as those into your head? |
homer-iliad-990 | And Nestor answered,"Why should Achilles care to know how many of the Achaeans may be wounded? |
homer-iliad-990 | And Priam said,"Who are you, my friend, and who are your parents, that you speak so truly about the fate of my unhappy son?" |
homer-iliad-990 | And Thetis answered,"Why does the mighty god so bid me? |
homer-iliad-990 | And now can you not dare face Menelaus and learn what manner of man he is whose wife you have stolen? |
homer-iliad-990 | And now tell me and tell me true, for how many days would you celebrate the funeral rites of noble Hector? |
homer-iliad-990 | And the son of Hippolochus answered, son of Tydeus, why ask me of my lineage? |
homer-iliad-990 | And which of the gods was it that set them on to quarrel? |
homer-iliad-990 | And you seem troubled-- has your husband the son of Saturn been frightening you?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Apollo stood beside him and said,"Hector son of Priam, why are you so faint, and why are you here away from the others? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are the Achaeans, woe betide them, pressing you hard about the city that you have thought fit to come and uplift your hands to Jove from the citadel? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are the sons of Atreus the only men in the world who love their wives? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are there no younger men among the Achaeans who could go about to rouse the princes? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you considering some matter that concerns the Trojans and Achaeans-- for the blaze of battle is on the point of being kindled between them?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you fatigued with killing so many of your dear friends the Trojans? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you going to send any of our comrades to exploit the Trojans? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you going to send me afield still further to some man whom you have taken up in Phrygia or fair Meonia? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you looking for one of your mules or for some comrade? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you mad? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you not afraid of the fierce Achaeans who are hard by you, so cruel and relentless? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you to keep your own prize, while I sit tamely under my loss and give up the girl at your bidding? |
homer-iliad-990 | Are you wounded, and is the point of the weapon hurting you? |
homer-iliad-990 | As for the others that came into the fight after these, who of his own self could name them? |
homer-iliad-990 | Baby, why keep your bow thus idle? |
homer-iliad-990 | But tell me, and tell me true, where did you leave Hector when you started? |
homer-iliad-990 | But why commune with myself in this way? |
homer-iliad-990 | But why talk to myself in this way? |
homer-iliad-990 | Can we hope to find helpers hereafter, or a wall to shield us more surely than the one we have? |
homer-iliad-990 | Can you find no compassion in your heart for the dying Danaans, who bring you many a welcome offering to Helice and to Aegae? |
homer-iliad-990 | Can you not hear him cheering on his whole host to fire our fleet, and bidding them remember that they are not at a dance but in battle? |
homer-iliad-990 | Can you not see that the Trojans are encamped on the brow of the plain hard by our ships, with but a little space between us and them?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Could not even the waters of the grey sea imprison him, as they do many another whether he will or no? |
homer-iliad-990 | Dead though he was, Hector still spoke to him saying,"Patroclus, why should you thus foretell my doom? |
homer-iliad-990 | Did not Hector burn you thigh- bones of heifers and of unblemished goats? |
homer-iliad-990 | Did you not, such as you are, get your following together and sail beyond the seas? |
homer-iliad-990 | Did you steal in among the Trojan forces, or did some god meet you and give them to you? |
homer-iliad-990 | Do you not remember how once upon a time I had you hanged? |
homer-iliad-990 | Do you think Jove will be as anxious to help the Trojans, as he was about his own son? |
homer-iliad-990 | Do you think, if Hector takes them, that you will be able to get home by land? |
homer-iliad-990 | Father Jove, did you ever so ruin a great king and rob him so utterly of his greatness? |
homer-iliad-990 | Granted that the gods have made him a great warrior, have they also given him the right to speak with railing?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Has any mishap befallen you?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Has he not at all times offered acceptable sacrifice to the gods that dwell in heaven? |
homer-iliad-990 | Has, then, your house fared so well at the hands of the Trojans? |
homer-iliad-990 | Have you anything to say to the Myrmidons or to myself? |
homer-iliad-990 | Have you forgotten how when you were alone I chased you from your herds helter- skelter down the slopes of Ida? |
homer-iliad-990 | Have you forgotten how you set Diomed son of Tydeus on to wound me, and yourself took visible spear and drove it into me to the hurt of my fair body? |
homer-iliad-990 | Have you no grief in your own homes that you are come to plague me here? |
homer-iliad-990 | Have you no pity upon the Trojans, and would you incline the scales of victory in favour of the Danaans? |
homer-iliad-990 | Have you not had enough of being cooped up behind walls? |
homer-iliad-990 | Have you not yet found out that it is a god whom you pursue so furiously? |
homer-iliad-990 | He came outside his tent and said,"Why do you go thus alone about the host, and along the line of the ships in the stillness of the night? |
homer-iliad-990 | He showed Jove the immortal blood that was flowing from his wound, and spoke piteously, saying,"Father Jove, are you not angered by such doings? |
homer-iliad-990 | He stood up and said among the Argives,"My friends, princes and counsellors of the Argives, can you see the running as well as I can? |
homer-iliad-990 | He then with all sincerity and goodwill addressed them thus:"What, in heaven''s name, do I now see? |
homer-iliad-990 | He went up to her and said,"What do you want that you have come hither from Olympus-- and that too with neither chariot nor horses to convey you?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Hector in a weak voice answered,"And which, kind sir, of the gods are you, who now ask me thus? |
homer-iliad-990 | Hector now rebuked him and said,"Why, Melanippus, are we thus remiss? |
homer-iliad-990 | His mother sat down beside him and caressed him with her hand saying,"My son, how long will you keep on thus grieving and making moan? |
homer-iliad-990 | His mother went up to him as he lay groaning; she laid her hand upon his head and spoke piteously, saying,"My son, why are you thus weeping? |
homer-iliad-990 | How can you say that we are slack? |
homer-iliad-990 | How can you sleep on in this way? |
homer-iliad-990 | How can you venture alone to the ships of the Achaeans, and look into the face of him who has slain so many of your brave sons? |
homer-iliad-990 | How dare you gibe at Agamemnon because the Danaans have awarded him so many prizes? |
homer-iliad-990 | How would it not grieve him could he hear of them as now quailing before Hector? |
homer-iliad-990 | How, too, are the watches and sleeping- ground of the Trojans ordered? |
homer-iliad-990 | I too-- see you not how I am great and goodly? |
homer-iliad-990 | I? |
homer-iliad-990 | In his likeness, then, Apollo said,"Aeneas, can you not manage, even though heaven be against us, to save high Ilius? |
homer-iliad-990 | Iris fleet as the wind then answered,"Am I really, Neptune, to take this daring and unyielding message to Jove, or will you reconsider your answer? |
homer-iliad-990 | Is it a small thing, think you, that the son of Saturn has sent this sorrow upon me, to lose the bravest of my sons? |
homer-iliad-990 | Is it not Hector come to life again? |
homer-iliad-990 | Is it not enough that I should fall short of you in actual fighting? |
homer-iliad-990 | Is it that you hope to reign over the Trojans in the seat of Priam? |
homer-iliad-990 | Is it thus that you would quit the city of Troy, to win which we have suffered so much hardship? |
homer-iliad-990 | Is it to plunder the bodies of the slain, or did Hector send you to spy out what was going on at the ships? |
homer-iliad-990 | Is my son still at the ships, or has Achilles hewn him limb from limb, and given him to his hounds?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Jove was angry and answered,"My dear, what harm have Priam and his sons done you that you are so hotly bent on sacking the city of Ilius? |
homer-iliad-990 | Jove was displeased and answered,"What, O shaker of the earth, are you talking about? |
homer-iliad-990 | King Neptune was greatly troubled and answered,"Juno, rash of tongue, what are you talking about? |
homer-iliad-990 | May not a man though he be only mortal and knows less than we do, do what he can for another person? |
homer-iliad-990 | Meanwhile King Neptune turned to Apollo saying,"Phoebus, why should we keep each other at arm''s length? |
homer-iliad-990 | Menelaus replied,"How do I take your meaning? |
homer-iliad-990 | My good friend, did not Menoetius charge you thus, on the day when he sent you from Phthia to Agamemnon? |
homer-iliad-990 | On the right wing of the host, in the centre, or on the left wing, where I take it the Achaeans will be weakest?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Or did you come here of your own mere notion?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Or have the Trojans been allotting you a demesne of passing richness, fair with orchard lawns and corn lands, if you should slay me? |
homer-iliad-990 | Priam then caught sight of Ajax and asked,"Who is that great and goodly warrior whose head and broad shoulders tower above the rest of the Argives?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Pry and ask questions? |
homer-iliad-990 | Say, noble Eurypylus, will the Achaeans be able to hold great Hector in check, or will they fall now before his spear?" |
homer-iliad-990 | See you not how the Achaeans have built a wall about their ships and driven a trench all round it, without offering hecatombs to the gods? |
homer-iliad-990 | Shall our counsels be flung into the fire, with our drink- offerings and the right hands of fellowship wherein we have put our trust? |
homer-iliad-990 | She took his hand within her own and said,"My son, why have you left the battle to come hither? |
homer-iliad-990 | Should some one of them see you bearing so much treasure through the darkness of the flying night, what would not your state then be? |
homer-iliad-990 | Sir, think you that the sons of the Achaeans are indeed as unwarlike and cowardly as you say they are? |
homer-iliad-990 | So, then, you would all be on the side of mad Achilles, who knows neither right nor ruth? |
homer-iliad-990 | Tell me now ye Muses that dwell in the mansions of Olympus, who, whether of the Trojans or of their allies, was first to face Agamemnon? |
homer-iliad-990 | Tell me, then, how do you propose to end this present fighting?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Tell me, then, who is yonder huge hero so great and goodly? |
homer-iliad-990 | The Lysians and proud Mysians, with the Phrygians and Meonians, have their place on the side towards Thymbra; but why ask about an this? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then Achilles said to himself in his surprise,"What marvel do I see here? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then King Agamemnon said to him,"Nestor son of Neleus, honour to the Achaean name, why have you left the battle to come hither? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then Minerva said,"Father, wielder of the lightning, lord of cloud and storm, what mean you? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then Phoebus Apollo spoke to the son of Peleus saying,"Why, son of Peleus, do you, who are but man, give chase to me who am immortal? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then fleet Achilles answered her saying,"How can I go up into the battle? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then he prayed to Juno and besought her saying,"Juno, why should your son vex my stream with such especial fury? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then he said to Glaucus son of Hippolochus,"Glaucus, why in Lycia do we receive especial honour as regards our place at table? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then he said to his men,"My friends, how can we wonder that Hector wields the spear so well? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then he turned round and shouted to the brave Lycians saying,"Lycians, why do you thus fail me? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then he was afraid and said to Diomed,"Son of Tydeus, turn your horses in flight; see you not that the hand of Jove is against you? |
homer-iliad-990 | Then said she to the mighty god of Neptune,"What now, wide ruling lord of the earthquake? |
homer-iliad-990 | This shall surely be; but how, Menelaus, shall I mourn you, if it be your lot now to die? |
homer-iliad-990 | To see the pride of Agamemnon, son of Atreus? |
homer-iliad-990 | Ulysses glared at him and answered,"Son of Atreus, what are you talking about? |
homer-iliad-990 | Ulysses looked fiercely at him and said,"Son of Atreus, what are you talking about? |
homer-iliad-990 | Ulysses then said,"Now tell me; are they sleeping among the Trojan troops, or do they lie apart? |
homer-iliad-990 | Was it not for the sake of Helen? |
homer-iliad-990 | Was it not heaven that made you so? |
homer-iliad-990 | Was it that you might share the sorrows that befall mankind? |
homer-iliad-990 | Was it to my sisters, or to my brothers''wives? |
homer-iliad-990 | We must consider what we shall do about all this; shall we set them fighting anew or make peace between them? |
homer-iliad-990 | What are their plans? |
homer-iliad-990 | What can I do? |
homer-iliad-990 | What care I whether they fly towards dawn or dark, and whether they be on my right hand or on my left? |
homer-iliad-990 | What could I do? |
homer-iliad-990 | What do you want with me?" |
homer-iliad-990 | What have I to do with quarrelling and helping people?" |
homer-iliad-990 | What if one of the ever- living gods should see us sleeping together, and tell the others? |
homer-iliad-990 | What is it that grieves you? |
homer-iliad-990 | What is it that you find so urgent?" |
homer-iliad-990 | What is there for me? |
homer-iliad-990 | What is your business?" |
homer-iliad-990 | What made the son of Atreus gather the host and bring them? |
homer-iliad-990 | What say you? |
homer-iliad-990 | What sorrow has now befallen you? |
homer-iliad-990 | What then will be our best plan both as regards rescuing the dead, and our own escape from death amid the battle- cries of the Trojans?" |
homer-iliad-990 | What think you of this matter? |
homer-iliad-990 | What though you be brave? |
homer-iliad-990 | What, again, if I were to lay down my shield and helmet, lean my spear against the wall and go straight up to noble Achilles? |
homer-iliad-990 | What, then is the full tale of those whom Hector son of Priam killed in the hour of triumph which Jove then vouchsafed him? |
homer-iliad-990 | What, then, if I go out and meet him in front of the city? |
homer-iliad-990 | Where are Adamas son of Asius, and Asius son of Hyrtacus? |
homer-iliad-990 | Where are our covenants now, and where the oaths that we have taken? |
homer-iliad-990 | Where indeed would be your lyre and your love- tricks, your comely locks and your fair favour, when you were lying in the dust before him? |
homer-iliad-990 | Where lies his armour and his horses? |
homer-iliad-990 | Where too is Othryoneus? |
homer-iliad-990 | Which of the Trojans did brave Teucer first kill? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who can be other than dismayed? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who can either hear or speak in an uproar? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who in future story will speak well of you unless you now save the Argives from ruin? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who knows but Achilles, son of lovely Thetis, may be smitten by my spear and die before me?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Who then first, and who last, was slain by you, O Patroclus, when the gods had now called you to meet your doom? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who, then, O Muse, was the foremost, whether man or horse, among those that followed after the sons of Atreus? |
homer-iliad-990 | Who, then, was first and who last to be slain by Mars and Hector? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why are the choicest portions served us and our cups kept brimming, and why do men look up to us as though we were gods? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why are you so fearful? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why should this man suffer when he is guiltless, to no purpose, and in another''s quarrel? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why should you whine in this way? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why, however, should I thus hesitate? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why, my good fellows, are you lagging? |
homer-iliad-990 | Why, pray, must the Argives needs fight the Trojans? |
homer-iliad-990 | Will he wait till the ships, do what we may, are in a blaze, and we perish one upon the other? |
homer-iliad-990 | Will not the Achaeans mock at us and say that we have sent one to champion us who is fair to see but who has neither wit nor courage? |
homer-iliad-990 | Will nothing do for you but you must within their walls and eat Priam raw, with his sons and all the other Trojans to boot? |
homer-iliad-990 | Will they stay here by the ships and away from the city, or now that they have worsted the Achaeans, will they retire within their walls?" |
homer-iliad-990 | Will you leave Priam and the Trojans the glory of still keeping Helen, for whose sake so many of the Achaeans have died at Troy, far from their homes? |
homer-iliad-990 | With what heart can any of the Achaeans do your bidding, either on foray or in open fighting? |
homer-iliad-990 | Would you have men eat while the bodies of those whom Hector son of Priam slew are still lying mangled upon the plain? |
homer-iliad-990 | Would you have us enjoy one another here on the top of Mount Ida, where everything can be seen? |
homer-iliad-990 | Would you have yet more gold, which some Trojan is to give you as a ransom for his son, when I or another Achaean has taken him prisoner? |
homer-iliad-990 | Would you pluck this mortal whose doom has long been decreed out of the jaws of death? |
homer-iliad-990 | Would you snatch a mortal man, whose doom has long been fated, out of the jaws of death? |
homer-iliad-990 | Would you wait till they are at the walls of Troy? |
homer-iliad-990 | do you take no note of the death of your kinsman, and do you not see how they are trying to take Dolops''s armour? |
homer-iliad-990 | or have you been sent to fetch me? |
homer-iliad-990 | or have you had news from Phthia which you alone know? |
homer-iliad-990 | or is it some young girl to hide and lie with? |
homer-iliad-990 | or is she at the temple of Minerva where the other women are propitiating the awful goddess?" |
homer-iliad-990 | what marvel am I now beholding? |
homer-iliad-990 | what shall I do? |
marx-capital-1110 | * What did the farmers do now? marx-capital-1110 * With such queer people as these, where is the"field of abstinence"for the capitalists? |
marx-capital-1110 | *( Does this Mr. Smith take no meals himself during 10 J hours?) marx-capital-1110 And I suppose it is very dirty work?" |
marx-capital-1110 | And he finds it difficult to get employment in another mine? |
marx-capital-1110 | Are not workmen summoned at all upon the juries? |
marx-capital-1110 | Are they very anxious to see the law enforced? |
marx-capital-1110 | But are they( the employers) not compelled to demand them( school certifi- cates)? |
marx-capital-1110 | But he can leave that place where the wrong has been committed? |
marx-capital-1110 | Can the labourer,he asks,"merely with his arms and l^s, produce commodities out of nothing? |
marx-capital-1110 | Can you see anything that makes a distinction between one class and the other? |
marx-capital-1110 | Could a man leave by giving 14 days''notice? |
marx-capital-1110 | Do the women smoke? |
marx-capital-1110 | Do they make any attempt of the kind( for providing instruction) by having schools at night? |
marx-capital-1110 | Do you think that the juries would be impartial if they were composed to a con- siderable extent of workmen? |
marx-capital-1110 | Do you think that the women employed about the collieries are less moral than the women employed in the factories? |
marx-capital-1110 | Do you think the mines in your neighborhood are sufficiently in- spected to insure a compliance with the provisions of the Act? |
marx-capital-1110 | Have you ever heard of any workman objecting to employ a boy between 10 and 12, who could not write or read? |
marx-capital-1110 | If the state were to require that every child should be sent to school, would there be schools for the children to go to? |
marx-capital-1110 | If you obtained your wish in getting an inferior class of inspectors appointed, do you think there would be no danger from want of skill,& c? marx-capital-1110 In what respect?" |
marx-capital-1110 | Is there a sufficiency of schools? marx-capital-1110 It is impossible to look at a question of this sort absolutely by itself?" |
marx-capital-1110 | Marked by whom? |
marx-capital-1110 | One great object in summoning a jury is to have an impartial one, is it not? |
marx-capital-1110 | Some of them( the boys) eannot read and write at all, I suppose? |
marx-capital-1110 | Still it is injurious to their morality, you think? |
marx-capital-1110 | That equally applies to agricultural employments, does it not? |
marx-capital-1110 | Then it is your opinion, tkU this provision of the Act as to requiring certificates, is not ge^v erally carried out in the collieries? |
marx-capital-1110 | Then you have a very poor opinion of the integrity of min- ing engineers? |
marx-capital-1110 | There is a pecuUarity of dress? |
marx-capital-1110 | They get black and grimy? |
marx-capital-1110 | What if w » have too much coin? marx-capital-1110 What is the general feeling in the district... as to the em- ployment of women?" |
marx-capital-1110 | Who art thou? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why not? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why should you distinguish them( colliery boys) from other boys? |
marx-capital-1110 | Would it not en- tail very great expense if all these old workings were kept ventilated? marx-capital-1110 Would you call for the interference of Parliament?" |
marx-capital-1110 | Would you interfere in every case with the employment of women where that em- ployment was degrading? |
marx-capital-1110 | Would you lay that obligation upon the colliers only, of all the work people of Great Britain? |
marx-capital-1110 | You do not think there would be a tendency on the part of the workmen to return imf airly severe verdicts? |
marx-capital-1110 | You have not inquired into that subject perhaps? |
marx-capital-1110 | You wish to have a class of sub- inspectors? |
marx-capital-1110 | You would be obliged to stop the employment of women in the ironworks as well, would you not, if you stopped it in the collieries? |
marx-capital-1110 | You would still be prepared, would you,( flint- hearted felkwl)"to prevent their obtaining a livelihood by these means?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ^(). marx-capital-1110 ''Whj not?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ''Is it worth while keeping the machinery in order?'' |
marx-capital-1110 | ''T3ut you are not quite satisfied with the state of morality in the factories?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ''Then why did you put your hand to it?'' |
marx-capital-1110 | ''^* What would the good Dr. Aikin say if he could rise from his grave and see the Manchester of to- day? |
marx-capital-1110 | * Finally, some one may ask why gold is capable of being replaced by tokens that have no value? |
marx-capital-1110 | * Is Fourier wrong when he calls fac- tories"tempered bagnos? |
marx-capital-1110 | * T)o you merely want more inspectors, or do you want a lower class of men as an in- spector? |
marx-capital-1110 | * Terhaps it may be a little difficult to detect irregularities under the relay system; but what of that? |
marx-capital-1110 | * What were the consequences for the Irish labourers left be- hind and freed from the surplus- population? |
marx-capital-1110 | * When you speak of sub- inspectors, do you mean men at a less salary, and of an inferior stamp to die present in- spectors? |
marx-capital-1110 | *"Combien de fois n''avons- notis pas vu, dans certains ateliers, embaucher beaucoop plus d''ouvriers que ne le demandait le travail k mettre en main? |
marx-capital-1110 | *"When a man is in want of a demand, does Mr. Malthus recommend him to pay some other person to take off his goods?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ** What IS a working day? |
marx-capital-1110 | ** What objection do you see to it?" |
marx-capital-1110 | *^Why do you not apply to the inspector?" |
marx-capital-1110 | *^Why; is he a marked man for having complained?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ... En quoi I''effet d*une machine diffire- t- il de celui de nouveaux habitants?" |
marx-capital-1110 | 2gy ierease onr profits? |
marx-capital-1110 | 399 found and blend together two classes of labour, which are striving after division and separation? |
marx-capital-1110 | 545 question^^( of education)? |
marx-capital-1110 | 549 the tube were fraudulently increased, a man could discontinue working hj giving 14 days''notice?" |
marx-capital-1110 | 823 complete change in the right of property, and by what law, or series of laws, was it effected?" |
marx-capital-1110 | 841 labour, brought about? |
marx-capital-1110 | 845 this unfortunate state of things in the colonies? |
marx-capital-1110 | ? |
marx-capital-1110 | ?" |
marx-capital-1110 | And am I to be allowed nothing in return for all this service?" |
marx-capital-1110 | And does not this labour, too, create value?'''' |
marx-capital-1110 | And first,''those that ye thinke should have no loase thereby? |
marx-capital-1110 | And for what is the gold exchanged? |
marx-capital-1110 | And how do we measure the quantity of this value? |
marx-capital-1110 | And how does he fare in the mill? |
marx-capital-1110 | And how? |
marx-capital-1110 | And in addition a willing help at the festive board? |
marx-capital-1110 | And now Hussey Vivian( himself an exploiter of mines) asks:"Would not the opinicm of Ihe workman depend upon the poverty of tho workman''s family?" |
marx-capital-1110 | And of what does this surplus- product consist? |
marx-capital-1110 | And to whom do they sell? |
marx-capital-1110 | And what is the great trump- card that they play? |
marx-capital-1110 | And what sort of workmanship could we ex- pect from such hard- driven animals? |
marx-capital-1110 | And what, if you please, is this"legitimate part,"which on your own showing the capitalist in Europe daily neglects to pay? |
marx-capital-1110 | And whether it had been otherwiaa possible for England, to have carried on her Woollen Manufacture to so great a per- fection? |
marx-capital-1110 | And why not? |
marx-capital-1110 | And why not? |
marx-capital-1110 | And why should not the workpeople eat their dinner before 9 in the morning? |
marx-capital-1110 | And why? |
marx-capital-1110 | Answer:"C''est ce qu''une chose vaut,"and what is"prix? |
marx-capital-1110 | Bi- monthly Over- land Summary of news, July 22nd.. Calcutta(?) |
marx-capital-1110 | But for what is the com- modity exchanged? |
marx-capital-1110 | But if all his brother capitalists were to do the same, where would he find his commodities in the mar- ket? |
marx-capital-1110 | But now comes that reviv?'' |
marx-capital-1110 | But suppose his product turn out a real use- value, and thereby attracts money? |
marx-capital-1110 | But the rate of profit §.=412? |
marx-capital-1110 | But what is a working day? |
marx-capital-1110 | But what is the cost of production — of the labourer, i.e., the cost of producing or re- producing the labourer himself? |
marx-capital-1110 | But what is the value of a commodity? |
marx-capital-1110 | But whence does the profit come, if the capitalist sells the commodities at cost price? |
marx-capital-1110 | But where do you come from, then? |
marx-capital-1110 | By how much? |
marx-capital-1110 | By the quantity of the labour contained in it How then is the value, e.g., of a 12 hours''working day to be determined? |
marx-capital-1110 | Creation of Tain? |
marx-capital-1110 | Did I not supply him with the materials, by means of which, and in which alone^ his labour could be embodied? |
marx-capital-1110 | Does an operative in a cotton*factory produce nothing but cotton goods? |
marx-capital-1110 | Does not the history of the productive organs of man, of or- gans that are the material basis of all social organisation, deserve equal attention? |
marx-capital-1110 | Finally,"Are not you workmen in Lancashire able to take care of your own interests without calling in the Government to help you?" |
marx-capital-1110 | For instance, 40 yards of linen are worth — what? |
marx-capital-1110 | Have I not performed the labour of superintendence and of overlooking the spinner? |
marx-capital-1110 | He adds maliciously:"We were ready enough to interfere for the employer, can nodung aow be done for the employed?" |
marx-capital-1110 | How can this purely formal distinction between these processes change their character as it were by magic? |
marx-capital-1110 | How comes it^ however^ that a great number, we might say, a great majority, of labourers, live in a more economical way? |
marx-capital-1110 | How far may the workinp day be e"^- tended beyond the working time necessary for the reproduction of labour- power itself? |
marx-capital-1110 | How long a time? |
marx-capital-1110 | How long is it since economy discarded the physiocratic illusion^ that rents grow out of the soil and not out of society? |
marx-capital-1110 | How then can the spinner produce in one hour, in the shape of yam, a value that embodies 6f hours labour? |
marx-capital-1110 | How then to find this price, 1.6., the money- value of a given quantity of labour? |
marx-capital-1110 | How will its internal economy be oared for? |
marx-capital-1110 | How, then, is the magnitude of this value to be measured? |
marx-capital-1110 | How, then, to heal the anti- oapitalistic cancer of the colon- ies? |
marx-capital-1110 | If there is none, but all happens to be in coin, what then? |
marx-capital-1110 | In 1835"( query — 1815 or 1825?) |
marx-capital-1110 | In the former case, it is a question of How and What, in the latter of How much? |
marx-capital-1110 | Is it a scientific advance to make cowardly concessions to public opinion? |
marx-capital-1110 | Is it not as salutary in surgery, as it is knowing in anatomy? |
marx-capital-1110 | Is not the real interest of the nation similar? |
marx-capital-1110 | Is there any want here- foro of potters? |
marx-capital-1110 | It is brought about by labour; but how? |
marx-capital-1110 | It loses exchange- value, either by mad? |
marx-capital-1110 | Knight: What is the next sort that ye say would win by t? |
marx-capital-1110 | Knight: What sorte b that which, ye sayde should have greater losse hereby, than these men had profit? |
marx-capital-1110 | Labour? |
marx-capital-1110 | Marx, or not? |
marx-capital-1110 | Must we, for such a temporary inconvenience, abolish the use of the knife? |
marx-capital-1110 | No; it is very small Kent? |
marx-capital-1110 | Now, in what manner does every labourer add new labour and consequently new value? |
marx-capital-1110 | Occupied with the difference between one valeur? |
marx-capital-1110 | Ol? |
marx-capital-1110 | On account of the garden? |
marx-capital-1110 | Only consider 1 where would agriculture and trade be without the knife? |
marx-capital-1110 | Or superfluous wealth that does not exist? |
marx-capital-1110 | Or, why can not pri> vate labour — labour for the account of private individuals — be treated as its oppo* site, immediate social labour? |
marx-capital-1110 | Our friend, up to this time so purse- proud, suddenly assumes the modest demeanour of his own workman, and exclaims:^^Have I myself not worked? |
marx-capital-1110 | Ques- tion: Has not the use of the power- loom superseded the use of the hand- loom? |
marx-capital-1110 | Question: What is an industrial product? |
marx-capital-1110 | RELA.OTIOIT''OF THB AGEICTTLTUBAL KBVOLUTIOl? |
marx-capital-1110 | Say; what is"valeur?" |
marx-capital-1110 | THE WORKING DAY, BEOnOl? |
marx-capital-1110 | The bed- room is a garret; the walls run together into the roof like a sugar- loaf, a dormer- window opening in front^''Why did he live here? |
marx-capital-1110 | The main question:''^ow is the price of labour determined?" |
marx-capital-1110 | The original capital was formed by the advance of £ 10,000, How did the owner become possessed of it? |
marx-capital-1110 | The question I would put then is this —^Is the trade worth retain- ing? |
marx-capital-1110 | The question arises, how much will it attract? |
marx-capital-1110 | The ratio Surpltis- labour Surplus- value xi_ j? |
marx-capital-1110 | The report of the Commission trusts that''^a manufacture which has assumed so prominent a place in the whole world, will not long b? |
marx-capital-1110 | This same bourgeois is not ashamed to put this ques- tion:^^o you not think that the mine owner also suffers loss from an explosion?" |
marx-capital-1110 | Thus much of this, will make black white; foul, fair; Wrong right; base, noble; old, yotmg; coward, valiant* • • • What this, yon gods? |
marx-capital-1110 | To economise what? |
marx-capital-1110 | We may form an idea of the stupendous nature of th? |
marx-capital-1110 | Well, but has not the labourer rendered him the equivalent service of changing his cotton and spindle into yam? |
marx-capital-1110 | What becomes of the production of wage- labourers, supernumerary in proportion to the accumula- tion of capital? |
marx-capital-1110 | What do these people want, who cry out for money? |
marx-capital-1110 | What does the primitive accumulation of capital,%.e., its his- torical genesis, resolve itself into? |
marx-capital-1110 | What does this equa- tion tell us? |
marx-capital-1110 | What has this been owing to? |
marx-capital-1110 | What is that equal something, that common substance, which admits of the value of the beds being expressed by a house? |
marx-capital-1110 | What is the length of time during which capital may consume the labour- power whose daily value it buys? |
marx-capital-1110 | What, first of all, practically concerns producers when they make an exchange, is the question, how much of some other product they get for their own? |
marx-capital-1110 | What, on the other hand, characterises division of labour in manufac- tures? |
marx-capital-1110 | Whence arose the illusions of the monetary sys- tem? |
marx-capital-1110 | Whence this difference in their values? |
marx-capital-1110 | Who are the consumers?" |
marx-capital-1110 | Who will look after the young childrai% Who will get ready the meals, do the washing and mending? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why can not he get a price? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why could not boys learn their handicraft in the day- time? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why do n''t you ask further, where « re the independent weavers, spinnen^^ad ATtitattt gone? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why does gold take the form of money face to face with the linen? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why? |
marx-capital-1110 | Why? |
marx-capital-1110 | Wh«ioe then is to come the internal market for capital? |
marx-capital-1110 | Would he otherwise sell it? |
marx-capital-1110 | You must lay down a general rule? |
marx-capital-1110 | Your reason? |
marx-capital-1110 | ]: mais ne vaudrait- il pas mieux qua ni les uns ni les autres p^rissent?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ^ Was not Dr. Andrew Ure right in crying down the 12 hours''bill of 1833 as a retrogres- sion to the times of the dark ages? |
marx-capital-1110 | ^ Would you prohibit the employment of women in factories also?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ^''Who are the people who are generally summoned upon these juries?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ^1)oes there appear to be any desire on the part of the employers that the boys should have such hours as to enable them to go to school?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ^Would you have the jury composed of persons who had been employed in mining?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ^^What care our great encroachers?" |
marx-capital-1110 | ^^Why should education be more valuable to them than to other classes of lads?" |
marx-capital-1110 | a day for the good of the family? |
marx-capital-1110 | a week)?" |
marx-capital-1110 | after Abel, Where are our thousands of freeholders gone? |
marx-capital-1110 | can really be effectual unless the population themselves assist in putting it into opera- tion?" |
marx-capital-1110 | he may be regarded as lending the difference(?) |
marx-capital-1110 | iflts? |
marx-capital-1110 | in it The question therefore arises^ how much mon^ this sphere constantly absorbs? |
marx-capital-1110 | in what proportions the pro- ducts are exchangeable? |
marx-capital-1110 | is well secured, to live without money than without poor; for who would do the work? |
marx-capital-1110 | it that forms the bond between the independent labours of the cattle- breeder, the tanner, and the shoemaker? |
marx-capital-1110 | of all the mutual relations of commodity- owners, as far as they are determined by their commodities? |
marx-capital-1110 | per we^ Near his work? |
marx-capital-1110 | they would report to the chief inspector, who would then bring his scientific knowledge to bear on the facts they have stated? |
marx-capital-1110 | • is this a merely speculative objection?" |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ( strophe 2) The wretch accurst, what were his gifts? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AGAMEMNON Can it be thou wilt reverence a dead foe? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AGAMEMNON Do you then praise such friends as worth the winning? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AGAMEMNON Is it you, they tell me, have dared to stretch your lips In savage raillery against us, unpunished? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AGAMEMNON Shouldst thou not also trample on him when dead? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AGAMEMNON Thou, Odysseus, champion him thus against me? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AGAMEMNON You bid me then permit these funeral rites? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AJAX During my late affliction, is that thy meaning? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AJAX Is the man coming? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AJAX Teucer, come!-Where is Teucer? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AJAX Till bound fast to a pillar beneath my roof- ATHENA What evil wilt thou inflict on the poor wretch? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AJAX Why is his coming then so long delayed? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | AJAX Wouldst thou know where is that accursed fox? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ATHENA Against the Atreidae didst thou arm thy hand? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ATHENA Seest thou, Odysseus, how great the strength of gods? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ATHENA Till thou hast done what, gained what further vantage? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ATHENA To look upon a madman art thou afeard? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ATHENA To mock foes, is not that the sweetest mockery? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ATHENA What dost thou dread? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Ah me, what shall I do? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Ah me, what shall I do? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Alas, child, what shall I do? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Among the Greeks are there no men but he? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | And I fear, from some god came This stroke; how else? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | And what know you of this thing? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | And what should I now do, who manifestly To Heaven am hateful; whom the Greeks abhor, Whom every Trojan hates, and this whole land? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | And what then of Laertes''son? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | And who am I that I should not learn wisdom? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Are not these monstrous taunts to hear from slaves? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Are there not here two woes instead of one? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Are we undone? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Being such, do you reproach me with my lineage? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | But I rebuked him, saying:"What doest thou, Ajax? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | But now tell me this: Hast thou dyed well thy sword in the Argive host? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | But say- His child- where shall I find him? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | But where is Ajax? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | CHORUS To what evil change from the day''s woe now Has night given birth? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | CHORUS( chanting) Ah me, at what dost thou hint? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | CHORUS( chanting) Whose cry was it that broke from yonder copse? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | CHORUS( singing, strophe 1) When will this agony draw to a close? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | CHORUS( singing, strophe) From whom, oh from whom? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Did he not sail as his own master, freely? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Did he reach his goal? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Do I speak riddles? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Do we not owe Remembrance, where we have met with any joy? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | For it beseems me in his cause to die In sight of all, rather than for the sake Of your wife- or your brother''s should I say? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | For no runaway''s lot did he cast in, No lump of clammy earth, but such that first It should leap lightly from the crested helm? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | From whom has he learned this? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Has he heard thy call? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Heard you not? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | How are you his chieftain? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | How could I endure such wrong? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | How draw thee, brother, From this fell sword, on whose bright murderous point Thou hast breathed out thy soul? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | How else? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | How have you the right To lord it o''er the folk he brought from home? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | How will he find heart to look On me, stripped of my championship in war, That mighty crown of fame that once was his? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | In what plight does he stand? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Is it Teucer''s voice I hear Lifting a dirge over this tragic sight? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Know you not that of old your father''s father Was Pelops, a barbarian, and a Phrygian? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Know''st thou not that I To the gods owe no duty any more? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | LEADER But how did this bane first alight upon him? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | LEADER By whose hand has he wrought this luckless deed? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | LEADER What is it? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | LEADER What mean thy words? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | LEADER What prophecy? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | LEADER What urgent need has been neglected here? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | LEADER Why still be afflicted, now the deed is done past cure? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | LEADER Yes, Teucer, while he lived, did he not charge thee To guard his son from harm, as now thou dost? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | MENELAUS Is it right that my assassin should be honoured? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | MENELAUS What, I rebel against the laws of heaven? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS And for whom should I work, if not myself? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS And why did he so brandish a frenzied hand? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS Dear mistress, do I labour to good purpose? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS Did he come near us? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS How shameful? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS How so, if still with the same eyes he sees? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS May now a friend speak out the truth, yet still As ever ply his oar in stroke with thine? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS Was this outrage designed against the Greeks? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS What bold scheme could inspire such reckless daring? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS What dost thou, Athena? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS What has he done thee whereby thou art wronged? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS What is it, friends? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS What then withheld his eager hand from bloodshed? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | ODYSSEUS Why then upon the flocks did he make this onslaught? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Or did the bronze- clad Demon of battle, aggrieved On him who scorned the might of his succouring spear, Plot revenge by nightly deception? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Or has he escaped thee? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Or when again chosen by lot, unbidden, Alone in single combat he met Hector? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | SEMI- CHORUS 1( chanting) Well how now? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | SEMI- CHORUS 1( chanting) You have found nought? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Seest thou not to what woe thou art sunk? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Shall I desert the beached ships, and abandoning The Atreidae, sail home o''er the Aegean sea? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Shall I then assault Troy''s fortress, and alone against them all Achieve some glorious exploit and then die? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | So slight is thy regard for thine ally? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TECMESSA Ah me, what sayest thou, man? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TECMESSA And where is Teucer, and why speaks he thus? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TECMESSA O my lord Ajax, what art thou purposing? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TECMESSA Since that is so, what shall I do to serve thee? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TECMESSA Why alas do you break my rest again After brief respite from relentless woes? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TECMESSA Wilt thou not heed? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TEUCER Assassin? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TEUCER Did Ajax ever confront you as your foe? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TEUCER For what cause do you waste such swelling words? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TEUCER O brother Ajax, to mine eyes most dear, Can it be thou hast fared as rumour tells? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | TEUCER What chieftain of the host do you behold? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | That your sire Atreus set before his brother A feast most impious of his own children''s flesh? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Took him to be a champion of the Greeks? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Was he not once a man? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Was it not he, who nowhere So much as stood beside thee, so thou sayest? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Was it not some Erinys forged this sword, And Hades the grim craftsman wrought that girdle? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | What cared he for nobodies? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | What friend shall lift thee? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | What joy can be in day that follows day, Bringing us close then snatching us from death? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | What ruthless, unspeakable wrong From the Atreidae fearest thou? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | What was this man whose praise you vaunt so loudly? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | What wealth? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | What will he keep back? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | When will it cease, the last of our years of exile? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | When, when again Shall joy befall me? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Where have not my footsteps been? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Where is Teucer? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Where, where Lieth the fatally named, intractable Ajax? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Whither seek for rest? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Whither should I then flee? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Whither went he, or where stood he, where I was not? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Whither, among what people, shall I go, Who in thy troubles failed to give thee succour? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Who checked this ruin? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Who ever would have thought my name Would harmonise so aptly with my woes? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Whom couldst thou find more prudent than this man, Or whom in act more valiant, when need called? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Why then should they deride him? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Why thus uncalled wouldst thou go forth? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Why, when thou art dead, should I live on? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | With what face shall I appear before my father Telamon? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Without thee then what fatherland were mine? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Would you deny he acted nobly there? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | Wretch, with what face can you fling forth such taunts? |
sophocles-ajax-1332 | You say you brought him hither? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | ALL Where shall we go? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Ah, good Demetrius, wilt thou give him me? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | All school- days''friendship, childhood innocence? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Am not I Hermia? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | And are you grown so high in his esteem; Because I am so dwarfish and so low? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | And made your other love, Demetrius, Who even but now did spurn me with his foot, To call me goddess, nymph, divine and rare, Precious, celestial? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | And make him with fair AEgle break his faith, With Ariadne and Antiopa? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | And will you rent our ancient love asunder, To join with men in scorning your poor friend? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | BOTTOM Peter Quince,-- QUINCE What sayest thou, bully Bottom? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | BOTTOM What do you see? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | BOTTOM What is Pyramus? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | BOTTOM Where''s Peaseblossom? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | But hast thou yet latch''d the Athenian''s eyes With the love- juice, as I did bid thee do? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | But speak, Egeus; is not this the day That Hermia should give answer of her choice? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | But what of that? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | But what see I? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | But who is here? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Can you not hate me, as I know you do, But you must join in souls to mock me too? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Come, my Hippolyta: what cheer, my love? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Could not a worm, an adder, do so much? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Coward, why comest thou not? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | DEMETRIUS An if I could, what should I get therefore? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | DEMETRIUS And thus she means, videlicet:-- Thisbe Asleep, my love? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | DEMETRIUS Are you sure That we are awake? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | DEMETRIUS Do I entice you? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | DEMETRIUS O, why rebuke you him that loves you so? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | DEMETRIUS Yea, art thou there? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Dead, dead? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Dead? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Did not you tell me I should know the man By the Athenian garment be had on? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Didst thou not lead him through the glimmering night From Perigenia, whom he ravished? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Do not you think The duke was here, and bid us follow him? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Durst thou have look''d upon him being awake, And hast thou kill''d him sleeping? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Eyes, do you see? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | FLUTE If he come not, then the play is marred: it goes not forward, doth it? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | FLUTE What is Thisby? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HELENA Call you me fair? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HELENA Do not say so, Lysander; say not so What though he love your Hermia? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HELENA Have you not set Lysander, as in scorn, To follow me and praise my eyes and face? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HELENA O, wilt thou darkling leave me? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HELENA Wherefore was I to this keen mockery born? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA Do you not jest? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA Lysander, whereto tends all this? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA Puppet? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA What love could press Lysander from my side? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA What''s this to my Lysander? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA What, can you do me greater harm than hate? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA What, with Lysander? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA Why are you grown so rude? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HERMIA Why, get you gone: who is''t that hinders you? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | HIPPOLYTA How chance Moonshine is gone before Thisbe comes back and finds her lover? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Hast thou slain him, then? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Have you conspired, have you with these contrived To bait me with this foul derision? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Have you no modesty, no maiden shame, No touch of bashfulness? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How answer you that? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How came her eyes so bright? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How can it be? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How can these things in me seem scorn to you, Bearing the badge of faith, to prove them true? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How chance the roses there do fade so fast? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How is it else the man i''the moon? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How low am I, thou painted maypole? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How shall we beguile The lazy time, if not with some delight? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | How shall we find the concord of this discord? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | In some bush? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Is there no play, To ease the anguish of a torturing hour? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | LYSANDER What, should I hurt her, strike her, kill her dead? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | LYSANDER Why should he stay, whom love doth press to go? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Lord, what though? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | MUSTARDSEED What''s your Will? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Night and silence.--Who is here? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | No? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Not Hermia but Helena I love: Who will not change a raven for a dove? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | OBERON Do you amend it then; it lies in you: Why should Titania cross her Oberon? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | OBERON How canst thou thus for shame, Titania, Glance at my credit with Hippolyta, Knowing I know thy love to Theseus? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | OBERON How long within this wood intend you stay? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | OBERON Tarry, rash wanton: am not I thy lord? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Or, rather, do I not in plainest truth Tell you, I do not, nor I can not love you? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | PUCK Thou coward, art thou bragging to the stars, Telling the bushes that thou look''st for wars, And wilt not come? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Pyramus O wherefore, Nature, didst thou lions frame? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Pyramus Wilt thou at Ninny''s tomb meet me straightway? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Quite dumb? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | SNOUT Doth the moon shine that night we play our play? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | SNOUT Will not the ladies be afeard of the lion? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | SNUG Have you the lion''s part written? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Saint Valentine is past: Begin these wood- birds but to couple now? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | See''st thou this sweet sight? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Shall we their fond pageant see? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Since night you loved me; yet since night you left me: Why, then you left me-- O, the gods forbid!-- In earnest, shall I say? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | THESEUS Come now; what masques, what dances shall we have, To wear away this long age of three hours Between our after- supper and bed- time? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | THESEUS Say, what abridgement have you for this evening? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | THESEUS Thanks, good Egeus: what''s the news with thee? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | THESEUS What are they that do play it? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | THESEUS What say you, Hermia? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | THESEUS Would you desire lime and hair to speak better? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | TITANIA How came these things to pass? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | TITANIA What, wilt thou hear some music, my sweet love? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | The sun was not so true unto the day As he to me: would he have stolen away From sleeping Hermia? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | These vows are Hermia''s: will you give her o''er? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Those that Hobgoblin call you and sweet Puck, You do their work, and they shall have good luck: Are not you he? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Thou art not by mine eye, Lysander, found; Mine ear, I thank it, brought me to thy sound But why unkindly didst thou leave me so? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | To what, my love, shall I compare thine eyne? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What beard were I best to play it in? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What masque? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What night- rule now about this haunted grove? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What revels are in hand? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What say you, Bottom? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What thought I be not so in grace as you, So hung upon with love, so fortunate, But miserable most, to love unloved? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What wicked and dissembling glass of mine Made me compare with Hermia''s sphery eyne? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What worser place can I beg in your love,-- And yet a place of high respect with me,-- Than to be used as you use your dog? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What, dead, my dove? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What, out of hearing? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | What, will you tear Impatient answers from my gentle tongue? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | When at your hands did I deserve this scorn? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where art thou now? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where art thou? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where dost thou hide thy head? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where is Demetrius? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where is Lysander and fair Hermia? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where is my love? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where is our usual manager of mirth? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where''s Mounsieur Cobweb? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Where''s Mounsieur Mustardseed? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Wherefore speaks he this To her he hates? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Who is next? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Why art thou here, Come from the farthest Steppe of India? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Why seek''st thou me? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Why will you suffer her to flout me thus? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Will it please you to see the epilogue, or to hear a Bergomask dance between two of our company? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Your name, I beseech you, sir? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | Your name, honest gentleman? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Enter BOTTOM] BOTTOM Where are these lads? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Enter LYSANDER and HELENA] LYSANDER Why should you think that I should woo in scorn? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Enter PUCK behind] PUCK What hempen home- spuns have we swaggering here, So near the cradle of the fairy queen? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Enter QUINCE, FLUTE, SNOUT, and STARVELING] QUINCE Have you sent to Bottom''s house? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Enter QUINCE, SNUG, BOTTOM, FLUTE, SNOUT, and STARVELING] BOTTOM Are we all met? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Enter QUINCE, SNUG, BOTTOM, FLUTE, SNOUT, and STARVELING] QUINCE Is all our company here? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Exit] BOTTOM Why do they run away? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Exit] FLUTE Must I speak now? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Lies down and sleeps] OBERON What hast thou done? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Lies down and sleeps] PUCK Yet but three? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Re- enter LYSANDER] LYSANDER Where art thou, proud Demetrius? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | [ Re- enter PUCK] Hast thou the flower there? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | a lover, or a tyrant? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | a wandering knight? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | and wherefore doth Lysander Deny your love, so rich within his soul, And tender me, forsooth, affection, But by your setting on, by your consent? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | are not you Lysander? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | could not this make thee know, The hate I bear thee made me leave thee so? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | do I speak you fair? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | gone? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | is he come home yet? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | no sound, no word? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | or asleep? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | speak again: Thou runaway, thou coward, art thou fled? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | speak; How low am I? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | what change is this? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | what do I see on thee? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | what music? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | what nymphs are these? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | what, have you come by night And stolen my love''s heart from him? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | what, removed? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | where are these hearts? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | where is he? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | wherefore? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | whither away? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | whither wander you? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | who would give a bird the lie, though he cry''cuckoo''never so? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | why is your cheek so pale? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | why so? |
shakespeare-midsummer-3253 | you see an asshead of your own, do you? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | ( Enter LICHAS) LICHAS Lady, what message shall I bear to Heracles? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | ( To IOLE) Ah, hapless girl, say, who art thou? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | ( antistrophe 1) Oh, will no one come and sever the head, at one fierce stroke, from this wretched body? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | ( strophe 2) Where art thou touching me? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | A maiden, or a mother? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | And how, then, are they bringing him? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | And since''tis this same black venom in the blood that hath passed out through the wound of Nessus, must it not kill my lord also? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | But then to live with her, sharing the same union- what woman could endure it? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | But, when this bride was to be won, who were the valiant rivals that entered the contest for her hand? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | CHORUS Sawest thou that violent deed, poor helpless one? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | CHORUS Speak, woman, how hath she met her doom? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | CHORUS What dost thou tell us? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | CHORUS What fury, what pangs of frenzy have cut her off by the edge of a dire weapon? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | CHORUS Whence came it? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | CHORUS( singing, strophe 1) Which woe shall I bewail first, which misery is the greater? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Ah, maidens, what am I to do? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Ah, my son, what cause have I given thee to abhor me? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA And in what region, my child, doth rumour place him? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA And then thou hast seen the greeting given to the stranger maiden- thou knowest how I welcomed her? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA And these- who are they, I pray thee, and whose daughters? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA And thou hast not heard her name from any of her companions? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA And where didst thou find him,- where didst thou stand at his side? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA And why is he not here, if he brings good news? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Can she be of royal race? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA How sayest thou? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA In payment of a vow, or at the bidding of an oracle? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Knowest thou, my son, that he hath left with me sure oracles touching that land? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA O best of friends, tell me first what first I would know,- shall I receive Heracles alive? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Shall I call those others back? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Was it the war against that city which kept him away so long, beyond all forecast, past all count of days? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA What citizen or stranger hath told thee this? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA What means this? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA What more, then, is there for thee to tell? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA What news is this, old man, that thou hast told me? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA What saidst thou, my son? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Where, tell me- at home, or on foreign soil? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Where, then, is he reported to be now,- alive or dead? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Wilt thou indeed give me the honest truth? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | DEIANEIRA Yea, have I not the fullest reason to rejoice at these tidings of my lord''s happy fortune? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Didst thou not say on thine oath that thou wast bringing her us a bride for Heracles? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | For how shall he who beholds not the light have toilsome servitude any more beyond the grave? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HERACLES And the heaping of the pyre, as I have bidden? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HERACLES And what Trachinian deals in spells so potent? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HERACLES By whose hand? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HERACLES Is it a good deed, thou wretch, to have slain thy sire? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HERACLES Knowest thou, then, the girl whose sire was Eurytus? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HERACLES Well, thou knowest the summit of Oeta, sacred to Zeus? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HERACLES( awaking) O Zeus, to what land have I come? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HERACLES( strophe 3) O my son, where art thou? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS A word that shall not fail of fulfilment; for who may undo that which bath come to pass? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS Ah me, it is not well to be angry with a sick man: but who could bear to see him in such a mind? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS Alas, my father, what hast thou spoken? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS And how, by enkindling thy body, shall I heal it? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS But must I learn, then, to be impious, my father? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS Dost thou command me, then, to do this deed, as a clear duty? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS For what purpose dost thou insist upon his pledge? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS How sayest thou, old man- is he alive? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS How, mother? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS To do what deed? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | HYLLUS What are they, mother? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Had Eurytus a daughter? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | How contrived she this death, following death,- all wrought by her alone? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | How was it done? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | In what plight do I stand? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Is she nameless, then, as her convoy sware? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | It hath seized me,- oh, the pest comes again!- Whence are ye, most ungrateful of all the Greeks? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Knowest thou not that such silence pleads for thine accuser? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LEADER Aged woman, what new mischance hast thou to tell? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LEADER And could a woman''s hand dare to do such deeds? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LEADER Dead, hapless one? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LEADER It is nothing, surely, that concerns thy gift to Heracles? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LEADER OF ONE SEMI- CHORUS Is it fancy, or do I hear some cry of grief just passing through the house? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LEADER Thou speakest not of death? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LEADER What hath happened, Deianeira, daughter of Oeneus? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LEADER( to DEIANEIRA) Why dost thou depart in silence? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LICHAS And thou- what dost thou mean by such a question? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LICHAS Failing in duty? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LICHAS How should I know? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LICHAS I? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LICHAS Said it to whom? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LICHAS What are thy commands? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LICHAS Yes, be great Zeus my witness,- in anything that I know, DEIANEIRA Who is the woman, then, whom thou hast brought? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | LICHAS Yes; but why dost thou ask? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Lichas, whose daughter is this stranger? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Lives there the man who would make such choice, unless he were maddened by avenging fiends? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | MESSENGER And I, shall I wait here? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | MESSENGER Sirrah, look at me:- to whom art thou speaking, think''st thou? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | MESSENGER That captive, whom thou hast brought home- thou knowest whom mean? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | MESSENGER The very word that I wished to hear from thee:- thou sayest that she is thy queen? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | MESSENGER Well, saidst thou not that thy prisoner- she, on whom thy gaze now turns so vacantly- was Iole, daughter of Eurytus? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | MESSENGER Well, then, what art thou prepared to suffer, if found guilty of failing in that duty? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | May this also be told? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Not to learn the truth,-that, indeed, would pain me; but to know it- what is there terrible in that? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | OLD MAN( to HYLLUS) Knew I not how much better it was that thou shouldest keep silence, instead of scaring slumber from his brain and eyes? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Or what is thy pleasure? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Or wilt thou speak before me and these maidens? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Say, what was the manner of her death? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | So would I wish thee also, the Queen, to keep that prospect ever in thy thoughts; for when hath Zeus been found so careless of his children? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | So, my child, when his fate is thus trembling in the scale, wilt thou not go to succour him? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | They are not wise, then, who stand forth to buffet against Love; for Love rules the gods as he will, and me; and why not another woman, such as I am? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Thou glorious lord of flashing light, say, is he threading the straits of the sea, or hath he found an abode on either continent? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | What are we to think; that he is dead, or sleeping? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | What can I do? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | What dark saying is this? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | What is this? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | What secret bane have received beneath my roof? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | What- hast thou dared to breathe her name again in my hearing,- the name of the mother who hath slain thy sire? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | When she alone is to blame for my mother''s death, and for thy present plight besides? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Where is the charmer, where is the cunning healer, save Zeus alone, that shall lull this plague to rest? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Whither shall I turn? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Whither wouldst thou turn me? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Who and where is the man that will be thy witness to hearing this from me? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Who are these among whom I lie, tortured with unending agonies? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Who is her mother, who her sire? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Who is thy warranty for charging me with a deed so terrible? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Who went forth to the ordeal of battle, to the fierce blows and the blinding dust? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Why or wherefore should the monster, in his death- throes, have shown good will to me, on whose account he was dying? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Why should the name of mother bring her a semblance of respect, when she is all unlike a mother in her deeds? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Why should''st thou ask me? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | Why wouldest thou stay my departure? |
sophocles-trachiniae-1960 | bringing a bride?- In the name of the gods, dear mistress, tell me who this stranger may be? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ADRIAN Carthage? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ADRIAN''Widow Dido''said you? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ALONSO A daughter? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ALONSO And Trinculo is reeling ripe: where should they Find this grand liquor that hath gilded''em? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ALONSO Heard you this, Gonzalo? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ALONSO Is not this Stephano, my drunken butler? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ALONSO What is this maid with whom thou wast at play? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO A space whose every cubit Seems to cry out,''How shall that Claribel Measure us back to Naples? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO And how does your content Tender your own good fortune? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO Ay, sir; where lies that? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO Do you not hear me speak? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO If but one of his pockets could speak, would it not say he lies? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO Then, tell me, Who''s the next heir of Naples? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO What impossible matter will he make easy next? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO Where is the master, boatswain? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ANTONIO Which, of he or Adrian, for a good wager, first begins to crow? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ARIEL Is there more toil? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ARIEL Presently? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | ARIEL[ Aside to PROSPERO] Was''t well done? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | And art thou living, Stephano? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | And now, I pray you, sir, For still''tis beating in my mind, your reason For raising this sea- storm? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Boatswain Do you not hear him? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Boatswain Here, master: what cheer? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Boatswain What, must our mouths be cold? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | But art thou not drowned, Stephano? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | But how is it That this lives in thy mind? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | But how should Prospero Be living and be here? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | But was not this nigh shore? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | CALIBAN Art thou afeard? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | CALIBAN Hast thou not dropp''d from heaven? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | CALIBAN How does thy honour? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | CALIBAN The dropsy drown this fool I what do you mean To dote thus on such luggage? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | CALIBAN Thou makest me merry; I am full of pleasure: Let us be jocund: will you troll the catch You taught me but while- ere? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | CALIBAN Within this half hour will he be asleep: Wilt thou destroy him then? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | CERES Tell me, heavenly bow, If Venus or her son, as thou dost know, Do now attend the queen? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Canst thou bring me to the party? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Canst thou remember A time before we came unto this cell? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Do you hear, monster? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Do you love me, master? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Do you put tricks upon''s with savages and men of Ind, ha? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Do you understand me? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Dost thou like the plot, Trinculo? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | FERDINAND Where should this music be? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | FERDINAND Wherefore weep you? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | GONZALO And were the king on''t, what would I do? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | GONZALO And,--do you mark me, sir? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | GONZALO If in Naples I should report this now, would they believe me? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | GONZALO Is not, sir, my doublet as fresh as the first day I wore it? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | GONZALO Was Milan thrust from Milan, that his issue Should become kings of Naples? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | GONZALO What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | GONZALO When I wore it at your daughter''s marriage? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Had I not Four or five women once that tended me? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Hast thou forgot The foul witch Sycorax, who with age and envy Was grown into a hoop? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Hast thou no mouth by land? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Have we devils here? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Have you a mind to sink? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | How came that widow in? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | How camest thou hither? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | How camest thou in this pickle? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | How camest thou to be the siege of this moon- calf? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | How''s the day? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | I do beseech you-- Chiefly that I might set it in my prayers-- What is your name? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | I say, My foot my tutor? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | If you be maid or no? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Is not this true? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Is the storm overblown? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | MIRANDA Do you love me? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | MIRANDA How came we ashore? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | MIRANDA My husband, then? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | MIRANDA Sir, are not you my father? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | MIRANDA What is''t? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | MIRANDA Wherefore did they not That hour destroy us? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | MIRANDA Why speaks my father so ungently? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | May I be bold To think these spirits? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Mistress line, is not this my jerkin? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Now, blasphemy, That swear''st grace o''erboard, not an oath on shore? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | O thou mine heir Of Naples and of Milan, what strange fish Hath made his meal on thee? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Or blessed was''t we did? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Out o''your wits and bearing too? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO Before the time be out? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO But are they, Ariel, safe? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO By what? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO Dost thou forget From what a torment I did free thee? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO Dost thou think so, spirit? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO Hast thou, spirit, Perform''d to point the tempest that I bade thee? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO How now? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO How? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO O, was she so? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO Say again, where didst thou leave these varlets? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO What? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | PROSPERO You''ld be king o''the isle, sirrah? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | SEBASTIAN But, for your conscience? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | SEBASTIAN Foul weather? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | SEBASTIAN He is drunk now: where had he wine? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | SEBASTIAN No marrying''mong his subjects? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | SEBASTIAN What if he had said''widower AEneas''too? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | SEBASTIAN What, art thou waking? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | SEBASTIAN Whiles we stood here securing your repose, Even now, we heard a hollow burst of bellowing Like bulls, or rather lions: did''t not wake you? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | SEBASTIAN Why Doth it not then our eyelids sink? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | STEPHANO Didst thou not say he lied? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | STEPHANO Do I so? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | STEPHANO Doth thy other mouth call me? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | STEPHANO How didst thou''scape? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | STEPHANO How now shall this be compassed? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | STEPHANO Is it so brave a lass? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | STEPHANO What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Say, how came you hither? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Say, my spirit, How fares the king and''s followers? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Shall we give o''er and drown? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Shrug''st thou, malice? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | TRINCULO Where should they be set else? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | TRINCULO Why, what did I? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | TRINCULO Wilt come? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | The wager? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Thy false uncle-- Dost thou attend me? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What cares these roarers for the name of king? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What foul play had we, that we came from thence? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What have we here? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What is it thou didst say? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What is the news? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What is the time o''the day? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What is''t thou canst demand? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What might, Worthy Sebastian? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What seest thou else In the dark backward and abysm of time? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What shall I do? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What things are these, my lord Antonio? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What were these? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What wert thou, if the King of Naples heard thee? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | What''s thy pleasure? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | When did you lose your daughter? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | When we were boys, Who would believe that there were mountaineers Dew- lapp''d like bulls, whose throats had hanging at''em Wallets of flesh? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Where the devil should he learn our language? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Where was she born? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Where''s the master? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Wherefore this ghastly looking? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Who was so firm, so constant, that this coil Would not infect his reason? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Why are you drawn? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Why, thou deboshed fish thou, was there ever man a coward that hath drunk so much sack as I to- day? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Will money buy''em? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Will you grant with me That Ferdinand is drown''d? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Will you laugh me asleep, for I am very heavy? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Will''t please you taste of what is here? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Wilt thou be pleased to hearken once again to the suit I made to thee? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Wilt thou go with me? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Wilt thou tell a monstrous lie, being but half a fish and half a monster? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | Your eld''st acquaintance can not be three hours: Is she the goddess that hath sever''d us, And brought us thus together? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | [ Ariel plays the tune on a tabour and pipe] STEPHANO What is this same? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | [ Enter ARIEL] ARIEL What would my potent master? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | [ Enter JUNO] JUNO How does my bounteous sister? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | [ Exit ARIEL] How fares my gracious sir? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | [ Exit above] GONZALO I''the name of something holy, sir, why stand you In this strange stare? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | [ Solemn and strange music] ALONSO What harmony is this? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | [ They wake] ALONSO Why, how now? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | a man or a fish? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | a spirit? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | by any other house or person? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | can he vent Trinculos? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | dead or alive? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | hast any more of this? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | hast thou forgot her? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | how does thine ague? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | how say you? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | i''the air or the earth? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | moody? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | no? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | or that there were such men Whose heads stood in their breasts? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | say what; what shall I do? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | the best? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | what do you here? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | when? |
shakespeare-tempest-1870 | wilt thou let him, my lord? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ''tis expressly against the law of arms:''tis as arrant a piece of knavery, mark you now, as can be offer''t; in your conscience, now, is it not? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ALICE La main? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ALICE Les doigts? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ALICE Les ongles? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ALICE N''avez vous pas deja oublie ce que je vous ai enseigne? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | And now to our French causes: Who are the late commissioners? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | And shall our quick blood, spirited with wine, Seem frosty? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | And what art thou, thou idle ceremony? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | And what have kings, that privates have not too, Save ceremony, save general ceremony? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | And what sayest thou then to my love? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Art thou a gentleman? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Art thou aught else but place, degree and form, Creating awe and fear in other men? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | BARDOLPH What, are Ancient Pistol and you friends yet? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | BATES He hath not told his thought to the king? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | BURGUNDY Is she not apt? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Be these the wretches that we play''d at dice for? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Boy Do you not remember, a''saw a flea stick upon Bardolph''s nose, and a''said it was a black soul burning in hell- fire? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Boy Ecoutez: comment etes- vous appele? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | But, Kate, dost thou understand thus much English, canst thou love me? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | But, O, What shall I say to thee, Lord Scroop? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | CANTERBURY The French ambassador upon that instant Craved audience; and the hour, I think, is come To give him hearing: is it four o''clock? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Can sodden water, A drench for sur- rein''d jades, their barley- broth, Decoct their cold blood to such valiant heat? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Canst thou, when thou command''st the beggar''s knee, Command the health of it? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Comest thou again for ransom? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Comment appelez- vous la main en Anglois? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Comment appelez- vous le col? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Comment appelez- vous le pied et la robe? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Comment appelez- vous les ongles? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Constable Who hath measured the ground? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | DAUPHIN For the Dauphin, I stand here for him: what to him from England? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | DAUPHIN My lord of Orleans, and my lord high constable, you talk of horse and armour? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | DAUPHIN Shall we go send them dinners and fresh suits And give their fasting horses provender, And after fight with them? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Do you like me, Kate? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Doth his majesty Incline to it, or no? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ELY But how, my lord, shall we resist it now? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ELY But what prevention? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ELY But, my good lord, How now for mitigation of this bill Urged by the commons? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ELY How did this offer seem received, my lord? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ELY What was the impediment that broke this off? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ERPINGHAM Shall I attend your grace? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Enter KING HENRY and his train] KING HENRY V How yet resolves the governor of the town? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Et le menton? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Et les doigts? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | FLUELLEN Is it not lawful, an please your majesty, to tell how many is killed? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | FLUELLEN It is Captain Macmorris, is it not? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | FLUELLEN It is with a good will; I can tell you, it will serve you to mend your shoes: come, wherefore should you be so pashful? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | FLUELLEN Why, I pray you, is not pig great? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | French Soldier Est- il impossible d''echapper la force de ton bras? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | French Soldier Petit monsieur, que dit- il? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | French Soldier Que dit- il, monsieur? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | GOWER Is the Duke of Exeter safe? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | GOWER What do you call him? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Give me your answer; i''faith, do: and so clap hands and a bargain: how say you, lady? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | How answer you, la plus belle Katharine du monde, mon tres cher et devin deesse? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | How shall we, then, behold their natural tears? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | I am afeard there are few die well that die in a battle; for how can they charitably dispose of any thing, when blood is their argument? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | I dare not fight; but I will wink and hold out mine iron: it is a simple one; but what though? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | I know no ways to mince it in love, but directly to say''I love you:''then if you urge me farther than to say''do you in faith?'' |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Is not their climate foggy, raw and dull, On whom, as in despite, the sun looks pale, Killing their fruit with frowns? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Je quand sur le possession de France, et quand vous avez le possession de moi,--let me see, what then? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KATHARINE Et le coude? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KATHARINE Is it possible dat I sould love de enemy of France? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KATHARINE Que dit- il? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V An Englishman? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Can any of your neighbours tell, Kate? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V How canst thou make me satisfaction? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Is''t so, my lords of England? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V It is not a fashion for the maids in France to kiss before they are married, would she say? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Knowest thou Gower? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Lives he, good uncle? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Madam my interpreter, what says she? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V May I with right and conscience make this claim? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V My brother Gloucester''s voice? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V No, Kate? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Shall Kate be my wife? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Soldier, why wearest thou that glove in thy cap? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Thou dost not wish more help from England, coz? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Well then I know thee: what shall I know of thee? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V What is thy name? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V What men have you lost, Fluellen? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V What prisoners of good sort are taken, uncle? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V What says she, fair one? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V What think you, Captain Fluellen? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V What treasure, uncle? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V What''s he that wishes so? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Who hath sent thee now? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING HENRY V Who servest thou under? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING OF FRANCE Or else what follows? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | KING OF FRANCE Where is Montjoy the herald? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Les doigts? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | My cousin Westmoreland? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | NYM I shall have my eight shillings I won of you at betting? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | NYM I shall have my noble? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | NYM Shall we shog? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | NYM Will you shog off? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | NYM You''ll pay me the eight shillings I won of you at betting? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Now is it time to arm: come, shall we about it? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | O hound of Crete, think''st thou my spouse to get? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ORLEANS Is this the king we sent to for his ransom? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ORLEANS Rien puis? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ORLEANS What''s he? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | ORLEANS Will it never be morning? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Or art thou base, common and popular? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL Art thou his friend? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL Base tike, call''st thou me host? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL By this leek, I will most horribly revenge: I eat and eat, I swear-- FLUELLEN Eat, I pray you: will you have some more sauce to your leek? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL Discuss unto me; art thou officer? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL Know''st thou Fluellen? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL Must I bite? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL Say''st thou me so? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL Trail''st thou the puissant pike? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL What are his words? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | PISTOL''Solus,''egregious dog? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | RAMBURES My lord constable, the armour that I saw in your tent to- night, are those stars or suns upon it? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | RAMBURES What, will you have them weep our horses''blood? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | RAMBURES Who will go to hazard with me for twenty prisoners? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Show men dutiful? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Think''st thou the fiery fever will go out With titles blown from adulation? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Thou damned and luxurious mountain goat, Offer''st me brass? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | WESTMORELAND Shall we call in the ambassador, my liege? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | WILLIAMS A good old commander and a most kind gentleman: I pray you, what thinks he of our estate? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | WILLIAMS Do you think I''ll be forsworn? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | WILLIAMS How shall I know thee again? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | WILLIAMS Sir, know you this glove? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | WILLIAMS Under what captain serve you? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | We must to France together: why the devil should we keep knives to cut one another''s throats? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What are thy rents? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What are you? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What drink''st thou oft, instead of homage sweet, But poison''d flattery? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What is this castle call''d that stands hard by? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What is thy name? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What is thy soul of adoration? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What is''t to me, when you yourselves are cause, If your pure maidens fall into the hand Of hot and forcing violation? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What ish my nation? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What ish my nation? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What kind of god art thou, that suffer''st more Of mortal griefs than do thy worshippers? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What rein can hold licentious wickedness When down the hill he holds his fierce career? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What say you? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What see you in those papers that you lose So much complexion? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | What''s to say? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | When, without stratagem, But in plain shock and even play of battle, Was ever known so great and little loss On one part and on the other? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Where is the number of our English dead? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Who goes there? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Who talks of my nation? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Why, so didst thou: come they of noble family? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Why, so didst thou: seem they grave and learned? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Why, so didst thou: seem they religious? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Why, what read you there That hath so cowarded and chased your blood Out of appearance? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Will it give place to flexure and low bending? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Will it never be day? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | Will you, fair sister, Go with the princes, or stay here with us? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Enter FLUELLEN and GOWER] GOWER Nay, that''s right; but why wear you your leek today? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Enter GLOUCESTER, BEDFORD, EXETER, ERPINGHAM, with all his host: SALISBURY and WESTMORELAND] GLOUCESTER Where is the king? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Enter GRANDPRE] GRANDPRE Why do you stay so long, my lords of France? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Enter KING HENRY V, GLOUCESTER, BEDFORD, EXETER, WARWICK, WESTMORELAND, and Attendants] KING HENRY V Where is my gracious Lord of Canterbury? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Enter PISTOL] PISTOL Qui va la? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Enter an English Herald] KING HENRY V Now, herald, are the dead number''d? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Enter three soldiers, JOHN BATES, ALEXANDER COURT, and MICHAEL WILLIAMS] COURT Brother John Bates, is not that the morning which breaks yonder? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Exeunt Hostess and Boy] BARDOLPH Come, shall I make you two friends? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Exit] PISTOL Doth Fortune play the huswife with me now? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Re- enter Lords, with EXETER and train] KING OF FRANCE From our brother England? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | [ Strikes him] Will you be so good, scauld knave, as eat it? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | a Cornish name: art thou of Cornish crew? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | art thou bedlam? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | camest thou from the bridge? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | come you from the bridge? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | dost thou thirst, base Trojan, To have me fold up Parca''s fatal web? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | have the pioneers given o''er? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | have you quit the mines? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | in your own conscience, now? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | is it fit this soldier keep his oath? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | is that a ton of moys? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | know''st thou not That I have fined these bones of mine for ransom? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | my royal cousin, teach you our princess English? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | or may we cram Within this wooden O the very casques That did affright the air at Agincourt? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | que je suis semblable a les anges? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | shall we not? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | that the tongues of men are full of deceits? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | what are thy comings in? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | what is thy name? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | what means this, herald? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | what new alarum is this same? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | what sayest thou, my fair flower- de- luce? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | where have they this mettle? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | why should they mock poor fellows thus? |
shakespeare-life-3554 | will you yield, and this avoid, Or, guilty in defence, be thus destroy''d? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | ''Tis strange to think how much King John hath lost In this which he accounts so clearly won: Are not you grieved that Arthur is his prisoner? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | ARTHUR Alas, what need you be so boisterous- rough? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | ARTHUR And will you? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | ARTHUR Are you sick, Hubert? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | ARTHUR Have you the heart? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | ARTHUR Is there no remedy? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | ARTHUR Too fairly, Hubert, for so foul effect: Must you with hot irons burn out both mine eyes? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | AUSTRIA What craker is this same that deafs our ears With this abundance of superfluous breath? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | AUSTRIA What the devil art thou? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Against the blood that thou hast married? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Am I Rome''s slave? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | And bloody England into England gone, O''erbearing interruption, spite of France? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | And shall I now give o''er the yielded set? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | And why rail I on this Commodity? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Are we not beaten? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Are you more stubborn- hard than hammer''d iron? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Arthur ta''en prisoner? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Ay, thou unreverend boy, Sir Robert''s son: why scorn''st thou at sir Robert? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Art thou gone so? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Brief, then; and what''s the news? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Come, come; sans compliment, what news abroad? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD How did he take it? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Hubert, I think? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD I, madam? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD James Gurney, wilt thou give us leave awhile? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Madam, by chance but not by truth; what though? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD My brother Robert? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Old Time the clock- setter, that bald sexton Time, Is it as he will? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Whither dost thou go? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Who didst thou leave to tend his majesty? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BASTARD Will''t not be? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BIGOT What wilt thou do, renowned Faulconbridge? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BIGOT Who kill''d this prince? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BLANCH Now shall I see thy love: what motive may Be stronger with thee than the name of wife? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | BLANCH Upon thy wedding- day? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Be these sad signs confirmers of thy words? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Brother of England, how may we content This widow lady? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | But wherefore do you droop? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | But who comes in such haste in riding- robes? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | CARDINAL PANDULPH What canst thou say but will perplex thee more, If thou stand excommunicate and cursed? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | CONSTANCE Ay, who doubts that? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | CONSTANCE What should he say, but as the cardinal? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | CONSTANCE Yes, that I will; and wherefore will I do it? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Can you not read it? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Colbrand the giant, that same mighty man? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Did not the prophet Say that before Ascension- day at noon My crown I should give off? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Do you not read some tokens of my son In the large composition of this man? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Doth he still rage? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Enter KING JOHN and HUBERT] KING JOHN How goes the day with us? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Enter certain Citizens upon the walls] First Citizen Who is it that hath warn''d us to the walls? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | First Citizen Why answer not the double majesties This friendly treaty of our threaten''d town? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | France friend with England, what becomes of me? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | France, shall we knit our powers And lay this Angiers even to the ground; Then after fight who shall be king of it? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | HUBERT Is this your promise? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | HUBERT My lord? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | HUBERT What''s that to thee? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | HUBERT Why, know you not? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Have I commandment on the pulse of life? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Have I not here the best cards for the game, To win this easy match play''d for a crown? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | How fares your majesty? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | How like you this wild counsel, mighty states? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Hubert, what news with you? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | I know she is not, for this match made up Her presence would have interrupted much: Where is she and her son? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | If love ambitious sought a match of birth, Whose veins bound richer blood than Lady Blanch? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | If zealous love should go in search of virtue, Where should he find it purer than in Blanch? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Is it not fair writ? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Is it sir Robert''s son that you seek so? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Is not Angiers lost? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Is not the Lady Constance in this troop? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Is''t not I That undergo this charge? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Do not I know thou wouldst? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Doth Arthur live? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Doth not the crown of England prove the king? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN From whom hast thou this great commission, France, To draw my answer from thy articles? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Is that the elder, and art thou the heir? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN O, where hath our intelligence been drunk? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Philip, what say''st thou to the cardinal? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Speak then, prince Dauphin; can you love this lady? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Thou idle dreamer, wherefore didst thou so? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN What art thou? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN What earthy name to interrogatories Can task the free breath of a sacred king? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN What follows if we disallow of this? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN What is thy name? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN What say these young ones? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Whose party do the townsmen yet admit? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Why do you bend such solemn brows on me? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Why seek''st thou to possess me with these fears? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING JOHN Would not my lords return to me again, After they heard young Arthur was alive? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING PHILIP By heaven, lady, you shall have no cause To curse the fair proceedings of this day: Have I not pawn''d to you my majesty? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING PHILIP Speak England first, that hath been forward first To speak unto this city: what say you? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING PHILIP Speak, citizens, for England; who''s your king? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING PHILIP What can go well, when we have run so ill? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | KING PHILIP What say''st thou, boy? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Knew you of this fair work? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | LADY FAULCONBRIDGE Hast thou conspired with thy brother too, That for thine own gain shouldst defend mine honour? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | LADY FAULCONBRIDGE Hast thou denied thyself a Faulconbridge? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | LADY FAULCONBRIDGE Where is that slave, thy brother? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | LEWIS But what shall I gain by young Arthur''s fall? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | LEWIS Here: what news? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Now, now, you stars that move in your right spheres, Where be your powers? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | O boy, then where art thou? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Or do you almost think, although you see, That you do see? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Or shall we give the signal to our rage And stalk in blood to our possession? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Or''What good love may I perform for you?'' |
shakespeare-life-3410 | PEMBROKE Who brought that letter from the cardinal? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | PRINCE HENRY How fares your majesty? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Play fast and loose with faith? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | QUEEN ELINOR I like thee well: wilt thou forsake thy fortune, Bequeath thy land to him and follow me? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | QUEEN ELINOR Look''st thou pale, France? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | QUEEN ELINOR Who is it thou dost call usurper, France? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | ROBERT Shall then my father''s will be of no force To dispossess that child which is not his? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | SALISBURY May this be possible? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | SALISBURY Must I rob the law? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | SALISBURY Sir Richard, what think you? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | SALISBURY What other harm have I, good lady, done, But spoke the harm that is by others done? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Say, shall the current of our right run on? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Say, where will you assault? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Second a villain and a murderer? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Shall Lewis have Blanch, and Blanch those provinces? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Shall braying trumpets and loud churlish drums, Clamours of hell, be measures to our pomp? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Shall we, upon the footing of our land, Send fair- play orders and make compromise, Insinuation, parley and base truce To arms invasive? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Sir Robert could not do it: We know his handiwork: therefore, good mother, To whom am I beholding for these limbs? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Sirrah, speak, What doth move you to claim your brother''s land? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Smacks it not something of the policy? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | So foul a sky clears not without a storm: Pour down thy weather: how goes all in France? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Tell me, how if my brother, Who, as you say, took pains to get this son, Had of your father claim''d this son for his? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Tell me, thou fellow, is not France forsworn? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Then tell us, shall your city call us lord, In that behalf which we have challenged it? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Think you I bear the shears of destiny? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Under whose conduct came those powers of France That thou for truth givest out are landed here? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What art thou? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What brings you here to court so hastily? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What cannoneer begot this lusty blood? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What dost thou mean by shaking of thy head? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What in the world should make me now deceive, Since I must lose the use of all deceit? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What is he lies here? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What is that peace to me? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What means that hand upon that breast of thine? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What means this scorn, thou most untoward knave? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What penny hath Rome borne, What men provided, what munition sent, To underprop this action? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What say you my niece? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What surety of the world, what hope, what stay, When this was now a king, and now is clay? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What woman- post is this? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What, here? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What, shall our feast be kept with slaughter''d men? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | What, shall they seek the lion in his den, And fright him there? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Where hath it slept? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Where is my mother''s care, That such an army could be drawn in France, And she not hear of it? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Which is the side that I must go withal? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Who art thou? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Who was he that said King John did fly an hour or two before The stumbling night did part our weary powers? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Who would not do thee right? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Why dost thou look so sadly on my son? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Why holds thine eye that lamentable rheum, Like a proud river peering o''er his bounds? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Why should I then be false, since it is true That I must die here and live hence by truth? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Why stand these royal fronts amazed thus? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Why urgest thou so oft young Arthur''s death? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Why, being younger born, Doth he lay claim to thine inheritance? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Will not a calfs- skin stop that mouth of thine? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | Will you put out mine eyes? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Enter KING JOHN, QUEEN ELINOR, PEMBROKE, ESSEX, SALISBURY, and others, with CHATILLON] KING JOHN Now, say, Chatillon, what would France with us? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Enter ROBERT and the BASTARD] What men are you? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Enter a Messenger] A fearful eye thou hast: where is that blood That I have seen inhabit in those cheeks? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Enter a Messenger] Messenger Where is my prince, the Dauphin? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Enter the BASTARD and HUBERT, severally] HUBERT Who''s there? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Enter the BASTARD and PETER of Pomfret] Now, what says the world To your proceedings? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Exeunt HUBERT with PETER] O my gentle cousin, Hear''st thou the news abroad, who are arrived? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Exit] KING JOHN Is this Ascension- day? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Re- enter KING JOHN and KING PHILIP, with their powers, severally] KING JOHN France, hast thou yet more blood to cast away? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Rising] What hath this day deserved? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | [ Trumpet sounds] What lusty trumpet thus doth summon us? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | and make him tremble there? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | and''Where lies your grief?'' |
shakespeare-life-3410 | as I have bank''d their towns? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | could thought, without this object, Form such another? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | darest thou brave a nobleman? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | divers dear friends slain? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | hath she no husband That will take pains to blow a horn before her? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | have I not ever said How that ambitious Constance would not cease Till she had kindled France and all the world, Upon the right and party of her son? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | have you beheld, Or have you read or heard? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | may this be true? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | old sir Robert''s son? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | or could you think? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | what hath it done, That it in golden letters should be set Among the high tides in the calendar? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | where is he, That holds in chase mine honour up and down? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | who did taste to him? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | who else but I, And such as to my claim are liable, Sweat in this business and maintain this war? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | why look you sad? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | why may not I demand Of thine affairs, as well as thou of mine? |
shakespeare-life-3410 | why, did you not provoke me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | ( 1) But what is the meaning of all these crests? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | ( 1) How do you like them? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | ( 1) Why have you come here a- twisting your game leg in circles? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | ( 1) f(1) As much as to say,''Then you have such things as anti- dicasts?'' |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | ( 1) f(1) Pisthetaerus modifies the Greek proverbial saying,"To what use can not hands be put?" |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | ( 14) Are you Phrygian like Spintharus? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | ( 16) Are you a slave and a Carian like Execestides? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | ( 9) Is it not clear that we are a prophetic Apollo to you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | --Are you a peacock? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | A DEALER IN DECREES"If the Nephelococcygian does wrong to the Athenian..."PISTHETAERUS Now whatever are these cursed parchments? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | AN INFORMER What are these birds with downy feathers, who look so pitiable to me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | AN INSPECTOR Where are the Proxeni? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Among us, when we see a thoughtless man, we ask,"What sort of bird is this?" |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | And over yonder? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | And what say you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | And who built such a wall? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | And why, pray, does it draggle in this fashion? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Are they hoping with our help to triumph over their foes or to be useful to their friends? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Are they not our most mortal foes? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Are we going to war about a woman? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Are you not astonished at the wall being completed so quickly? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Besides, is not Athene recognized as Zeus''sole heiress? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But come, what is it like to live with the birds? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But tell me, has your father had you entered on the registers of his phratria? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But tell me, where are you flying to? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But tell me, who are you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But tell me, who did the woodwork? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But tell me, why do the people admire me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But what are all these birds doing in heaven? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But what do all these insults mean? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But what god shall be its patron? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But what object can have induced you to come among us? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But what sort of city should we build? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But where shall we be buried, if we die? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But who are you, pray? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But why, if he is Cleonymus, has he not thrown away his crest? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But, by Heracles, how, if a Mede, has he flown here without a camel? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | But, poet, what ill wind drove you here? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS And what fate has led them hither to the land of the birds? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Are they mad? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Are wolves to be spared? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Clever men? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Indeed, and what are their plans? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS What have you done then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Where are they? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Where? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Who are they? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Why, do they think to see some advantage that determines them to settle here? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | CHORUS Will not man find here everything that can please him-- wisdom, love, the divine Graces, the sweet face of gentle peace? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Can they be bearing us ill- will? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | D''you know what you look like? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Did you present yourself to the officers in command of the jays? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Do n''t you know the cawing crow lives five times as long as a man? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Do n''t you see that a single kite could easily carry off the lot at once? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Do you conceive my bent? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Do you take me for a Lydian or a Phrygian(1) and think to frighten me with your big words? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Do you understand? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Do you want to dethrone your own father? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Do you want to fight it? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Do you want us to fling ourselves headlong down these rocks? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Does he not say she must be given to the swallows? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Does the son of Pisias want to betray the gates of the city to the foe? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS And are you looking for a greater city than Athens? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS And his? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS And how are we to give them health, which belongs to the gods? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS And how shall we give wealth to mankind? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS And they are? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Are you calling me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Are you chaffing me about my feathers? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Are you dicasts? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS At what, then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS But how will mankind recognize us as gods and not as jays? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS But, after all, what sort of city would please you best? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Come now, what must be done? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS From what country? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS From whom will they take them? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS How so? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS How their pole? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Is that kind of seed sown among you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS No more shall perish? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Oh, most cruel of all animals, why tear these two men to pieces, why kill them? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Take your advice? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS The Greeks? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS This one? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS We birds? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS What brings you here? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS What for? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Who wants me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EPOPS Why not choose Lepreum in Elis for your settlement? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES And did you not lose your crow, when you fell sprawling on the ground? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES And how about my eyes? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES And what does the crow say about the road to follow? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES And which way does it tell us to go now? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES And who is it brings an owl to Athens? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES But do you see all those hooked claws? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Do you know how dearly I should like to splint her legs for her? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Does a bird need a servant, then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES How so? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES I''faith, yes,''tis a bird, but of what kind? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES I? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Is it a question of feasting? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Is it in Nephelococcygia that all the wealth of Theovenes(1) and most of Aeschines''(2) is? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES That they may tear me to pieces? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Then where are your feathers? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Then you did not let it go? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Through illness? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES We? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES What makes you laugh? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES What? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Where is it, then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Why with the stew- pots? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Why, have you been conquered by a cock? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES Will you keep silence? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES You were Tereus, and what are you now? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | EUELPIDES( TO HIS JAY)(1) Do you think I should walk straight for yon tree? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | From what country? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | HERACLES And I get nothing whatever of the paternal property? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | HERACLES And you are seasoning them before answering us? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | HERACLES But what if my father wished to give me his property on his death- bed, even though I be a bastard? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | HERACLES Hi Triballian, do you want a thrashing? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | HERACLES What are these meats? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | HERACLES What else? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | HERACLES You say that you give her? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Have these birds come to contend for the double stadium prize? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Have you a permit, bearing the seal of the storks? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Have you no Greek town you can propose to us? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Have you ulcers to hide like Laespodias? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | He has indeed sold us this jay, a true son of Tharelides,(2) for an obolus, and this crow for three, but what can they do? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | How is that? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | How long since? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | How will they get at it? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | I say, Epops, you are not the only one of your kind then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | INFORMER All? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | INFORMER And how can you give a man wings with your words? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | INFORMER I? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | INFORMER So that words give wings? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | INFORMER Well, and why not? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | INFORMER Where is he who gives out wings to all comers? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | INSPECTOR Do you recall that evening when you stooled against the column where the decrees are posted? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | INSPECTOR What does this mean? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | IRIS Am I awake? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | IRIS And what other roads can the gods travel? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | IRIS Are there others then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | IRIS Are you mad? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | IRIS By which gate? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | IRIS I? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | IRIS Of which? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | IRIS What do you mean? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | In what way? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Is he dispersing the clouds or gathering them? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Is it no later than that? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Is it not the most priceless gift of all, to be winged? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Is it possible that the gods have chosen such an envoy? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Is n''t it a peacock? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Is the swallow in sight? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | MESSENGER Where, where is he? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | METON Is there sedition in your city? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | METON What d''you want with me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | METON What''s wrong then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | METON Who am I? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | METON Why, what have I to fear? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Must I knock again? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Must they die in early youth? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Over whom? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS And how do you think to escape them? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS And what is the name of these gods? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS And when did you compose them? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS And who carried the mortar? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Are the sandals there? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Are you not going to clear out with your urns? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS But how can they be gathered together? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS But how could they put the mortar into hods? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS By Posidon, do you see that many- coloured bird? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS By which gate did you pass through the wall, wretched woman? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Can you see any bird? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS D''you see? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Did you get one? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Do you know what to do? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Do you like Nephelococcygia? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Do you want to fly straight to Pellene? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Far better, are they not? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS From whom? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Gather songs in the clouds? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS How will you be able to cry when once your eyes are pecked out? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS I? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS If only I knew where we were.... EUELPIDES Could you find your country again from here? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS If they are happy, is not that the chief thing towards health? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS In the name of the gods, who are you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS In what way? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Is all that there? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Is there another glutton besides Cleonymus? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS No head- bird gave you a safe- conduct? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Now will you be off with your decrees? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Of the entrails-- is it so written? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Of which gods are you speaking? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Paralus or Salaminia? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS So it seems, despite all your youthful vigour, you make it your trade to denounce strangers? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS The time? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Well then, what name can you suggest? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What ails you, that you should shake your fist at heaven? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What are these things? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What are you chanting us about frosts? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What are you shouting for? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What do you reckon on doing then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What for? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What have we here? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What have you seen? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS What''s your name, ship or cap? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Which laws? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Which? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Who are you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Who is this Basileia? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Who is this Sardanapalus? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Who then shall guard the Pelargicon? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Who will explain the matter to them? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Who would want paid servants after this? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Why did you not reveal it to me before I founded my city? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Why not choose Athene Polias? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Why were not guards sent against him at once? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Why, certainly; are you not born of a stranger woman? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Why, what''s the matter, Prometheus? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Will you have a high- sounding Laconian name? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Will you just pocket your salary, do nothing, and be off? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Will you stay with us and form a chorus of winged birds as slender as Leotrophides(1) for the Cecropid tribe? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Wo n''t you be off quickly? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS Would you do this better if you had wings? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS You, gods? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS( TO HIS CROW) Cursed beast, what are you croaking to me?... |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PISTHETAERUS( TO THE TRIBALLIAN) And you, what''s your opinion? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | POSIDON What else is there to do? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PRIEST I begin, but where is he with the basket? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROMETHEUS Can you see any god behind me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROMETHEUS If there were no barbarian gods, who would be the patron of Execestides? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROMETHEUS Is it the fall of day? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROMETHEUS Their name? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROMETHEUS What is Zeus doing? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROMETHEUS What''s the time, please? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROPHET Is all that there? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROPHET Who am I? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | PROPHET"But when the wolves and the white crows shall dwell together between Corinth and Sicyon..."PISTHETAERUS But how do the Corinthians concern me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Shall we call it Sparta? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | TROCHILUS And this other one, what bird is it? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | TROCHILUS What are you, then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | TROCHILUS Who''s there? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Us, who have wings and fly? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What are you saying? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What are you saying? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What do you say? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What do you want of me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What does it all mean? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What god was it? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What good thing have you to tell me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What have they done to you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What have you come to do? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What is his name? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What is this bird from beyond the mountains with a look as solemn as it is stupid? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What is this bird? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What means this triple crest? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What shall our city be called? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What then is to be done? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What''s that you tell me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What''s the matter? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What''s the purpose of your journey? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What''s this? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What''s your plan? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | What? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where am I to find him? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where are you off to? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where did you come from, tell me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where is Pisthetaerus, our leader? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where is Pisthetaerus? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where is he who called me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where is the chief of the cohort? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where shall I fly to, unfortunate wretch that I am? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where, where, where is he? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Where, where, where is he? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Who are you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Who are you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Who calls my master? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Why did you bring me from down yonder? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Why these splendid buskins? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Why, nothing whatever but bite and scratch!--What''s the matter with you then, that you keep opening your beak? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Why, wretch, to what sacred feast are you inviting the vultures and the sea- eagles? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | Would anyone call you an old friend of mine?" |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | a bird a barber? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | a bird or a peacock? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | and how? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | and since when, pray? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | and who sends you here, you rascal? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | and yet you wear your hair long? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | are you not delighted to be cleaving the air? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | are you still there? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | call my town Sparta? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | do n''t you want to stop any longer? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | do you always want to be fooled? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | do you hear me? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | do you see what swarms of birds are gathering here? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | for whom shall we weave the peplus? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | is not this the pole of the birds then? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | not a beat of your wing!--Who are you and from what country? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | there are other gods besides you, barbarian gods who dwell above Olympus? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | to retrace my steps? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | to what use can not feet be put? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | were you so frightened that you let go your jay? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | what animal are you? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | what are you doing? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | what are you up to? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | what do you say to it? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | what is this? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | what is this? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | where are you flying to? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | whither are you leading us? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | wo n''t you hurry yourself? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | you are by far the most barbarous of all the gods.--Tell me, Heracles, what are we going to do? |
aristophanes-birds-1765 | you are there too? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | And call''d Marina? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | And how achieved you these endowments, which You make more rich to owe? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | And wherefore call''d Marina? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | BOULT But can you teach all this you speak of? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | BOULT For flesh and blood, sir, white and red, you shall see a rose; and she were a rose indeed, if she had but-- LYSIMACHUS What, prithee? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | BOULT Sir? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | BOULT What would you have me do? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd And I prithee tell me, how dost thou find the inclination of the people, especially of the younger sort? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd Boult, has she any qualities? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd Pray you, without any more virginal fencing, will you use him kindly? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd What else, man? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd What have we to do with Diana? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd What would you have me be, an I be not a woman? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd What''s her price, Boult? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd Who should deny it? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd Who, Monsieur Veroles? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd Why lament you, pretty one? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Bawd Why to give over, I pray you? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Being at Antioch-- THALIARD[ Aside] What from Antioch? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | But bring they what they will and what they can, What need we fear? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | But shall I search the market? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | But, good sir, Whither will you have me? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | But, hark, what music? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | But, mistress, do you know the French knight that cowers i''the hams? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | But, what music? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | CERIMON Gentlemen, Why do you stir so early? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | CERIMON What is that? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | CLEON O Dionyza, Who wanteth food, and will not say he wants it, Or can conceal his hunger till he famish? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Can it be undone? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Come, I am for no more bawdy- houses: shall''s go hear the vestals sing? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | DIONYZA And as for Pericles, What should he say? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Did the sea cast it up? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Didst thou not say, when I did push thee back-- Which was when I perceived thee-- that thou camest From good descending? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Do ye not hear? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | First Fisherman Die quoth- a? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | First Fisherman Hark you, sir, do you know where ye are? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | First Fisherman No, friend, can not you beg? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | First Fisherman What mean you, sir? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | First Fisherman Why, wilt thou tourney for the lady? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Fit counsellor and servant for a prince, Who by thy wisdom makest a prince thy servant, What wouldst thou have me do? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | HELICANUS Calls my lord? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | HELICANUS First, what is your place? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | HELICANUS How dare the plants look up to heaven, from whence They have their nourishment? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | HELICANUS With me? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Have you a working pulse? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Here of these shores? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | How a dozen of virginities? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | How chance my daughter is not with you? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | How far is his court distant from this shore? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | How have I offended, Wherein my death might yield her any profit, Or my life imply her any danger? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | How lost thou them? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Is not this true? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Is''t not a goodly presence? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Kings are earth''s gods; in vice their law''s their will; And if Jove stray, who dares say Jove doth ill? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Knights Who can be other in this royal presence? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Know you the character? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LEONINE Was''t so? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LEONINE When was this? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LYSIMACHUS Did you go to''t so young? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LYSIMACHUS Ha''you done? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LYSIMACHUS How long have you been of this profession? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LYSIMACHUS How''s this? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LYSIMACHUS May we not see him? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LYSIMACHUS Upon what ground is his distemperature? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | LYSIMACHUS Why, hath your principal made known unto you who I am? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Like him you spake, Like him you are: did you not name a tempest, A birth, and death? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA Are you a woman? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA Do you know this house to be a place of such resort, and will come into''t? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA First, sir, I pray, What is your title? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA Is it no more to be your daughter than To say my mother''s name was Thaisa? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA What canst thou wish thine enemy to be? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA What mean you? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA What trade, sir? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA Whither wilt thou have me? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA Whither would you have me? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA Who is my principal? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA Why will you kill me? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | MARINA Why would she have me kill''d? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Mariner, say what coast is this? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | My masters, you say she''s a virgin? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Note it not you, Thaisa? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | O, how, Lychorida, How does my queen? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | O, my lord, Are you not Pericles? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES But are you flesh and blood? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES I do not doubt thy faith; But should he wrong my liberties in my absence? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES If there be such a dart in princes''frowns, How durst thy tongue move anger to our face? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES May we see them? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES My fortunes-- parentage-- good parentage-- To equal mine!--was it not thus? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES Where were you bred? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES Why, are all your beggars whipped, then? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES You have heard me say, when I did fly from Tyre, I left behind an ancient substitute: Can you remember what I call''d the man? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | PERICLES[ Aside] What''s here? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Pray you, will you go with us? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | SIMONIDES And she is fair too, is she not? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | SIMONIDES Let me ask you one thing: What do you think of my daughter, sir? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | SIMONIDES No? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | SIMONIDES What, are you both agreed? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | SIMONIDES What, are you merry, knights? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | SIMONIDES Yea, mistress, are you so peremptory? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Say, is it done? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Second Fisherman Canst thou catch any fishes, then? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Second Fisherman Why, man? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Second Gentleman Is not this strange? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Second Knight May we not get access to her, my lord? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | THAISA What is it To me, my father? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | THAISA Why, sir, say if you had, Who takes offence at that would make me glad? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Third Fisherman Nay, master, said not I as much when I saw the porpus how he bounced and tumbled? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Third Fisherman What say you, master? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Thou art resolved? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Thou stormest venomously; Wilt thou spit all thyself? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Thou wilt not, wilt thou? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Thy name, my most kind virgin? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Well: where were you bred? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Were you a gamester at five or at seven? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | What is your will? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | What was thy mother''s name? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | What were thy friends? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | What were thy friends? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | What world is this? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | When canst thou reach it? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Where do you live? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Where were you born? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Where''s my lord? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Who attends us there? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Who can cross it? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Who dream''d, who thought of such a thing?'' |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Who is this? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Why do you make us love your goodly gifts, And snatch them straight away? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Why do you weep? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Will you deliver How this dead queen re- lives? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Will you not go the way of women- kind? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Will you, not having my consent, Bestow your love and your affections Upon a stranger? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | Yet, give me leave: How came you in these parts? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | You are like something that-- What country- woman? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Enter CLEON and DIONYZA] DIONYZA Why, are you foolish? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Enter PHILEMON] PHILEMON Doth my lord call? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Enter THALIARD] THALIARD Doth your highness call? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Enter a Knight; he passes over, and his Squire presents his shield to the Princess] SIMONIDES Who is the first that doth prefer himself? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Enter a Lord] Lord Where''s the lord governor? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Enter two Sailors] First Sailor What courage, sir? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Enter two or three Gentlemen] First Gentleman Doth your lordship call? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Enter, from the brothel, two Gentlemen] First Gentleman Did you ever hear the like? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Exeunt Bawd, Pandar, and BOULT] LYSIMACHUS Now, pretty one, how long have you been at this trade? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Exeunt Lords] Helicanus, thou Hast moved us: what seest thou in our looks? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Exit DIONYZA] Is this wind westerly that blows? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Exit] BOULT How''s this? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Faints] PERICLES What means the nun? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ MARINA sings] LYSIMACHUS Mark''d he your music? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Re- enter BOULT with MARINA] Is she not a fair creature? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Re- enter BOULT] Now, sir, hast thou cried her through the market? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ Re- enter HELICANUS, LYSIMACHUS, and MARINA] HELICANUS Sir? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ She moves] THAISA O dear Diana, Where am I? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ The Fourth Knight passes over] SIMONIDES What is the fourth? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ The Second Knight passes over] Who is the second that presents himself? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ The Third Knight passes over] SIMONIDES And what''s the third? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | [ To LYSIMACHUS] Shall we refresh us, sir, upon your shore, And give you gold for such provision As our intents will need? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | a king''s daughter? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | and are no fairy? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | did you ever dream of such a thing? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | do you stop your ears? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | for what? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | go to the wars, would you? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | good fellow, what''s that? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | how''s this? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | is it a shame to get when we are old? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | says one,''wilt out?'' |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | what mother? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | what say you? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | what''s here? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | where a man may serve seven years for the loss of a leg, and have not money enough in the end to buy him a wooden one? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | where were you bred? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | wholesome iniquity have you that a man may deal withal, and defy the surgeon? |
shakespeare-pericles,-3305 | why do you keep alone? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | ''Tis pity-- PAROLLES What''s pity? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Am I or that or this for what he''ll utter, That will speak any thing? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM But follows it, my lord, to bring me down Must answer for your raising? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM Do you think I am so far deceived in him? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM For this description of thine honesty? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM Is there any unkindness between my lord and you, monsieur? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM May I be bold to acquaint his grace you are gone about it? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM My lord, I neither can nor will deny But that I know them: do they charge me further? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM Nothing of me, has a''? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM Well, what would you say? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM What is it, my good lord, the king languishes of? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM What shall be done to him? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM What would you have? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM Where are my other men, monsieur? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM Why, do you think he will make no deed at all of this that so seriously he does address himself unto? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM Will she away to- night? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | BERTRAM[ Aside to PAROLLES] Is she gone to the king? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | But shall we have this dialogue between the fool and the soldier? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | But, fair soul, In your fine frame hath love no quality? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS And to be a soldier? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Brought you this letter, gentlemen? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS But think you, Helen, If you should tender your supposed aid, He would receive it? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS By what observance, I pray you? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Do you love my son? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Dost thou believe''t? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Find you that there? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Had you not lately an intent,--speak truly,-- To go to Paris? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Have you, I say, an answer of such fitness for all questions? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS In what case? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Is this all your worship''s reason? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Love you my son? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS May the world know them? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Nay, a mother: Why not a mother? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Nor I your mother? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Not much employment for you: you understand me? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Parolles, was it not? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Return you thither? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS This was your motive For Paris, was it? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS What angel shall Bless this unworthy husband? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS What does this knave here? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS What have we here? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS What hope is there of his majesty''s amendment? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS What is the matter? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS What, one good in ten? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Wherefore? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Why should he be killed? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Will your answer serve fit to all questions? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Wilt thou ever be a foul- mouthed and calumnious knave? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | COUNTESS Wilt thou needs be a beggar? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Ca n''t no other, But, I your daughter, he must be my brother? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Clown Did you find me in yourself, sir? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Clown Was this fair face the cause, quoth she, Why the Grecians sacked Troy? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | DIANA Do you know he promised me marriage? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | DIANA That jack- an- apes with scarfs: why is he melancholy? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | DIANA The Count Rousillon: know you such a one? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | DIANA Why do you look so strange upon your wife? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | DIANA Will you not, my lord? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Lord Good captain, will you give me a copy of the sonnet you writ to Diana in behalf of the Count Rousillon? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Lord In the mean time, what hear you of these wars? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Lord Is it not meant damnable in us, to be trumpeters of our unlawful intents? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier But wilt thou faithfully? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier Do you know this Captain Dumain? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier Here''tis; here''s a paper: shall I read it to you? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier If your life be saved, will you undertake to betray the Florentine? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier Shall I set down your answer so? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier Well, is this captain in the duke of Florence''s camp? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier What is his reputation with the duke? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier What say you to his expertness in war? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier What''s he? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | First Soldier What''s his brother, the other Captain Dumain? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Fond done, done fond, Was this King Priam''s joy? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Gentleman What''s your will? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | God? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA But will you make it even? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA Do not you love him, madam? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA How do you mean? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA How might one do, sir, to lose it to her own liking? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA If she be very well, what does she ail, that she''s not very well? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA Is it yourself? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA Is this the way? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA What is your pleasure, madam? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA What more commands he? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA What two things? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA What''s his name? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA What''s his will else? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA Which is he? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | HELENA Which is the Frenchman? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Had you that craft, to reave her Of what should stead her most? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | He stole from France, As''tis reported, for the king had married him Against his liking: think you it is so? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | How does he carry himself? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | How does your drum? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | How does your ladyship like it? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | How long is''t, count, Since the physician at your father''s died? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | I do beseech you, whither is he gone? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | I must give myself some hurts, and say I got them in exploit: yet slight ones will not carry it; they will say,''Came you off with so little?'' |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | I pray you, sir, are you a courtier? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | I would he loved his wife: if he were honester He were much goodlier: is''t not a handsome gentleman? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Is there no military policy, how virgins might blow up men? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Is this the man you speak of? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Is''t real that I see? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Are thou so confident? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING But wilt thou not speak all thou knowest? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Come hither, count; do you know these women? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Come, come, to the purpose: did he love this woman? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING How is that? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING How, I pray you? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING If it were yours by none of all these ways, How could you give it him? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Know you this ring? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Know''st thou not, Bertram, What she has done for me? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Upon thy certainty and confidence What darest thou venture? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING What ring was yours, I pray you? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING What say''st thou to her? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING What''her''is this? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING What''s he comes here? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Where did you buy it? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Where did you find it, then? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Wherefore hast thou accused him all this while? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | KING Who lent it you? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU And what would you have me to do? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Are you companion to the Count Rousillon? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Ay; is it not a language I speak? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Do all they deny her? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Good faith, across: but, my good lord''tis thus; Will you be cured of your infirmity? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU How called you the man you speak of, madam? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU How understand we that? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU O, will you eat no grapes, my royal fox? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Pray you, sir, who''s his tailor? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Was I, in sooth? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU What prince is that? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Whether dost thou profess thyself, a knave or a fool? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Who''s that? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Who? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | LAFEU Your distinction? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Man is enemy to virginity; how may we barricado it against him? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Might you not know she would do as she has done, By sending me a letter? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | O my dear mother, do I see you living? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | O, my knave, how does my old lady? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES Are you meditating on virginity? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES Faith, sir, he did love her; but how? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES It is, indeed: if you will have it in showing, you shall read it in-- what do you call there? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES Sir? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES What''s the matter, sweet- heart? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES What, what, sweet- heart? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES Why think you so? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES Why under Mars? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES Why, do you not know him? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES Will this capriccio hold in thee? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | PAROLLES Your pleasure, sir? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Portotartarosa First Soldier He calls for the tortures: what will you say without''em? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Rust, sword? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord Art not acquainted with him? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord But what linsey- woolsey hast thou to speak to us again? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord Captain, what greeting will you to my Lord Lafeu? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord Hath the count all this intelligence? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord How deep? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord How is this justified? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord Is it possible he should know what he is, and be that he is? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord What will Count Rousillon do then? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Second Lord Why does be ask him of me? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | She''s a fair creature: Will you go see her? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Sir, will you hear my suit? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Speak, is''t so? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | The court''s a learning place, and he is one-- PAROLLES What one, i''faith? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | This ring, you say, was yours? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Towards Florence is he? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Was this gentlewoman the daughter of Gerard de Narbon? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | We shall not then have his company to- night? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What power is it which mounts my love so high, That makes me see, and can not feed mine eye? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What say you to that? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What say you to that? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What say you to this? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What shall I say I have done? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What should be said? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What was he like? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What''s the matter, That this distemper''d messenger of wet, The many- colour''d Iris, rounds thine eye? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | What, pale again? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | When I said''a mother,''Methought you saw a serpent: what''s in''mother,''That you start at it? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Where do the palmers lodge, I do beseech you? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Wherefore, what''s the instance? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Who comes here? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Who was with him? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Why dost thou garter up thy arms o''this fashion? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Why? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Widow You came, I think, from France? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | Yet who would have suspected an ambush where I was taken? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | You remember The daughter of this lord? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Enter COUNTESS, Steward, and Clown] COUNTESS I will now hear; what say you of this gentlewoman? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Enter HELENA and Clown] HELENA My mother greets me kindly; is she well? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Enter Widow and DIANA] What woman''s that? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Enter the two French Lords and some two or three Soldiers] First Lord You have not given him his mother''s letter? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Exeunt all but LAFEU and PAROLLES] LAFEU[ Advancing] Do you hear, monsieur? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Exit an Attendant] BERTRAM What of him? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Exit] KING Now, fair one, does your business follow us? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Exit] KING What says he to your daughter? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Re- enter Widow, with HELENA] KING Is there no exorcist Beguiles the truer office of mine eyes? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | [ Unblinding him] So, look about you: know you any here? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | a Frenchman? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | and is it I That drive thee from the sportive court, where thou Wast shot at with fair eyes, to be the mark Of smoky muskets? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | and would you take the letter of her? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | art sure? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | at your whipping, and''spare not me?'' |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | do other servants so? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | does it curd thy blood To say I am thy mother? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | dost make hose of sleeves? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | dost thou put upon me at once both the office of God and the devil? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | have you spoke? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | is not this Helen? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | is''t I That chase thee from thy country and expose Those tender limbs of thine to the event Of the none- sparing war? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | is''t not after midnight? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | is''t''but a drum''? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | knows he not thy voice? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | or were you taught to find me? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | or who gave it you? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | that you are my daughter? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | what do you know of it? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | what will ye do? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | where''s your master? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | whither are you bound? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | why, what place make you special, when you put off that with such contempt? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | will he travel higher, or return again into France? |
shakespeare-alls-3298 | within what space Hopest thou my cure? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ''Where is the thousand marks I gave thee, villain?'' |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA And are not you my husband? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA And what said he? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA But say, I prithee, is he coming home? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA Didst speak him fair? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA How if your husband start some other where? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA Is''t good to soothe him in these contraries? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA Say, didst thou speak with him? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA Say, how grows it due? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA What, is he arrested? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA What, the chain? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA Where is thy master, Dromio? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA Which of you two did dine with me to- day? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA Why should their liberty than ours be more? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA Why, man, what is the matter? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA With what persuasion did he tempt thy love? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ADRIANA[ Within] Who is that at the door that keeps all this noise? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | AEGEON Dromio, nor thou? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | AEGEON If I dream not, thou art AEmilia: If thou art she, tell me where is that son That floated with thee on the fatal raft? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | AEGEON Is not your name, sir, call''d Antipholus? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | AEGEON Why look you strange on me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | AEMELIA Hath he not lost much wealth by wreck of sea? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | AEMELIA How long hath this possession held the man? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANGELO Then you will bring the chain to her yourself? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANGELO Upon what cause? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS Do you hear, you minion? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS And did not I in rage depart from thence? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS And did not she herself revile me there? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Are you there, wife? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS But where''s the money? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Did not her kitchen- maid rail, taunt, and scorn me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Dromio, what stuff of mine hast thou embark''d? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Fie, now you run this humour out of breath, where''s the chain? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Five hundred ducats, villain, for a rope? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Say, wherefore didst thou lock me forth to- day? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS To what end did I bid thee hie thee home? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Went''st not thou to her for a purse of ducats? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Were not my doors lock''d up and I shut out? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS What art thou that keepest me out from the house I owe? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS What, will you murder me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Wherefore? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Who talks within there? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS Wilt thou still talk? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF EPHESUS You minion, you, are these your customers? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE AEgeon art thou not? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Am I in earth, in heaven, or in hell? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE By Dromio? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE By what rule, sir? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Did you converse, sir, with this gentlewoman? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Dost thou not know? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE For what reason? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE How dost thou mean a fat marriage? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE I am not in a sportive humour now: Tell me, and dally not, where is the money? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE In good time, sir; what''s that? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE In what part of her body stands Ireland? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE May he not do it by fine and recovery? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Plead you to me, fair dame? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Shall I tell you why? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Stop in your wind, sir: tell me this, I pray: Where have you left the money that I gave you? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Thank me, sir, for what? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Then she bears some breadth? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Thy mistress''marks? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE To me she speaks; she moves me for her theme: What, was I married to her in my dream? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE What claim lays she to thee? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE What complexion is she of? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE What gold is this? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE What is she? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE What is your will that I shall do with this? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE What''s her name? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE What, thou meanest an officer? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE What, wilt thou flout me thus unto my face, Being forbid? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Where America, the Indies? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Where England? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Where France? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Where Scotland? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Where Spain? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Where stood Belgia, the Netherlands? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Who heard me to deny it or forswear it? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Why is Time such a niggard of hair, being, as it is, so plentiful an excrement? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Why, Dromio? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Yea, dost thou jeer and flout me in the teeth? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS OF SYRACUSE Your reason? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | ANTIPHOLUS What woman''s man? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Against my soul''s pure truth why labour you To make it wander in an unknown field? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | And is not that your bondman, Dromio? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | And why dost thou deny the bag of gold? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Antipholus, thou camest from Corinth first? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Are you a god? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Buried some dear friend? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | But say, sir, is it dinner- time? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | But, I pray, sir why am I beaten? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS A crow without feather? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS Am I so round with you as you with me, That like a football you do spurn me thus? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS Go back again, and be new beaten home? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS O,--sixpence, that I had o''Wednesday last To pay the saddler for my mistress''crupper? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS Ourselves we do remember, sir, by you; For lately we were bound, as you are now You are not Pinch''s patient, are you, sir? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS That''s a question: how shall we try it? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS To me, sir? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS What mean you, sir? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS What patch is made our porter? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF EPHESUS Will you be bound for nothing? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE By me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Do you know me, sir? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I am glad to see you in this merry vein: What means this jest? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I am transformed, master, am I not? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I, sir? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Master, is this Mistress Satan? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Master, shall I be porter at the gate? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE No? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Sconce call you it? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Was there ever any man thus beaten out of season, When in the why and the wherefore is neither rhyme nor reason? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DROMIO OF SYRACUSE What answer, sir? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DUKE SOLINUS But had he such a chain of thee or no? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | DUKE SOLINUS Saw''st thou him enter at the abbey here? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Do you not hear it ring? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Dost thou conjure for wenches, that thou call''st for such store, When one is one too many? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Even in the spring of love, thy love- springs rot? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Hast thou delight to see a wretched man Do outrage and displeasure to himself? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Hath homely age the alluring beauty took From my poor cheek? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Hath not else his eye Stray''d his affection in unlawful love? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Have at you with a proverb-- Shall I set in my staff? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Have you the chain about you? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | How comes it now, my husband, O, how comes it, That thou art thus estranged from thyself? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | I know his eye doth homage otherwhere, Or else what lets it but he would be here? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | I see, sir, you have found the goldsmith now: Is that the chain you promised me to- day? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | If Time be in debt and theft, and a sergeant in the way, Hath he not reason to turn back an hour in a day? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | If voluble and sharp discourse be marr''d, Unkindness blunts it more than marble hard: Do their gay vestments his affections bait? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCE[ Within] Can you tell for whose sake? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCE[ Within] Have at you with another; that''s-- When? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCE[ Within] What a coil is there, Dromio? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCE[ Within] What needs all that, and a pair of stocks in the town? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCIANA How hast thou lost thy breath? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCIANA Quoth who? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCIANA Spake he so doubtfully, thou couldst not feel his meaning? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCIANA What, are you mad, that you do reason so? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCIANA Who would be jealous then of such a one? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCIANA Why call you me love? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | LUCIANA Why pratest thou to thyself and answer''st not? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Look''d he or red or pale, or sad or merrily? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Master, mean you so? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Mightst thou perceive austerely in his eye That he did plead in earnest? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | My house was at the Phoenix? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Nay, he''s a thief too: have you not heard men say That Time comes stealing on by night and day? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Officer One Angelo, a goldsmith: do you know him? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Or sleep I now and think I hear all this? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Say, woman, didst thou so? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Second Merchant How is the man esteemed here in the city? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Shall love, in building, grow so ruinous? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Sirrah, what say you? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Sleeping or waking? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Tell me, was he arrested on a band? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | That''s not my fault: he''s master of my state: What ruins are in me that can be found, By him not ruin''d? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Think''st thou I jest? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Thou drunkard, thou, what didst thou mean by this? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Thou gaoler, thou, I am thy prisoner: wilt thou suffer them To make a rescue? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Thou villain, what sayest thou? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Wast thou mad, That thus so madly thou didst answer me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | We being strangers here, how darest thou trust So great a charge from thine own custody? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | We''ll mend our dinner here? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | What error drives our eyes and ears amiss? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | What is the course and drift of your compact? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | What is the sum he owes? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | What now? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | What observation madest thou in this case Of his heart''s meteors tilting in his face? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | What simple thief brags of his own attaint? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | What, have you got the picture of old Adam new- apparelled? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | What, will you walk with me about the town, And then go to my inn and dine with me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | When were you wo nt to use my sister thus? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Where is the gold I gave in charge to thee? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Wherefore throng you hither? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Which is the natural man, And which the spirit? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Which of these sorrows is he subject to? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Why bear you these rebukes and answer not? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Why, thou peevish sheep, What ship of Epidamnum stays for me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Will you go with me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Will you send him, mistress, redemption, the money in his desk? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Will you walk in to see their gossiping? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | You know no Centaur? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | Your mistress sent to have me home to dinner? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | [ Beating him] Courtezan How say you now? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | [ Enter ADRIANA and LUCIANA] ADRIANA Ah, Luciana, did he tempt thee so? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | [ Enter DROMIO of Ephesus] ADRIANA Say, is your tardy master now at hand? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | [ Enter LUCIANA and ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse] LUCIANA And may it be that you have quite forgot A husband''s office? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | [ Exeunt all but Adriana, Luciana, Officer and Courtezan] Say now, whose suit is he arrested at? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | [ They offer to bind Dromio of Ephesus] ADRIANA What wilt thou do, thou peevish officer? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | am I Dromio? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | am I myself? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | am I your man? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | and how besides thyself? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | barren my wit? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | besides thyself? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | can you tell? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | have you that I sent you for? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | how chance thou art return''d so soon? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | is he well? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | is not your husband mad? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | is your merry humour alter''d? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | know''st thou his mind? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | mad or well- advised? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | now your jest is earnest: Upon what bargain do you give it me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | or else his ghost? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | quoth he:''Will you come home?'' |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | then he hath wasted it: Are my discourses dull? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | what Adam dost thou mean? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | what mistress, slave, hast thou? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | what should I answer you? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | what tell''st thou me of supping? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | when spake I such a word? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | where runn''st thou so fast? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | wherefore dost thou mad me? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | who are those at the gate? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | who deciphers them? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | who hath bound him here? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | who wafts us yonder? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | would you create me new? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | yea or no? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | you received no gold? |
shakespeare-comedy-2623 | you''ll let us in, I hope? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Do you know,he said"of your divorce? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | How long will you besiege the emperor''s son? tacitus-annals-1338 Is it your pleasure to search for arguments in a matter already weighed in the deliberations of wiser men than ourselves? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Is there really,they said,"no native of this country to fill the place of king without raising the son of the spy Flavus above all his fellows? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Was Sacrovir too,they asked,"to be charged with treason before the Senate? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Were they always to be the same, or was there to be a succession? tacitus-annals-1338 What was the ruin of Sparta and Athens, but this, that mighty as they were in war, they spurned from them as aliens those whom they had conquered? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | When,he said,"will you dare to demand relief, if you do not go with your prayers or arms to a new and yet tottering throne? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Where,he asked again and again,"are your maxims of philosophy, or the preparation of so many years''study against evils to come? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Who,they asked,"can be so arrogant as to anticipate in hope an eternity of renown? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why had he come, neither to increase the soldiers''pay, nor to alleviate their hardships, in a word, with no power to better their lot? tacitus-annals-1338 Why,"it was asked,"had the Roman army been withdrawn from Tigranocerta? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why,it was asked,"if he thought that the public welfare required freedom of speech in the Senate, did he pursue such trifling abuses? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why,it was asked,"was no one else chosen to put his tongue at the service of that savage harlot? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why,she asked,"was her marriage put off? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Among nobles who can show a long succession of glories, has my new name become famous? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | And so Cneius Piso asked,"In what order will you vote, Caesar? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | And, again, what is my sin? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Answer, Blaesus, where you have flung aside the corpse? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Are Cassius and Brutus now in arms on the fields of Philippi, and am I with them rousing the people by harangues to stir up civil war? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Are then all unmarried men blameless? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Are we sorry that the Balbi came to us from Spain, and other men not less illustrious from Narbon Gaul? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | As for distant commotions, how can they be checked? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | As the girl rose to depart, she exclaimed,"Do you too forsake me?" |
tacitus-annals-1338 | At its sight the emperor exclaimed( I give his very words),"Why would you have been a Nero?" |
tacitus-annals-1338 | But, as for Drusus, what can be his hindrance but pride?" |
tacitus-annals-1338 | By what kind of wisdom or maxims of philosophy had Seneca within four years of royal favour amassed three hundred million sesterces? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Can it be that he is not satisfied with your sorrows and griefs? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Could I have lived with Britannicus in the possession of power? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Could he pass the night- guard, could he open the doors of the chamber, carry in a light, and accomplish the murder, while all were in ignorance? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Could they be going to the Treveri, to be subjects of the foreigner?" |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Do the people of Rome prefer that the offspring of an Egyptian fluteplayer should be raised to the imperial throne? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Even if Germanicus held his own life cheap, why should he keep a little son and a pregnant wife among madmen who outraged every human right? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | For what am I first to begin with restraining and cutting down to the old standard? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | For what have you not dared, what have you not profaned during these days? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | How could he foresee through so long an interval what would be a man''s temper, or domestic relations, or estate? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | How often had the Divine Augustus travelled to West and to the East accompanied by Livia? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | How was he to be secure under the youth of the coming sovereign? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | If these latter had provinces allotted to them, why was it forbidden to the priests of Jupiter? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | If you Romans choose to lord it over the world, does it follow that the world is to accept slavery? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | In a word, are they, instead of the Neros and the Drusi, to control the empire of the Roman people? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Is anything left for us but to retain our freedom or to die before we are enslaved? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Is it that I am about to give to the house of the Caesars a lawful heir? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Is it the peace throughout the world or victories won without loss to our armies which vex him? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Is this apology meant to be offered for all without difference and discrimination? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | The marvels in bronze and painting? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | The masses of silver and gold? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | The number of slaves of every nationality? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | The vast dimensions of country houses? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Then, again, what a scene would be presented by persons grasping their swords on the threshold of the Senate House? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Thereupon Asinius Gallus said,"I ask you, Caesar, what part of the State you wish to have intrusted to you?" |
tacitus-annals-1338 | They came out of their tents, asking"what was that mournful sound? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Vote impunity, in heaven''s name, and then who will be protected by his rank, when the prefecture of the capital has been of no avail to its holder? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Was it better for them to have wintered on the confines of Cappadocia in hastily constructed huts, than in the capital of a kingdom lately recovered? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Was it only sons who were to visit them? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Was it the only worthy object of reform to provide that the Syracusans should not give shows on a larger scale? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Was it, forsooth, her beauty and her ancestors, with their triumphal honours, that failed to please, or her being a mother, and her sincere heart? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Was then the same Senate to be consulted whenever notice was given of an execution or of a battle? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Well; even among our magistrates, are not many subject to various passions? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Were all other matters in every department of the empire as admirable as if Thrasea and not Nero had the direction of them? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Were their rewards to be at the discretion of absolute rulers, their punishments to be without appeal?" |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Were they to be men who had held office or youths, private citizens or officials? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What distinctions will be left for the remnants of our noble houses, or for any impoverished senators from Latium? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What is to be the end of our strifes? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What meant the sad sight? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What name shall I give to this gathering? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What offense have I caused any one? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What remained for them but to strip themselves naked, put on the boxing- glove, and practise such battles instead of the arms of legitimate warfare? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What resource remained, if they despised the emperor? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What then is my meaning? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What will happen if the rivalry is rendered more intense by such a marriage? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What wonder if I parted with them reluctantly? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What would happen if their thoughts were fixed on promotion for five years? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | What would happen were it for a number of years to be forgotten, just as in a divorce? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | When was there to be an end of nothing being publicly admired but what Seneca was thought to have originated? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Where is the mind once content with a humble lot? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Which of us will be rescued by his domestics, who, even with the dread of punishment before them, regard not our dangers? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Which was he to prefer, without the fear that those whom he slighted would be infuriated by the affront? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Who knew not Nero''s cruelty? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Who will be kept safe by the number of his slaves when four hundred have not protected Pedanius Secundus? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why are we not rather first in our repentance as we were last in the offence? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why had they abandoned in peace what they had defended in war? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why should he not speak for or against peace and war, or on the taxes and laws and other matters involving Roman interests? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why should not the emperor seize the offer and spare the exile, whose punishment would be the greater, the longer he lived in poverty? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Why then in old times was economy in the ascendant? |
tacitus-annals-1338 | Will Percennius and Vibulenus give pay to the soldiers and land to those who have earned their discharge? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | ANTONIO Well, tell me now what lady is the same To whom you swore a secret pilgrimage, That you to- day promised to tell me of? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | ARRAGON What is here? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | ARRAGON What''s here? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | And not one vessel''scape the dreadful touch Of merchant- marring rocks? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | And now who knows But you, Lorenzo, whether I am yours? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | And now, good sweet, say thy opinion, How dost thou like the Lord Bassanio''s wife? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | And yet no matter: why should we go in? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Are there balance here to weigh The flesh? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Are they return''d? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Are you acquainted with the difference That holds this present question in the court? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Are you answer''d? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | BASSANIO And do you, Gratiano, mean good faith? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | BASSANIO Do all men kill the things they do not love? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | BASSANIO Good signiors both, when shall we laugh? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | BASSANIO Have you heard any imputation to the contrary? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | BASSANIO May you stead me? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | BASSANIO Shylock, do you hear? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | BASSANIO Were you the doctor and I knew you not? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | BASSANIO What find I here? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | But is it true, Salerio? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | But tell us, do you hear whether Antonio have had any loss at sea or no? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | But what warmth is there in your affection towards any of these princely suitors that are already come? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | But wherefore should I go? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Can no prayers pierce thee? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Can you tell me whether one Launcelot, that dwells with him, dwell with him or no? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Come you from old Bellario? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | DUKE How shalt thou hope for mercy, rendering none? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Did I deserve no more than a fool''s head? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Do you know me, father? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | From Tripolis, from Mexico and England, From Lisbon, Barbary and India? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | GOBBO Alack the day, I know you not, young gentleman: but, I pray you, tell me, is my boy, God rest his soul, alive or dead? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | GOBBO Master young gentleman, I pray you, which is the way to master Jew''s? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | GRATIANO That ever holds: who riseth from a feast With that keen appetite that he sits down? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | GRATIANO Were you the clerk that is to make me cuckold? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | GRATIANO Why, this is like the mending of highways In summer, where the ways are fair enough: What, are we cuckolds ere we have deserved it? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Go, gentlemen,[ Exit Launcelot] Will you prepare you for this masque tonight? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Hath not a Jew eyes? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Have all his ventures fail''d? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | He is a proper man''s picture, but, alas, who can converse with a dumb- show? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | He may win; And what is music then? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | How begot, how nourished? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | How cheerest thou, Jessica? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | How dost thou and thy master agree? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | How doth that royal merchant, good Antonio? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | How shall I know if I do choose the right? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | How''gree you now? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | I pray you, is my master yet return''d? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | I stand for judgment: answer; shall I have it? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | If a Christian wrong a Jew, what should his sufferance be by Christian example? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | If a Jew wrong a Christian, what is his humility? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | If thou wilt lend this money, lend it not As to thy friends; for when did friendship take A breed for barren metal of his friend? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | If you prick us, do we not bleed? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt, But, being seasoned with a gracious voice, Obscures the show of evil? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | In religion, What damned error, but some sober brow Will bless it and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with fair ornament? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Is he yet possess''d How much ye would? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Is it not hard, Nerissa, that I can not choose one nor refuse none? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Is that my prize? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Is''t like that lead contains her? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Is''t true, is''t true? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | JESSICA And what hope is that, I pray thee? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | JESSICA Lorenzo, certain, and my love indeed, For who love I so much? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | JESSICA What, must I hold a candle to my shames? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | LAUNCELOT But I pray you, ergo, old man, ergo, I beseech you, talk you of young Master Launcelot? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | LAUNCELOT Do I look like a cudgel or a hovel- post, a staff or a prop? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | LAUNCELOT Do you not know me, father? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | LAUNCELOT Talk you of young Master Launcelot? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | LORENZO Whither goest thou? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | LORENZO Who calls? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | LORENZO Who comes with her? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | LORENZO Will you cover then, sir? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Lorenzo and his infidel? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | May I speak with Antonio? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Move these eyes? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Must give: for what? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA Come, good sir, will you show me to this house? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA How like you the young German, the Duke of Saxony''s nephew? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA How say you by the French lord, Monsieur Le Bon? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA Shall they see us? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA What say you, then, to Falconbridge, the young baron of England? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA What talk you of the posy or the value? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA What think you of the Scottish lord, his neighbour? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA What, and stake down? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | NERISSA Why, shall we turn to men? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | No news of them? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Or is your gold and silver ewes and rams? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Or shall I think in silver she''s immured, Being ten times undervalued to tried gold? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Or whether, riding on the balls of mine, Seem they in motion? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA Art thou contented, Jew? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA Do you confess the bond? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA Here: what would my lord? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA Is he not able to discharge the money? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA Is it your dear friend that is thus in trouble? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA Is this true, Nerissa? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA Is your name Shylock? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA It is not so express''d: but what of that? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA What mercy can you render him, Antonio? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA What ring gave you my lord? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA What sum owes he the Jew? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA What, no more? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA Why doth the Jew pause? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | PORTIA You, merchant, have you any thing to say? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Pray you, tell me this; If he should break his day, what should I gain By the exaction of the forfeiture? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SALARINO Not in love neither? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SALARINO Why, I am sure, if he forfeit, thou wilt not take his flesh: what''s that good for? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven: Shall I lay perjury upon my soul? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK Ay, his breast: So says the bond: doth it not, noble judge? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK Hates any man the thing he would not kill? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK Is it so nominated in the bond? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK Is that the law? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK On what compulsion must I? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK Shall I not have barely my principal? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK What, are there masques? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK What, wouldst thou have a serpent sting thee twice? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | SHYLOCK Who bids thee call? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Shall I have the thought To think on this, and shall I lack the thought That such a thing bechanced would make me sad? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Should I not say''Hath a dog money? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Sleep when he wakes and creep into the jaundice By being peevish? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | TUBAL Yes, other men have ill luck too: Antonio, as I heard in Genoa,-- SHYLOCK What, what, what? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Talk you of young Master Launcelot? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart, or in the head? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Three months from twelve; then, let me see; the rate-- ANTONIO Well, Shylock, shall we be beholding to you? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Was this inserted to make interest good? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What demi- god Hath come so near creation? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What if I stray''d no further, but chose here? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What if my house be troubled with a rat And I be pleased to give ten thousand ducats To have it baned? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What news on the Rialto? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What of that? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What says the golden chest? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What says the silver with her virgin hue? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What says this leaden casket? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What should I say, sweet lady? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What would you? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What, and my old Venetian friend Salerio? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What, are you answer''d yet? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | What, not one hit? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Where is he? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Where is the horse that doth untread again His tedious measures with the unbated fire That he did pace them first? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Who is he comes here? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Why should a man, whose blood is warm within, Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Why sweat they under burthens? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Wilt thou show the whole wealth of thy wit in an instant? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | You grow exceeding strange: must it be so? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | You stand within his danger, do you not? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | Your hand, Salerio: what''s the news from Venice? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter GRATIANO] GRATIANO Where is your master? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter JESSICA, above, in boy''s clothes] JESSICA Who are you? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter JESSICA, below] What, art thou come? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter Jessica] JESSICA Call you? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter LAUNCELOT, with a letter] Friend Launcelot, what''s the news? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter NERISSA, dressed like a lawyer''s clerk] DUKE Came you from Padua, from Bellario? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter Old GOBBO, with a basket] GOBBO Master young man, you, I pray you, which is the way to master Jew''s? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter SALANIO and SALARINO] SALANIO Now, what news on the Rialto? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter STEPHANO] LORENZO Who comes so fast in silence of the night? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter a Servant] Servant Where is my lady? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Enter the DUKE, the Magnificoes, ANTONIO, BASSANIO, GRATIANO, SALERIO, and others] DUKE What, is Antonio here? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Exeunt GRATIANO and LORENZO] ANTONIO Is that any thing now? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Exeunt SALARINO and SALANIO] GRATIANO Was not that letter from fair Jessica? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Exit with Jessica and Salarino][ Enter ANTONIO] ANTONIO Who''s there? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Exit] SHYLOCK What says that fool of Hagar''s offspring, ha? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | [ Presenting a letter] BASSANIO Why dost thou whet thy knife so earnestly? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | and if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | are my deserts no better? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | did he take interest? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | did you see Master Lorenzo? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | for lead? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | hast thou found my daughter? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | hazard for lead? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | how many months Do you desire? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | if you poison us, do we not die? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | if you tickle us, do we not laugh? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | ill luck, ill luck? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | in Genoa? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | is it possible A cur can lend three thousand ducats?'' |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | let their beds Be made as soft as yours and let their palates Be season''d with such viands? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | rebels it at these years? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | say, when? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | shall I know your answer? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what dost thou say? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what friend? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what have we here? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what is your will? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what news among the merchants? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what news from Genoa? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what news? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what sayest thou? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | where are all the rest? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | where? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | where? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | where? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | who''s within? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | will you pleasure me? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | wouldst thou aught with me? |
shakespeare-merchant-2797 | your name, I pray you, friend? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | ''And do you not pursue after pleasure as a good, and avoid pain as an evil?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | ''And have you not a similar way of speaking about pain? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | ''And is this a sort of thing which is of the nature of the holy, or of the nature of the unholy?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | ''Are these things good for any other reason except that they end in pleasure, and get rid of and avert pain? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | ''But how,''he will reply,''can the good be unworthy of the evil, or the evil of the good''? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | ''By what?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | ''Shall this be the manner in which I am to distribute justice and reverence among men, or shall I give them to all?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | --and I were to answer, just: would you vote with me or against me? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | --how would you answer him? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | --they would acknowledge that they were not? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | --they would agree to the latter alternative, if I am not mistaken? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | --they would assent to me? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | --we should answer,''Yes,''if I am not mistaken? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Again we knocked, and he answered without opening: Did you not hear me say that he is not at home, fellows? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And are not these confident persons also courageous? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And because of that ignorance they are cowards? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And by what is he overcome? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And do men have some one part and some another part of virtue? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And do the cowards knowingly refuse to go to the nobler, and pleasanter, and better? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And do you remember that folly has already been acknowledged by us to be the opposite of wisdom? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And do you think that a man lives well who lives in pain and grief? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And do you think that the ode is a good composition, and true? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And do you think, I said in a tone of surprise, that justice and holiness have but a small degree of likeness? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And do you think, he said, that the two sayings are consistent? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And does not the poet proceed to say,''I do not agree with the word of Pittacus, albeit the utterance of a wise man: Hardly can a man be good''? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And first, you would agree with me that justice is of the nature of a thing, would you not? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And foolish actions are done by folly, and temperate actions by temperance? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And good sense is good counsel in doing injustice? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And have they not been shown to be cowards through their ignorance of dangers? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And have you an answer for him? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And have you not seen persons utterly ignorant, I said, of these things, and yet confident about them? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And if he were further to ask: What is the wisdom of the Sophist, and what is the manufacture over which he presides?--how should we answer him? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And if honourable, then good? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And if not base, then honourable? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And in causing diseases do they not cause pain? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And in opposite ways? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And is going to battle honourable or disgraceful? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And is it partly good and partly bad, I said, or wholly good? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And is not ignorance the having a false opinion and being deceived about important matters? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And is not wisdom the very opposite of folly? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And is the good that which is expedient for man? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And is there anything good? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And is there not a contradiction? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And might you not, I said, affirm this of the painter and of the carpenter also: Do not they, too, know wise things? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And one thing is done by temperance, and quite another thing by folly? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And shall I argue with them or with you? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And suppose that he turned to you and said,''Is this true, Protagoras? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And suppose that he went on to say:''Well now, is there also such a thing as holiness?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And suppose that he went to Orthagoras the Theban, and heard him say the same thing, and asked him,''In what shall I become better day by day?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And temperance is good sense? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And temperance makes them temperate? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And that is done strongly which is done by strength, and that which is weakly done, by weakness? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And that which is done in opposite ways is done by opposites? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And that which is done in the same manner, is done by the same; and that which is done in an opposite manner by the opposite? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And that which is done with swiftness is done swiftly, and that which is done with slowness, slowly? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And that which was done foolishly, as we further admitted, was done in the opposite way to that which was done temperately? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And that which was done temperately was done by temperance, and that which was done foolishly by folly? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And the courageous man has no base fear or base confidence? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And the ignorance of them is cowardice? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And the knowledge of that which is and is not dangerous is courage, and is opposed to the ignorance of these things? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And the reason of this is that they have knowledge? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And the reason why they are cowards is admitted by you to be cowardice? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And then after this suppose that he came and asked us,''What were you saying just now? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And there is the acute in sound? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And therefore by opposites:--then folly is the opposite of temperance? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And these base fears and confidences originate in ignorance and uninstructedness? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And they are all different from one another? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And they who do not act rightly act foolishly, and in acting thus are not temperate? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And this, as possessing measure, must undeniably also be an art and science? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And we admitted also that what was done in opposite ways was done by opposites? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And we said that everything has only one opposite? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And what am I doing? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And what is good and honourable, I said, is also pleasant? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And what is that which the Sophist knows and makes his disciple know? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And what is your purpose? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And what sort of well- doing makes a man a good physician? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And what will he make of you? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And what will they make of you? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And what, Socrates, is the food of the soul? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And when men act rightly and advantageously they seem to you to be temperate? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And when you speak of being overcome--''what do you mean,''he will say,''but that you choose the greater evil in exchange for the lesser good?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And who have confidence when fighting on horseback-- the skilled horseman or the unskilled? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And who when fighting with light shields-- the peltasts or the nonpeltasts? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And why, I said, do you neither assent nor dissent, Protagoras? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And would you wish to begin the enquiry? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And you think otherwise? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And you would admit the existence of goods? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | And you would call pleasant, I said, the things which participate in pleasure or create pleasure? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Are not all actions honourable and useful, of which the tendency is to make life painless and pleasant? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Are these the things which are good but painful?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Are they not the confident? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Are you looking to any other standard but pleasure and pain when you call them good?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Are you not of Homer''s opinion, who says''Youth is most charming when the beard first appears''? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Are you satisfied, then, at having a life of pleasure which is without pain? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Because all men are teachers of virtue, each one according to his ability; and you say Where are the teachers? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But does not the courageous man also go to meet the better, and pleasanter, and nobler? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But if he lives pleasantly to the end of his life, will he not in that case have lived well? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But if there is a contradiction, can the composition be good or true? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But shall I tell you a strange thing? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But short enough? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But some one will ask, Why? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But suppose a person were to ask this further question: And how about yourself? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But suppose a person were to ask us: In what are the painters wise? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But surely courage, I said, is opposed to cowardice? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But the fear and confidence of the coward or foolhardy or madman, on the contrary, are base? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But what matter? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But what sort of doing is good in letters? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But what would you like? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But which of the two are they who, as you say, are unwilling to go to war, which is a good and honourable thing? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But why then do the sons of good fathers often turn out ill? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | But why, Socrates, should we trouble ourselves about the opinion of the many, who just say anything that happens to occur to them? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | By the gods, I said, and are you not ashamed at having to appear before the Hellenes in the character of a Sophist? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | COMPANION: And do you just come from an interview with him? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | COMPANION: And is this stranger really in your opinion a fairer love than the son of Cleinias? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | COMPANION: But have you really met, Socrates, with some wise one? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | COMPANION: Of what country? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | COMPANION: Well, and how do matters proceed? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | COMPANION: What do you mean-- a citizen or a foreigner? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | COMPANION: What is the meaning of this? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | COMPANION: Where do you come from, Socrates? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Delightful, I said; but what is the news? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Did not Simonides first set forth, as his own view, that''Hardly can a man become truly good''? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Do I understand you, I said; and is your meaning that you teach the art of politics, and that you promise to make men good citizens? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Do they also differ from one another in themselves and in their functions? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Do you admit the existence of folly? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Do you hear, Protagoras, I asked, what our friend Prodicus is saying? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Do you know the poem? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Do you think that an unjust man can be temperate in his injustice? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Do you wish, he said, to speak with me alone, or in the presence of the company? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | First of all we admitted that everything has one opposite and not more than one? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Has Protagoras robbed you of anything? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Has anything happened between you and him? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Have you been visiting him, and was he gracious to you? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | He and his fellow- workmen have taught them to the best of their ability,--but who will carry them further in their arts? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | How should we answer him, Socrates? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | How so? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | How then can I do otherwise than invite you to the examination of these subjects, and ask questions and consult with you? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | I knew his voice, and said: Hippocrates, is that you? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | I know that Pheidias is a sculptor, and that Homer is a poet; but what appellation is given to Protagoras? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | I proceeded: Is not a Sophist, Hippocrates, one who deals wholesale or retail in the food of the soul? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | I said: I wonder whether you know what you are doing? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | I said: You would admit, Protagoras, that some men live well and others ill? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | I said; or shall I begin? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | I want to know whether you still think that there are men who are most ignorant and yet most courageous? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | I, who knew the very courageous madness of the man, said: What is the matter? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | If I am not mistaken the question was this: Are wisdom and temperance and courage and justice and holiness five names of the same thing? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | If they succeed, I said, or if they do not succeed? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Is Protagoras in Athens? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Is not that true, Protagoras? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Is not that true? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Is not the real explanation that they are out of proportion to one another, either as greater and smaller, or more and fewer? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Is that, he will ask, because the good was worthy or not worthy of conquering the evil''? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | May I employ an illustration? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Must not he make him eloquent in that which he understands? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Now is that your view? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Now when there is all this care about virtue private and public, why, Socrates, do you still wonder and doubt whether virtue can be taught? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Now who becomes a bad physician? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Once more, I said, is there anything beautiful? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Or if a man has one part, must he also have all the others? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Or you might ask, Who is to teach the sons of our artisans this same art which they have learned of their fathers? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Please to consider: Is there or is there not some one quality of which all the citizens must be partakers, if there is to be a city at all? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | SOCRATES: And is not the wiser always the fairer, sweet friend? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | SOCRATES: What of his beard? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Shall I answer what appears to me to be short enough, or what appears to you to be short enough? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Shall I, as an elder, speak to you as younger men in an apologue or myth, or shall I argue out the question? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Suppose again, I said, that the world says to me:''Why do you spend many words and speak in many ways on this subject?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Tell me then; who are they who have confidence when diving into a well? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Tell me, Hippocrates, I said, as you are going to Protagoras, and will be paying your money to him, what is he to whom you are going? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | That is my opinion: would it not be yours also? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | The honourable work is also useful and good? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | The world will assent, will they not? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then I proceeded to say: Well, but are you aware of the danger which you are incurring? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then about what does the Sophist make him eloquent? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then against something different? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then as to the motive from which the cowards act, do you call it cowardice or courage? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then do cowards go where there is safety, and the courageous where there is danger? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then every opposite has one opposite only and no more? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then tell me, what do you imagine that he is? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then the ignorance of what is and is not dangerous is cowardice? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then the wisdom which knows what are and are not dangers is opposed to the ignorance of them? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then to act foolishly is the opposite of acting temperately? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then to live pleasantly is a good, and to live unpleasantly an evil? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then we are going to pay our money to him in the character of a Sophist? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then who are the courageous? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then, I said, no other part of virtue is like knowledge, or like justice, or like courage, or like temperance, or like holiness? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then, Protagoras, which of the two assertions shall we renounce? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Then, my friends, what do you say to this? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Thereupon I should answer to him who asked me, that justice is of the nature of the just: would not you? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | To which the only opposite is the evil? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | To which the only opposite is the grave? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | To which the only opposite is the ugly? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Well then, I said, tell us against what are the courageous ready to go-- against the same dangers as the cowards? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | What did he mean, Prodicus, by the term''hard''? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | What do you mean? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | What else would you say? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | What other answer could there be but that he presides over the art which makes men eloquent? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | What will Protagoras make of you, if you go to see him? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | What would you say? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | When you speak of brave men, do you mean the confident, or another sort of nature? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Which of these two assertions shall we renounce? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Which you would also acknowledge to be a thing-- should we not say so? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Who is so foolish as to chastise or instruct the ugly, or the diminutive, or the feeble? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Why do I say all this? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Why, he said, how can he be consistent in both? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Will you be so good? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Would not mankind generally acknowledge that the art which accomplishes this result is the art of measurement? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Would not the art of measuring be the saving principle; or would the power of appearance? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Would they still be evil, if they had no attendant evil consequences, simply because they give the consciousness of pleasure of whatever nature?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Would you not admit, my friends, that this is true? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Would you not answer in the same way? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | Yes, I replied; he came two days ago: have you only just heard of his arrival? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | You might as well ask, Who teaches Greek? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | You think that some men are temperate, and yet unjust? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | You would not deny, then, that courage and wisdom are also parts of virtue? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | You, Socrates, are discontented, and why? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and about what? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and do you bring any news? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and do you call the latter good? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and do you maintain that one part of virtue is unlike another, and is this your position?'' |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and in causing poverty do they not cause pain;--they would agree to that also, if I am not mistaken? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and what sort of doing makes a man good in letters? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and what will he make of you? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and why do you give them this money?--how would you have answered? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | and why have you come hither at this unearthly hour? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | he said: how am I to shorten my answers? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | how is he designated? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | how would you have answered? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | or shall I repeat the whole? |
plato-protagoras-1570 | shall I make them too short? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | All my pretty ones? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | All? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | And wakes it now, to look so green and pale At what it did so freely? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Are not Those in commission yet return''d? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Are you a man? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Are you so gospell''d To pray for this good man and for his issue, Whose heavy hand hath bow''d you to the grave And beggar''d yours for ever? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Art thou afeard To be the same in thine own act and valour As thou art in desire? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling as to sight? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | BANQUO Good sir, why do you start; and seem to fear Things that do sound so fair? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | BANQUO How far is''t call''d to Forres? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | BANQUO Were such things here as we do speak about? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | BANQUO What, can the devil speak true? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | BANQUO What, sir, not yet at rest? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | But Banquo''s safe? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | But how wilt thou do for a father? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | But no more sights!--Where are these gentlemen? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | CAITHNESS Who knows if Donalbain be with his brother? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | DONALBAIN[ Aside to MALCOLM] What should be spoken here, where our fate, Hid in an auger- hole, may rush, and seize us? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | DUNCAN Dismay''d not this Our captains, Macbeth and Banquo? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | DUNCAN Whence camest thou, worthy thane? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | DUNCAN Where''s the thane of Cawdor? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Did heaven look on, And would not take their part? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Did not you speak? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Did you say all? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Didst thou not hear a noise? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Do you find Your patience so predominant in your nature That you can let this go? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Doctor Do you mark that? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Doctor Even so? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Doctor How came she by that light? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Doctor What is it she does now? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Enter DUNCAN, MALCOLM, DONALBAIN, LENNOX, and Attendants] DUNCAN Is execution done on Cawdor? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Enter DUNCAN, MALCOLM, DONALBAIN, LENNOX, with Attendants, meeting a bleeding Sergeant] DUNCAN What bloody man is that? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Enter the three Witches] First Witch Where hast thou been, sister? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Enter three Witches] First Witch When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | FLEANCE escapes] Third Murderer Who did strike out the light? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | First Murderer Wast not the way? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | First Murderer Where is your husband? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | First Witch Ay, sir, all this is so: but why Stands Macbeth thus amazedly? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | First Witch Say, if thou''dst rather hear it from our mouths, Or from our masters? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | First Witch Where the place? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Goes Fleance with you? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Gone? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | HECATE Have I not reason, beldams as you are, Saucy and overbold? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Hear''st thou of them? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | How does your patient, doctor? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | How is''t with me, when every noise appals me? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | How will you live? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | I did hear The galloping of horse: who was''t came by? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | I''the name of truth, Are ye fantastical, or that indeed Which outwardly ye show? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | In this slumbery agitation, besides her walking and other actual performances, what, at any time, have you heard her say? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Is he dispatch''d? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Is''t far you ride? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Knocking within] MACBETH Whence is that knocking? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH And when goes hence? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH Did you send to him, sir? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH He has almost supp''d: why have you left the chamber? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH Know you not he has? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH Thou''rt mad to say it: Is not thy master with him? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH Was the hope drunk Wherein you dress''d yourself? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH What beast was''t, then, That made you break this enterprise to me? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH What''s to be done? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH Who dares receive it other, As we shall make our griefs and clamour roar Upon his death? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACBETH Who was it that thus cried? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACDUFF What, with worms and flies? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LADY MACDUFF Yes, he is dead; how wilt thou do for a father? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LENNOX Mean you his majesty? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | LENNOX Sent he to Macduff? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Live you? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Lords What, my good lord? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH And thane of Cawdor too: went it not so? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH As I descended? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH But wherefore could not I pronounce''Amen''? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Came they not by you? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer''s cloud, Without our special wonder? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Hath he ask''d for me? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH How say''st thou, that Macduff denies his person At our great bidding? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH If we should fail? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Ride you this afternoon? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Saw you the weird sisters? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Speak, if you can: what are you? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Stay, you imperfect speakers, tell me more: By Sinel''s death I know I am thane of Glamis; But how of Cawdor? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH The thane of Cawdor lives: why do you dress me In borrow''d robes? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Well then, now Have you consider''d of my speeches? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH What is''t you say? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH What news more? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH When? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Where? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Which of you have done this? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH Who can be wise, amazed, temperate and furious, Loyal and neutral, in a moment? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACBETH[ Within] Who''s there? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF And all my children? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF But not a niggard of your speech: how goes''t? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF How does my wife? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF Is the king stirring, worthy thane? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF Is thy master stirring? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF My children too? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF Stands Scotland where it did? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF The tyrant has not batter''d at their peace? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF What concern they? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF What should he be? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF What three things does drink especially provoke? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF Wherefore did you so? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MACDUFF Why, see you not? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MALCOLM O, by whom? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MALCOLM What will you do? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MALCOLM What''s the newest grief? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MALCOLM[ Aside to DONALBAIN] Why do we hold our tongues, That most may claim this argument for ours? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MENTEITH What does the tyrant? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | MENTEITH Who then shall blame His pester''d senses to recoil and start, When all that is within him does condemn Itself for being there? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | My wife kill''d too? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Or have we eaten on the insane root That takes the reason prisoner? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | ROSS Is''t known who did this more than bloody deed? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | ROSS What sights, my lord? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | ROSS Where is Duncan''s body? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | ROSS Will you to Scone? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | SIWARD Had he his hurts before? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | SIWARD Then he is dead? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | SIWARD What wood is this before us? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Say from whence You owe this strange intelligence? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Son And be all traitors that do so? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Son And must they all be hanged that swear and lie? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Son Nay, how will you do for a husband? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Son Was my father a traitor, mother? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Son What is a traitor? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Son Who must hang them? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Son Why should I, mother? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | The general cause? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | The witches dance and then vanish, with HECATE] MACBETH Where are they? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Third Witch Sister, where thou? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Was he not born of woman? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Was not that nobly done? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What are these So wither''d and so wild in their attire, That look not like the inhabitants o''the earth, And yet are on''t? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What are you? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What good could they pretend? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What hands are here? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What is the night? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What is''t that moves your highness? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What is''t you do? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What soldiers, patch? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What soldiers, whey- face? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What''s he That was not born of woman? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What''s the boy Malcolm? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What, all my pretty chickens and their dam At one fell swoop? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What, in our house? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | When was it she last walked? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Where got''st thou that goose look? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Whither are they vanish''d? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Who can not want the thought how monstrous It was for Malcolm and for Donalbain To kill their gracious father? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Who lies i''the second chamber? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Who''s here? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Who''s there, i''the name of Beelzebub? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Who''s there, in the other devil''s name? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Why are you silent? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Why did you bring these daggers from the place? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Why do you make such faces? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Why do you show me this? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Why in that rawness left you wife and child, Those precious motives, those strong knots of love, Without leave- taking? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Why sinks that cauldron? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Why, what care I? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Will it not be received, When we have mark''d with blood those sleepy two Of his own chamber and used their very daggers, That they have done''t? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | Yet my heart Throbs to know one thing: tell me, if your art Can tell so much: shall Banquo''s issue ever Reign in this kingdom? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ A cry of women within] What is that noise? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Apparitions vanish] What, is this so? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Aside] This supernatural soliciting Can not be ill, can not be good: if ill, Why hath it given me earnest of success, Commencing in a truth? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Bell rings][ Enter LADY MACBETH] LADY MACBETH What''s the business, That such a hideous trumpet calls to parley The sleepers of the house? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Descends] MACBETH That will never be Who can impress the forest, bid the tree Unfix his earth- bound root? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Descends] MACBETH Then live, Macduff: what need I fear of thee? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter BANQUO, and FLEANCE bearing a torch before him] BANQUO How goes the night, boy? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter LADY MACBETH and a Servant] LADY MACBETH Is Banquo gone from court? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter LADY MACDUFF, her Son, and ROSS] LADY MACDUFF What had he done, to make him fly the land? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter LENNOX] LENNOX What''s your grace''s will? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter MACBETH] MACBETH Why should I play the Roman fool, and die On mine own sword? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter MACDUFF] How goes the world, sir, now? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter MALCOLM and DONALBAIN] DONALBAIN What is amiss? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter Murderers] What are these faces? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter ROSS] MACDUFF See, who comes here? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter SEYTON] SEYTON What is your gracious pleasure? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter YOUNG SIWARD] YOUNG SIWARD What is thy name? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter a Doctor] MALCOLM Well; more anon.--Comes the king forth, I pray you? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter a Messenger] What is your tidings? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Enter three Murderers] First Murderer But who did bid thee join with us? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exeunt all but MACBETH, and an attendant] Sirrah, a word with you: attend those men Our pleasure? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exit Attendant] Was it not yesterday we spoke together? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exit Doctor] MACDUFF What''s the disease he means? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exit Sergeant, attended] Who comes here? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exit Servant] Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exit] Doctor Will she go now to bed? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exit] LADY MACDUFF Sirrah, your father''s dead; And what will you do now? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exit] LADY MACDUFF Whither should I fly? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Exit] LENNOX Goes the king hence to- day? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ GHOST OF BANQUO vanishes] LADY MACBETH What, quite unmann''d in folly? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Opens the gate][ Enter MACDUFF and LENNOX] MACDUFF Was it so late, friend, ere you went to bed, That you do lie so late? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ Re- enter SEYTON] Wherefore was that cry? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | [ To BANQUO] Do you not hope your children shall be kings, When those that gave the thane of Cawdor to me Promised no less to them? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | a soldier, and afeard? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | and what noise is this? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | did he not straight In pious rage the two delinquents tear, That were the slaves of drink and thralls of sleep? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | hath it slept since? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | how say you? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | or are you aught That man may question? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from the heat- oppressed brain? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | or is it a fee- grief Due to some single breast? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | or why Upon this blasted heath you stop our way With such prophetic greeting? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | the life? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | to leave his wife, to leave his babes, His mansion and his titles in a place From whence himself does fly? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | what news? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | what not put upon His spongy officers, who shall bear the guilt Of our great quell? |
shakespeare-macbeth-1824 | why do you keep alone, Of sorriest fancies your companions making, Using those thoughts which should indeed have died With them they think on? |
milton-paradise-1886 | O father, what intends thy hand,she cried,"Against thy only son? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Wherefore cease we, then? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Ah, why should all mankind, For one man''s fault, thus guiltless be condemned, It guiltless? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Among unequals what society Can sort, what harmony, or true delight? |
milton-paradise-1886 | And am I now upbraided as the cause Of thy transgressing? |
milton-paradise-1886 | And do they only stand By ignorance? |
milton-paradise-1886 | And know''st for whom? |
milton-paradise-1886 | And what are Gods, that Man may not become As they, participating God- like food? |
milton-paradise-1886 | And what is faith, love, virtue, unassayed Alone, without exteriour help sustained? |
milton-paradise-1886 | And who knows, Let this be good, whether our angry Foe Can give it, or will ever? |
milton-paradise-1886 | And, though God Made thee without thy leave, what if thy son Prove disobedient, and reproved, retort,"Wherefore didst thou beget me? |
milton-paradise-1886 | As he our darkness, can not we his light Imitate when we please? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Being as I am, why didst not thou, the head, Command me absolutely not to go, Going into such danger, as thou saidst? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Book III Hail, holy Light, offspring of Heaven firstborn, Or of the Eternal coeternal beam May I express thee unblam''d? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But fallen he is; and now What rests, but that the mortal sentence pass On his transgression,--death denounced that day? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But from me what can proceed, But all corrupt; both mind and will depraved Not to do only, but to will the same With me? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But have I now seen Death? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But is there yet no other way, besides These painful passages, how we may come To death, and mix with our connatural dust? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But past who can recall, or done undo? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But say, What meant that caution joined, If ye be found Obedient? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But say, if our Deliverer up to Heaven Must re- ascend, what will betide the few His faithful, left among the unfaithful herd, The enemies of truth? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But say, what mean those coloured streaks in Heaven Distended, as the brow of God appeased? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But to Adam in what sort Shall I appear? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But to convince the proud what signs avail, Or wonders move the obdurate to relent? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But what if better counsels might erect Our minds, and teach us to cast off this yoke? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But what will not ambition and revenge Descend to? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But wherefore all night long shine these? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But wherefore thou alone? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But whom send I to judge them? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But, first, whom shall we send In search of this new World? |
milton-paradise-1886 | But, if death Bind us with after- bands, what profits then Our inward freedom? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Can he make deathless death? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Can it be death? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Can it be sin to know? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Can thus The image of God in Man, created once So goodly and erect, though faulty since, To such unsightly sufferings be debased Under inhuman pains? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay To mould me Man? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Doctrine which we would know whence learned: who saw When this creation was? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Dwells in all Heaven charity so dear? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Faithful to whom? |
milton-paradise-1886 | First, what revenge? |
milton-paradise-1886 | For though the Lord of all be infinite, Is his wrath also? |
milton-paradise-1886 | For us alone Was death invented? |
milton-paradise-1886 | For, what admirest thou, what transports thee so, An outside? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Forbid who will, none shall from me withhold Longer thy offered good; why else set here?" |
milton-paradise-1886 | Gabriel? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Hadst thou the same free will and power to stand? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Hast thou eaten of the tree, Whereof I gave thee charge thou shouldst not eat? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Hast thou not made me here thy substitute, And these inferiour far beneath me set? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Hast thou not wondered, Adam, at my stay? |
milton-paradise-1886 | High matter thou enjoinest me, O prime of men, Sad task and hard: For how shall I relate To human sense the invisible exploits Of warring Spirits? |
milton-paradise-1886 | How can he exercise Wrath without end on Man, whom death must end? |
milton-paradise-1886 | How can they then acquitted stand In sight of God? |
milton-paradise-1886 | How comes it thus? |
milton-paradise-1886 | How dies the Serpent? |
milton-paradise-1886 | If thence he scape, into whatever world, Or unknown region, what remains him less Than unknown dangers, and as hard escape? |
milton-paradise-1886 | In heavenly Spirits could such perverseness dwell? |
milton-paradise-1886 | In plain then, what forbids he but to know, Forbids us good, forbids us to be wise? |
milton-paradise-1886 | In solitude What happiness, who can enjoy alone, Or, all enjoying, what contentment find? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Is knowledge so despised? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Is not the Earth With various living creatures, and the air Replenished, and all these at thy command To come and play before thee? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Is that their happy state, The proof of their obedience and their faith? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Is this the end Of this new glorious world, and me so late The glory of that glory, who now become Accursed, of blessed? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Is this the way I must return to native dust? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Is this, then, worst-- Thus sitting, thus consulting, thus in arms? |
milton-paradise-1886 | It was but breath Of life that sinned; what dies but what had life And sin? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Know ye not then said Satan, filled with scorn, Know ye not me? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Knowest thou not Their language and their ways? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Me first He ruined, now Mankind; whom will he next?" |
milton-paradise-1886 | Meanwhile war arose, And fields were fought in Heaven: wherein remained( For what could else?) |
milton-paradise-1886 | Must I thus leave thee Paradise? |
milton-paradise-1886 | My voice thou oft hast heard, and hast not feared, But still rejoiced; how is it now become So dreadful to thee? |
milton-paradise-1886 | O Earth, how like to Heaven, if not preferred For what God, after better, worse would build? |
milton-paradise-1886 | O Teacher, some great mischief hath befallen To that meek man, who well had sacrificed; Is piety thus and pure devotion paid? |
milton-paradise-1886 | O, then, at last relent: Is there no place Left for repentance, none for pardon left? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Only begotten Son, seest thou what rage Transports our Adversary? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Or envy, or what reserve forbids to taste? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Or have ye chosen this place After the toil of battle to repose Your wearied virtue, for the ease you find To slumber here, as in the vales of Heaven? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Or hear''st thou rather pure ethereal stream, Whose fountain who shall tell? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Or is it envy? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Or serve they, as a flowery verge, to bind The fluid skirts of that same watery cloud, Lest it again dissolve, and shower the earth? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Or shall the Adversary thus obtain His end, and frustrate thine? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Or when we lay Chained on the burning lake? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Our Maker bids encrease; who bids abstain But our Destroyer, foe to God and Man? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Peace is despaired; For who can think submission? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Proud, art thou met? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Satan, I know thy strength, and thou knowest mine; Neither our own, but given: What folly then To boast what arms can do? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Say they who counsel war;"we are decreed, Reserved, and destined to eternal woe; Whatever doing, what can we suffer more, What can we suffer worse?" |
milton-paradise-1886 | Say, Woman, what is this which thou hast done? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Say, heavenly Powers, where shall we find such love? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Seem I to thee sufficiently possessed Of happiness, or not? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Serpent, thy overpraising leaves in doubt The virtue of that fruit, in thee first proved: But say, where grows the tree? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Shall Truth fail to keep her word, Justice Divine not hasten to be just? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Shall that be shut to Man, which to the Beast Is open? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Shall we, then, live thus vile-- the race of Heaven Thus trampled, thus expelled, to suffer here Chains and these torments? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Shalt thou give law to God? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Sight so deform what heart of rock could long Dry- eyed behold? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Sleepest thou, Companion dear? |
milton-paradise-1886 | That thou art naked, who Hath told thee? |
milton-paradise-1886 | That we were formed then sayest thou? |
milton-paradise-1886 | The former, vain to hope, argues as vain The latter; for what place can be for us Within Heaven''s bound, unless Heaven''s Lord supreme We overpower? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Their song was partial; but the harmony( What could it less when Spirits immortal sing?) |
milton-paradise-1886 | This deep world Of darkness do we dread? |
milton-paradise-1886 | This evening from the sun''s decline arrived, Who tells of some infernal Spirit seen Hitherward bent( who could have thought?) |
milton-paradise-1886 | Thou art my father, thou my author, thou My being gav''st me; whom should I obey But thee? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Thou hadst: whom hast thou then or what to accuse, But Heaven''s free love dealt equally to all? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Thou to me thy thoughts Wast wo nt, I mine to thee was wo nt to impart; Both waking we were one; how then can now Thy sleep dissent? |
milton-paradise-1886 | To the loss of that, Sufficient penalty, why hast thou added The sense of endless woes? |
milton-paradise-1886 | To whom the Goblin, full of wrath, replied:--"Art thou that traitor Angel? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Was I to have never parted from thy side? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Was she thy God, that her thou didst obey Before his voice? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Was this your discipline and faith engaged, Your military obedience, to dissolve Allegiance to the acknowledged Power supreme? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What callest thou solitude? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What can it the avail though yet we feel Strength undiminished, or eternal being To undergo eternal punishment?" |
milton-paradise-1886 | What can your knowledge hurt him, or this tree Impart against his will, if all be his? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What could I do, But follow straight, invisibly thus led? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What fear I then? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What fear we then? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What fury, O son, Possesses thee to bend that mortal dart Against thy father''s head? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What if the sun Be center to the world; and other stars, By his attractive virtue and their own Incited, dance about him various rounds? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What if we find Some easier enterprise? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What matter where, if I be still the same, And what I should be, all but less than he Whom thunder hath made greater? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What may this mean? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What should they do? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What sit we then projecting peace and war? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What sleep can close Thy eye- lids? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What strength, what art, can then Suffice, or what evasion bear him safe, Through the strict senteries and stations thick Of Angels watching round? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What thinkest thou then of me, and this my state? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What though the field be lost? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What when we fled amain, pursued and struck With Heaven''s afflicting thunder, and besought The Deep to shelter us? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What will they then But force the Spirit of Grace itself, and bind His consort Liberty? |
milton-paradise-1886 | What wonder? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Where art thou, Adam, wo nt with joy to meet My coming seen far off? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Which of those rebel Spirits adjudged to Hell Comest thou, escaped thy prison? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Which of you will be mortal, to redeem Man''s mortal crime, and just the unjust to save? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Who can in reason then, or right, assume Monarchy over such as live by right His equals, if in power and splendour less, In freedom equal? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Who first seduced them to that foul revolt? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Who of all ages to succeed, but, feeling The evil on him brought by me, will curse My head? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Who then shall guide His people, who defend? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Whose but his own? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why comes not Death, Said he, with one thrice- acceptable stroke To end me? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why delays His hand to execute what his decree Fixed on this day? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why do I overlive, Why am I mocked with death, and lengthened out To deathless pain? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why else this double object in our sight Of flight pursued in the air, and o''er the ground, One way the self- same hour? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why is life given To be thus wrested from us? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why should not Man, Retaining still divine similitude In part, from such deformities be free, And, for his Maker''s image sake, exempt? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why should their Lord Envy them that? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why shouldst not thou like sense within thee feel When I am present, and thy trial choose With me, best witness of thy virtue tried? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why then was this forbid? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Why, but to awe; Why, but to keep ye low and ignorant, His worshippers? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Will he draw out, For anger''s sake, finite to infinite, In punished Man, to satisfy his rigour, Satisfied never? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Will they not deal Worse with his followers than with him they dealt? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Will ye submit your necks, and choose to bend The supple knee? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Wouldst thou admit for his contempt of thee That proud excuse? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Wouldst thou approve thy constancy, approve First thy obedience; the other who can know, Not seeing thee attempted, who attest? |
milton-paradise-1886 | Yet why? |
milton-paradise-1886 | and can envy dwell In heavenly breasts? |
milton-paradise-1886 | and the work Of secondary hands, by task transferred From Father to his Son? |
milton-paradise-1886 | and what is one? |
milton-paradise-1886 | and wherein lies The offence, that Man should thus attain to know? |
milton-paradise-1886 | and, transformed, Why sat''st thou like an enemy in wait, Here watching at the head of these that sleep? |
milton-paradise-1886 | but double how endured, To one, and to his image now proclaimed? |
milton-paradise-1886 | but what we more affect, Honour, dominion, glory, and renown; Who have sustained one day in doubtful fight,( And if one day, why not eternal days?) |
milton-paradise-1886 | by looks only? |
milton-paradise-1886 | by the fruit? |
milton-paradise-1886 | couldst thou support That burden, heavier than the earth to bear; Than all the world much heavier, though divided With that bad Woman? |
milton-paradise-1886 | did I solicit thee From darkness to promote me, or here place In this delicious garden? |
milton-paradise-1886 | do not believe Those rigid threats of death: ye shall not die: How should you? |
milton-paradise-1886 | expressed Immutable, when thou wert lost, not I; Who might have lived, and joyed immortal bliss, Yet willingly chose rather death with thee? |
milton-paradise-1886 | for what can I encrease, Or multiply, but curses on my head? |
milton-paradise-1886 | for whom This glorious sight, when sleep hath shut all eyes? |
milton-paradise-1886 | for, on earth, Who against faith and conscience can be heard Infallible? |
milton-paradise-1886 | from hence how far? |
milton-paradise-1886 | hath God then said that of the fruit Of all these garden- trees ye shall not eat, Yet Lords declared of all in earth or air? |
milton-paradise-1886 | how last unfold The secrets of another world, perhaps Not lawful to reveal? |
milton-paradise-1886 | how, without remorse, The ruin of so many glorious once And perfect while they stood? |
milton-paradise-1886 | it gives you life To knowledge; by the threatener? |
milton-paradise-1886 | language of man pronounced By tongue of brute, and human sense expressed? |
milton-paradise-1886 | of evil, if what is evil Be real, why not known, since easier shunned? |
milton-paradise-1886 | or can introduce Law and edict on us, who without law Err not? |
milton-paradise-1886 | or do they mix Irradiance, virtual or immediate touch? |
milton-paradise-1886 | or more than this, that we are dust, And thither must return, and be no more? |
milton-paradise-1886 | or these titles now Must we renounce, and, changing style, be called Princes of Hell? |
milton-paradise-1886 | or thou than they Less hardy to endure? |
milton-paradise-1886 | or to us denied This intellectual food, for beasts reserved? |
milton-paradise-1886 | or will God incense his ire For such a petty trespass? |
milton-paradise-1886 | or wilt thou thyself Abolish thy creation, and unmake For him, what for thy glory thou hast made? |
milton-paradise-1886 | rather, what know to fear Under this ignorance of good and evil, Of God or death, of law or penalty? |
milton-paradise-1886 | rather, why Obtruded on us thus? |
milton-paradise-1886 | rememberest thou Thy making, while the Maker gave thee being? |
milton-paradise-1886 | these happy walks and shades, Fit haunt of Gods? |
milton-paradise-1886 | to thy rebellious crew? |
milton-paradise-1886 | what are these, Death''s ministers, not men? |
milton-paradise-1886 | what doubt we to incense His utmost ire? |
milton-paradise-1886 | what praise could they receive? |
milton-paradise-1886 | what, but unbuild His living temples, built by faith to stand, Their own faith, not another''s? |
milton-paradise-1886 | when meet now Such pairs, in love and mutual honour joined? |
milton-paradise-1886 | wherefore with thee Came not all hell broke loose? |
milton-paradise-1886 | wherefore, but in hope To dispossess him, and thyself to reign? |
milton-paradise-1886 | which way shall I fly Infinite wrath, and infinite despair? |
milton-paradise-1886 | whom but thee, Vicegerent Son? |
milton-paradise-1886 | whom follow? |
milton-paradise-1886 | whom shall we find Sufficient? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Again, would you not be cautious of affirming that the addition of one to one, or the division of one, is the cause of two? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And Socrates observing them asked what they thought of the argument, and whether there was anything wanting? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And an absolute beauty and absolute good? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And are not the temperate exactly in the same case? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And can all this be true, think you? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And did he answer forcibly or feebly? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And did we not see and hear and have the use of our other senses as soon as we were born? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And do not courageous men face death because they are afraid of yet greater evils? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And do we know the nature of this absolute essence? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And do you not imagine, he said, that if there were a competition in evil, the worst would be found to be very few? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And does not the nature of every harmony depend upon the manner in which the elements are harmonized? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And does the soul admit of death? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And has not this been our own case in the matter of equals and of absolute equality? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And having neither more nor less of harmony or of discord, one soul has no more vice or virtue than another, if vice be discord and virtue harmony? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And how can such a notion of the soul as this agree with the other? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And in all these cases, the recollection may be derived from things either like or unlike? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And in this the philosopher dishonours the body; his soul runs away from his body and desires to be alone and by herself? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is not all true virtue the companion of wisdom, no matter what fears or pleasures or other similar goods or evils may or may not attend her? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is not courage, Simmias, a quality which is specially characteristic of the philosopher? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is not the feeling discreditable? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is not this the state in which the soul is most enthralled by the body? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is the soul in agreement with the affections of the body? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is the soul seen or not seen? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is the soul seen or not seen? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is there any opposite to life? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is this always the case? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And is this true of all opposites? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And may we say that this has been proven? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And now, he said, what did we just now call that principle which repels the even? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And on this oddness, of which the number three has the impress, the opposite idea will never intrude? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And one of the two processes or generations is visible-- for surely the act of dying is visible? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And return to life, if there be such a thing, is the birth of the dead into the world of the living? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And shall we suppose nature to walk on one leg only? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And so you think that I ought to answer your indictment as if I were in a court? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And that by greatness only great things become great and greater greater, and by smallness the less become less? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And that principle which repels the musical, or the just? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And that which is not more or less a harmony is not more or less harmonized? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And that which is not more or less harmonized can not have more or less of harmony, but only an equal harmony? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And the body is more like the changing? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And there is no difficulty, he said, in assigning to all of them places answering to their several natures and propensities? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And therefore a soul which is absolutely a soul has no vice? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And therefore has neither more nor less of discord, nor yet of harmony? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And therefore, previously? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And these, if they are opposites, are generated the one from the other, and have there their two intermediate processes also? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And they are generated one from the other? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And this impress was given by the odd principle? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And this separation and release of the soul from the body is termed death? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And this state of the soul is called wisdom? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And to the odd is opposed the even? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And to which class is the body more alike and akin? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And to which class is the soul more nearly alike and akin, as far as may be inferred from this argument, as well as from the preceding one? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what about the pleasures of love-- should he care for them? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what do we call the principle which does not admit of death? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what from the dead? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what is it? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what is now your notion of such matters? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what is that process? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what is that? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what is the nature of this knowledge or recollection? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And what we mean by''seen''and''not seen''is that which is or is not visible to the eye of man? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And whence did we obtain our knowledge? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And where shall we find a good charmer of our fears, Socrates, when you are gone? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And which alternative, Simmias, do you prefer? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And which does the soul resemble? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And which of his friends were with him? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And yet from these equals, although differing from the idea of equality, you conceived and attained that idea? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And yet what is the feeling of lovers when they recognize a lyre, or a garment, or anything else which the beloved has been in the habit of using? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And yet, he said, the number two is certainly not opposed to the number three? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | And, further, is not one part of us body, another part soul? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Are not all things which have opposites generated out of their opposites? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Are not these, Simmias and Cebes, the points which we have to consider? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Are they equals in the same sense in which absolute equality is equal? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Are they not, Cebes, such as compel the things of which they have possession, not only to take their own form, but also the form of some opposite? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Are they not, as the poets are always telling us, inaccurate witnesses? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | At any rate you can decide whether he who has knowledge will or will not be able to render an account of his knowledge? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | At the same time, turning to Cebes, he said: Are you at all disconcerted, Cebes, at our friend''s objection? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But are real equals ever unequal? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But are they the same as fire and snow? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But did you ever behold any of them with your eyes? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But do you mean to take away your thoughts with you, Socrates? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But do you think that every man is able to give an account of these very matters about which we are speaking? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But does the soul admit of degrees? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But enough of them:--let us discuss the matter among ourselves: Do we believe that there is such a thing as death? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But if it be true, then is not the body liable to speedy dissolution? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But is this the only thing which is called odd? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But what followed? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But what would you say of equal portions of wood and stone, or other material equals? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | But when did our souls acquire this knowledge?--not since we were born as men? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | By all means, replied Socrates; what else should I please? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Can this, my dear Cebes, be denied? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Did he appear to share the unpleasant feeling which you mention? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Did you never observe this? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Do not they, from knowing the lyre, form in the mind''s eye an image of the youth to whom the lyre belongs? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Do we lose them at the moment of receiving them, or if not at what other time? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Do you agree in this notion of the cause? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Do you agree? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Do you agree? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Do you know of any? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Do you not agree with me? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Do you not agree? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Does not the divine appear to you to be that which naturally orders and rules, and the mortal to be that which is subject and servant? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | ECHECRATES: And was Aristippus there, and Cleombrotus? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | ECHECRATES: Any one else? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | ECHECRATES: Well, and what did you talk about? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | ECHECRATES: Were you yourself, Phaedo, in the prison with Socrates on the day when he drank the poison? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | ECHECRATES: What followed? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | ECHECRATES: What is this ship? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | ECHECRATES: What was the manner of his death, Phaedo? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | ECHECRATES: Who were present? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | For example, when the body is hot and thirsty, does not the soul incline us against drinking? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | For example; Will not the number three endure annihilation or anything sooner than be converted into an even number, while remaining three? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | For if the living spring from any other things, and they too die, must not all things at last be swallowed up in death? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | For what can be the meaning of a truly wise man wanting to fly away and lightly leave a master who is better than himself? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | For what could be more convincing than the argument of Socrates, which has now fallen into discredit? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | From the senses then is derived the knowledge that all sensible things aim at an absolute equality of which they fall short? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Had we the knowledge at our birth, or did we recollect the things which we knew previously to our birth? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Has the reality of them ever been perceived by you through the bodily organs? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | He proceeded: And did you deny the force of the whole preceding argument, or of a part only? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Heat is a thing different from fire, and cold is not the same with snow? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | How can she have, if the previous argument holds? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | How so? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | How so? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | I mean to say, have sight and hearing any truth in them? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | I mean what I may illustrate by the following instance:--The knowledge of a lyre is not the same as the knowledge of a man? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | I will try to make this clearer by an example:--The odd number is always called by the name of odd? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Instead of caring about them, does he not rather despise anything more than nature needs? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Is it not the separation of soul and body? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Is not death opposed to life? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Is not forgetting, Simmias, just the losing of knowledge? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Is not the separation and release of the soul from the body their especial study? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Is not this true, Cebes? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Is the blood the element with which we think, or the air, or the fire? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | May I, or not? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | May they not rather be described as almost always changing and hardly ever the same, either with themselves or with one another? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Must we not rather assign to death some corresponding process of generation? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Must we not, said Socrates, ask ourselves what that is which, as we imagine, is liable to be scattered, and about which we fear? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Now if it be true that the living come from the dead, then our souls must exist in the other world, for if not, how could they have been born again? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Now which of these two functions is akin to the divine? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Of all this we may certainly affirm that we acquired the knowledge before birth? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Of what nature? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Once more, he said, what ruler is there of the elements of human nature other than the soul, and especially the wise soul? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Or did the authorities forbid them to be present-- so that he had no friends near him when he died? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Or do or suffer anything other than they do or suffer? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Or look at the matter in another way:--Do not the same pieces of wood or stone appear at one time equal, and at another time unequal? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Or you may also be led to the recollection of Simmias himself? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | PHAEDO: Did you not hear of the proceedings at the trial? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Please to tell me then, Cebes, he said, what was the difficulty which troubled you? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Seeing then that the immortal is indestructible, must not the soul, if she is immortal, be also imperishable? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Shall we exclude the opposite process? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Shall we say so? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Socrates alone retained his calmness: What is this strange outcry? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Socrates replied with a smile: O Simmias, what are you saying? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Socrates replied: And have you, Cebes and Simmias, who are the disciples of Philolaus, never heard him speak of this? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Supposing that the odd were imperishable, must not three be imperishable? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Tell me, I implore you, how did Socrates proceed? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Tell me, then, what is that of which the inherence will render the body alive? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | That is to say, before we were born, I suppose? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | The debt shall be paid, said Crito; is there anything else? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | The seen is the changing, and the unseen is the unchanging? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then must not true existence be revealed to her in thought, if at all? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then one soul not being more or less absolutely a soul than another, is not more or less harmonized? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then tell me, Socrates, why is suicide held to be unlawful? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then the idea of the even number will never arrive at three? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then the inference is that our souls exist in the world below? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then the living, whether things or persons, Cebes, are generated from the dead? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then the soul is immortal? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then the soul is more like to the unseen, and the body to the seen? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then the triad or number three is uneven? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then these( so- called) equals are not the same with the idea of equality? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then three has no part in the even? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then we are agreed after all, said Socrates, that the opposite will never in any case be opposed to itself? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then we must have acquired the knowledge of equality at some previous time? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then whatever the soul possesses, to that she comes bearing life? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then you are not of opinion, Simmias, that all men know these things? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Then, if all souls are equally by their nature souls, all souls of all living creatures will be equally good? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | They are in process of recollecting that which they learned before? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | True, Cebes, said Socrates; and shall I suggest that we converse a little of the probabilities of these things? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Unseen then? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Was not that a reasonable notion? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | We will do our best, said Crito: And in what way shall we bury you? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Well, and is there not an opposite of life, as sleep is the opposite of waking? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Well, but is Cebes equally satisfied? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Well, but there is another thing, Simmias: Is there or is there not an absolute justice? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Well; and may you not also from seeing the picture of a horse or a lyre remember a man? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What again shall we say of the actual acquirement of knowledge?--is the body, if invited to share in the enquiry, a hinderer or a helper? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What can I do better in the interval between this and the setting of the sun? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What did he say in his last hours? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you mean? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you mean? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you mean? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you mean? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you say? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you say? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What do you think? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What is generated from the living? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What is it, Socrates? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What natures do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What shall I do with them? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What then is to be the result? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What was said or done? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | What was the reason of this? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Whence come wars, and fightings, and factions? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Wherefore, Simmias, seeing all these things, what ought not we to do that we may obtain virtue and wisdom in this life? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Which might be like, or might be unlike them? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Which of them will you retain? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Why are they the happiest? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Why do you say, enquired Cebes, that a man ought not to take his own life, but that the philosopher will be ready to follow the dying? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Why, said Socrates,--is not Evenus a philosopher? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Will he not depart with joy? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Will you not allow that I have as much of the spirit of prophecy in me as the swans? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Would you not say that he is entirely concerned with the soul and not with the body? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | Yes, my friend, but if so, when do we lose them? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | You must have observed this trait of character? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | You would agree; would you not? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | You would be afraid to draw such an inference, would you not? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | and are we convinced that all of them are generated out of opposites? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | and from the picture of Simmias, you may be led to remember Cebes? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | and is not the soul almost or altogether indissoluble? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | and what again is that about which we have no fear? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | and what is the impression produced by them? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | and when the body is hungry, against eating? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | and which to the mortal? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | and yet, if even they are inaccurate and indistinct, what is to be said of the other senses?--for you will allow that they are the best of them? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | he said; for these are the consequences which seem to follow from the assumption that the soul is a harmony? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | or did he calmly meet the attack? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | or do they fall short of this perfect equality in a measure? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | or is one soul in the very least degree more or less, or more or less completely, a soul than another? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | or is she at variance with them? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | or is the idea of equality the same as of inequality? |
plato-phaedo-1105 | whence but from the body and the lusts of the body? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | ''And what did you think of them?'' |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | ''Crito,''said he to me,''are you giving no attention to these wise men?'' |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | ''Is a speaking of the silent possible? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | ''What did I think of them?'' |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | ''What was that?'' |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | A noble man or a mean man? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | A weak man or a strong man? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | All letters? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Am I not right? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Am I not right? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Amid the dangers of the sea, again, are any more fortunate on the whole than wise pilots? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And a coward would do less than a courageous and temperate man? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And a slow man less than a quick; and one who had dull perceptions of seeing and hearing less than one who had keen ones? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And an indolent man less than an active man? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And are not good things good, and evil things evil? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And are not health and beauty goods, and other personal gifts? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And are not the scribes most fortunate in writing and reading letters? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And are not these gods animals? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And are those who acquire those who have or have not a thing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And are you an ox because an ox is present with you, or are you Dionysodorus, because Dionysodorus is present with you? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And being other than a stone, you are not a stone; and being other than gold, you are not gold? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And can any one do anything about that which has no existence, or do to Cleinias that which is not and is nowhere? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And can he vault among swords, and turn upon a wheel, at his age? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And clearly we do not want the art of the flute- maker; this is only another of the same sort? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And did you always know this? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And did you not say that you knew something? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do all other men know all things or nothing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do the Scythians and others see that which has the quality of vision, or that which has not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do they speak great things of the great, rejoined Euthydemus, and warm things of the warm? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do you know of any word which is alive? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do you know stitching? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do you know things such as the numbers of the stars and of the sand? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do you know with what you know, or with something else? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do you please? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do you really and truly know all things, including carpentering and leather- cutting? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And do you suppose that gold is not gold, or that a man is not a man? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And doing is making? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And gudgeons and puppies and pigs are your brothers? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And have not other Athenians, he said, an ancestral Zeus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And have you no need, Euthydemus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And have you not admitted that those who do not know are of the number of those who have not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And have you not admitted that you always know all things with that which you know, whether you make the addition of''when you know them''or not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And he has puppies? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And he is not wise as yet? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And he who says that thing says that which is? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And he who tells, tells that thing which he tells, and no other? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And if a man does his business he does rightly? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And if a person had wealth and all the goods of which we were just now speaking, and did not use them, would he be happy because he possessed them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And if we knew how to convert stones into gold, the knowledge would be of no value to us, unless we also knew how to use the gold? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And if you were engaged in war, in whose company would you rather take the risk-- in company with a wise general, or with a foolish one? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And if you were ill, whom would you rather have as a companion in a dangerous illness-- a wise physician, or an ignorant one? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And in telling a lie, do you tell the thing of which you speak or not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And is Patrocles, he said, your brother? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And is he not yours? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And is that fair? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And is that something, he rejoined, always the same, or sometimes one thing, and sometimes another thing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And is this true? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And knowing is having knowledge at the time? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And may a person use them either rightly or wrongly? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And may there not be a silence of the speaker? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And not knowing is not having knowledge at the time? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And now answer: Do you always know with this? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And now, O son of Axiochus, let me put a question to you: Do not all men desire happiness? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And philosophy is the acquisition of knowledge? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And please to tell me whether you intend to exhibit your wisdom; or what will you do? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And seeing that in war to have arms is a good thing, he ought to have as many spears and shields as possible? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And should we be any the better if we went about having a knowledge of the places where most gold was hidden in the earth? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And should we be happy by reason of the presence of good things, if they profited us not, or if they profited us? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And so Chaeredemus, he said, being other than a father, is not a father? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And speaking is doing and making? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And surely, in the manufacture of vessels, knowledge is that which gives the right way of making them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And tell me, I said, O tell me, what do possessions profit a man, if he have neither good sense nor wisdom? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And that is a distinct thing apart from other things? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And that is impossible? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And that which is not is nowhere? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And the business of the cook is to cut up and skin; you have admitted that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And the dog is the father of them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And they are the teachers of those who learn-- the grammar- master and the lyre- master used to teach you and other boys; and you were the learners? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And to have money everywhere and always is a good? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And was Sophroniscus a father, and Chaeredemus also? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And were you not just now saying that you could teach virtue best of all men, to any one who was willing to learn? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And were you wise then? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And what does that signify? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And what is your notion? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And what knowledge ought we to acquire? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And what other goods are there? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And what things do we esteem good? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And when you were learners you did not as yet know the things which you were learning? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And who has to kill and skin and mince and boil and roast? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And who would do least-- a poor man or a rich man? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And whose the making of pots? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And why should you say so? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And would not you, Crito, say the same? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And would they profit us, if we only had them and did not use them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And would you arm Geryon and Briareus in that way? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And would you be able, Socrates, to recognize this wisdom when it has become your own? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And yet, perhaps, I was right after all in saying that words have a sense;--what do you say, wise man? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And you admit gold to be a good? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And you admitted that of animals those are yours which you could give away or sell or offer in sacrifice, as you pleased? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And you also see that which has the quality of vision? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And you say that gentlemen speak of things as they are? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And your mother, too, is the mother of all? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | And your papa is a dog? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Are the things which have sense alive or lifeless? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Are you not ashamed, Socrates, of asking a question when you are asked one? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Are you not other than a stone? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Are you prepared to make that good? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Are you saying this as a paradox, Dionysodorus; or do you seriously maintain no man to be ignorant? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | At any rate they are yours, he said, did you not admit that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Bravo Heracles, or is Heracles a Bravo? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But are you quite sure about this, Dionysodorus and Euthydemus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But can a father be other than a father? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But can we contradict one another, said Dionysodorus, when both of us are describing the same thing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But did you carry the search any further, and did you find the art which you were seeking? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But how can I refute you, if, as you say, to tell a falsehood is impossible? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But how, he said, by reason of one thing being present with another, will one thing be another? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But if he can not speak falsely, may he not think falsely? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But if you were not wise you were unlearned? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But suppose, I said, that we were to learn the art of making speeches-- would that be the art which would make us happy? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But when I describe something and you describe another thing, or I say something and you say nothing-- is there any contradiction? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But when the teacher dictates to you, does he not dictate letters? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But when you speak of stones, wood, iron bars, do you not speak of the silent? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | But why should I repeat the whole story? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: And did Euthydemus show you this knowledge? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: And do you mean, Socrates, that the youngster said all this? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: And were you not right, Socrates? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: But, Socrates, are you not too old? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: How did that happen, Socrates? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: Well, and what came of that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: What do you say of them, Socrates? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: Who was the person, Socrates, with whom you were talking yesterday at the Lyceum? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | CRITO: Why not, Socrates? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Can there be any doubt that good birth, and power, and honours in one''s own land, are goods? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Certainly; did you think we should say No to that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Ctesippus, here taking up the argument, said: And is not your father in the same case, for he is other than my father? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Did we not agree that philosophy should be studied? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Do those, said he, who learn, learn what they know, or what they do not know? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Do you agree with me? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Do you agree? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Do you know something, Socrates, or nothing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Do you not know letters? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Do you not remember? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Do you suppose the same person to be a father and not a father? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Do you, Dionysodorus, maintain that there is not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Does it not supply us with the fruits of the earth? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Does not your omniscient brother appear to you to have made a mistake? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Euthydemus answered: And that which is not is not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Euthydemus proceeded: There are some whom you would call teachers, are there not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Euthydemus replied: And do you think, Ctesippus, that it is possible to tell a lie? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | For example, if we had a great deal of food and did not eat, or a great deal of drink and did not drink, should we be profited? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | For example, would a carpenter be any the better for having all his tools and plenty of wood, if he never worked? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | For tell me now, is not learning acquiring knowledge of that which one learns? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | For then neither of us says a word about the thing at all? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Here Ctesippus was silent; and I in my astonishment said: What do you mean, Dionysodorus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | How can he who speaks contradict him who speaks not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | I can not say that I like the connection; but is he only my father, Euthydemus, or is he the father of all other men? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | I did, I said; what is going to happen to me? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | I said, and where did you learn that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | I should have far more reason to beat yours, said Ctesippus; what could he have been thinking of when he begat such wise sons? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | I turned to the other, and said, What do you think, Euthydemus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Is not that your position? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Is not the honourable honourable and the base base? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Is not this the result-- that other things are indifferent, and that wisdom is the only good, and ignorance the only evil? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Is that your difficulty? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Let me ask you one little question more, said Dionysodorus, quickly interposing, in order that Ctesippus might not get in his word: You beat this dog? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Look at the matter thus: If he did fewer things would he not make fewer mistakes? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | May we not answer with absolute truth-- A knowledge which will do us good? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Nay, said Ctesippus, but the question which I ask is whether all things are silent or speak? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Nay, take nothing away; I desire no favours of you; but let me ask: Would you be able to know all things, if you did not know all things? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Neither did I tell you just now to refute me, said Dionysodorus; for how can I tell you to do that which is not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Now Euthydemus, if I remember rightly, began nearly as follows: O Cleinias, are those who learn the wise or the ignorant? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Now in the working and use of wood, is not that which gives the right use simply the knowledge of the carpenter? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Of their existence or of their non- existence? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Of what country are they, and what is their line of wisdom? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Or a speaking of the silent? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Or when neither of us is speaking of the same thing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Or would an artisan, who had all the implements necessary for his work, and did not use them, be any the better for the possession of them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Perhaps you may not be ready with an answer? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Poseidon, I said, this is the crown of wisdom; can I ever hope to have such wisdom of my own? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Quite true, I said; and that I have always known; but the question is, where did I learn that the good are unjust? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: And does the kingly art make men wise and good? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: And in what will they be good and useful? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: And surely it ought to do us some good? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: And what does the kingly art do when invested with supreme power? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: And what of your own art of husbandry, supposing that to have supreme authority over the subject arts-- what does that do? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: And what would you say that the kingly art does? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: And will you on this account shun all these pursuits yourself and refuse to allow them to your son? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: Are you incredulous, Crito? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: But then what is this knowledge, and what are we to do with it? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: O Crito, they are marvellous men; but what was I going to say? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: There were two, Crito; which of them do you mean? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: Well, and do you not see that in each of these arts the many are ridiculous performers? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | SOCRATES: What, all men, and in every respect? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Shall we not be happy if we have many good things? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Shall we say, Crito, that it is the knowledge by which we are to make other men good? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Tell me, he said, Socrates and the rest of you who say that you want this young man to become wise, are you in jest or in real earnest? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Tell me, then, you two, do you not know some things, and not know others? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | That makes no difference;--and must you not, if you are knowing, know all things? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | That will do, he said: And would you admit that anything is what it is, and at the same time is not what it is? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then are they not animals? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then do you see our garments? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then he is the same? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then if you know all letters, he dictates that which you know? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then in every possession and every use of a thing, knowledge is that which gives a man not only good- fortune but success? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then tell me, he said, do you know anything? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then the good speak evil of evil things, if they speak of them as they are? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then there is no such thing as false opinion? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then there is no such thing as ignorance, or men who are ignorant; for is not ignorance, if there be such a thing, a mistake of fact? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then those who learn are of the class of those who acquire, and not of those who have? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then we must surely be speaking the same thing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then what is the inference? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then why did you ask me what sense my words had? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then, I said, a man who would be happy must not only have the good things, but he must also use them; there is no advantage in merely having them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then, I said, you know all things, if you know anything? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then, after a pause, in which he seemed to be lost in the contemplation of something great, he said: Tell me, Socrates, have you an ancestral Zeus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then, my dear boy, I said, the knowledge which we want is one that uses as well as makes? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then, my good friend, do they all speak? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then, said he, you learn what you know, if you know all the letters? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Then, said the other, you do not learn that which he dictates; but he only who does not know letters learns? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Upon what principle? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Very true, said Ctesippus; and do you think, Euthydemus, that he ought to have one shield only, and one spear? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Very well, I said; and where in the company shall we find a place for wisdom-- among the goods or not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Well, Cleinias, but if you have the use as well as the possession of good things, is that sufficient to confer happiness? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Well, I said; but then what am I to do? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Well, but do rhetoricians, when they speak in the assembly, do nothing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Well, but, Euthydemus, I said, has that never happened to you? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Well, have not all things words expressive of them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Well, said he, and so you say that you wish Cleinias to become wise? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Were they other than the beautiful, or the same as the beautiful? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What am I to do with them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What can make you tell such a lie about me and the others, which I hardly like to repeat, as that I wish Cleinias to perish? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What can they see? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What do I know? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What do you mean, Dionysodorus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What do you mean, I said; do you know nothing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What do you mean? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What followed, Crito, how can I rightly narrate? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What is that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What marvellous dexterity of wit, I said, enabled you to acquire this great perfection in such a short time? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What of that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What proof shall I give you? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What then do you say? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What then is the result of what has been said? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What, I said, are you blessed with such a power as this? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What, before you, Dionysodorus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What, he said, do you think that you know what is your own? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What, of men only, said Ctesippus, or of horses and of all other animals? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What, replied Dionysodorus in a moment; am I the brother of Euthydemus? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What, said Ctesippus; then all things are not silent? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | What, said he, is the business of a good workman? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | When you are silent, said Euthydemus, is there not a silence of all things? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | When you were children, and at your birth? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Whither then shall we go, I said, and to what art shall we have recourse? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Why do you laugh, Cleinias, I said, at such solemn and beautiful things? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Why do you say so? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Why not? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Why, Ctesippus, said Dionysodorus, do you mean to say that any one speaks of things as they are? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Why, Socrates, said Dionysodorus, did you ever see a beautiful thing? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Will you let me see you explaining to the young man how he is to apply himself to the study of virtue and wisdom? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Will you not cease adding to your answers? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Will you not take our word that we know all things? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Will you tell me how many teeth Euthydemus has? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | With what I know; and I suppose that you mean with my soul? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Would a man be better off, having and doing many things without wisdom, or a few things with wisdom? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Yes, he said, and you would mean by animals living beings? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | Yes; and your mother has a progeny of sea- urchins then? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | You admit that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | You agree then, that those animals only are yours with which you have the power to do all these things which I was just naming? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | You remember, I said, our making the admission that we should be happy and fortunate if many good things were present with us? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | You then, learning what you did not know, were unlearned when you were learning? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | You think, I said, that to act with a wise man is more fortunate than to act with an ignorant one? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | You wish him to be what he is not, and no longer to be what he is? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | You wish him, he said, to become wise and not, to be ignorant? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | and if he had fewer misfortunes would he not be less miserable? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | and teach them all the arts,--carpentering, and cobbling, and the rest of them? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | and was not that our conclusion? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | and will you explain how I possess that knowledge for which we were seeking? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | for you admit that all things which have life are animals; and have not these gods life? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | has he got to such a height of skill as that? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | if he made fewer mistakes would he not have fewer misfortunes? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | or are you the same as a stone? |
plato-euthydemus-1581 | tell me, in the first place, whose business is hammering? |
plato-meno-911 | ( To the Boy:) Tell me, boy, do you assert that a double space comes from a double line? |
plato-meno-911 | ANYTUS: Whom do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-meno-911 | ANYTUS: Why do you not tell him yourself? |
plato-meno-911 | ANYTUS: Why single out individuals? |
plato-meno-911 | Am I not right? |
plato-meno-911 | And am I to carry back this report of you to Thessaly? |
plato-meno-911 | And if these were our reasons, should we not be right in sending him? |
plato-meno-911 | And if this is the proper name, then you, Meno''s slave, are prepared to affirm that the double space is the square of the diagonal? |
plato-meno-911 | And if you find what you want, how will you ever know that this is the thing which you did not know? |
plato-meno-911 | And is any mode of acquisition, even if unjust and dishonest, equally to be deemed virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | And now tell me, is not this a line of two feet and that of four? |
plato-meno-911 | And, therefore, my dear Meno, I fear that I must begin again and repeat the same question: What is virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | Are they not profitable when they are rightly used, and hurtful when they are not rightly used? |
plato-meno-911 | But I can not believe, Socrates, that there are no good men: And if there are, how did they come into existence? |
plato-meno-911 | But are you in earnest, Socrates, in saying that you do not know what virtue is? |
plato-meno-911 | But is virtue taught or not? |
plato-meno-911 | But what has been the result? |
plato-meno-911 | Can he be wrong who has right opinion, so long as he has right opinion? |
plato-meno-911 | Can the child govern his father, or the slave his master; and would he who governed be any longer a slave? |
plato-meno-911 | Can those who were deemed by many to be the wisest men of Hellas have been out of their minds? |
plato-meno-911 | Can you say that they are teachers in any true sense whose ideas are in such confusion? |
plato-meno-911 | Can you teach me how this is? |
plato-meno-911 | Consider the matter thus: If we wanted Meno to be a good physician, to whom should we send him? |
plato-meno-911 | Could you not answer that question, Meno? |
plato-meno-911 | Do not all men, my dear sir, desire good? |
plato-meno-911 | Do they seem to you to be teachers of virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | Do you observe that here he seems to imply that virtue can be taught? |
plato-meno-911 | Do you remember them? |
plato-meno-911 | Do you think that I could? |
plato-meno-911 | Have there not been many good men in this city? |
plato-meno-911 | Have you not heard from our elders of him? |
plato-meno-911 | Health and strength, and beauty and wealth-- these, and the like of these, we call profitable? |
plato-meno-911 | Here are two and there is one; and on the other side, here are two also and there is one: and that makes the figure of which you speak? |
plato-meno-911 | How could that be? |
plato-meno-911 | How would you answer me? |
plato-meno-911 | How, if I knew nothing at all of Meno, could I tell if he was fair, or the opposite of fair; rich and noble, or the reverse of rich and noble? |
plato-meno-911 | If a man knew the way to Larisa, or anywhere else, and went to the place and led others thither, would he not be a right and good guide? |
plato-meno-911 | Is he a bit better than any other mortal? |
plato-meno-911 | Is there any difference? |
plato-meno-911 | Is virtue the same in a child and in a slave, Meno? |
plato-meno-911 | Let me explain: if in one direction the space was of two feet, and in the other direction of one foot, the whole would be of two feet taken once? |
plato-meno-911 | Let the first hypothesis be that virtue is or is not knowledge,--in that case will it be taught or not? |
plato-meno-911 | Let us take another,--Aristides, the son of Lysimachus: would you not acknowledge that he was a good man? |
plato-meno-911 | Look at the matter in your own way: Would you not admit that Themistocles was a good man? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: And did you not think that he knew? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: And how will you enquire, Socrates, into that which you do not know? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: And now, Socrates, what is colour? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: But if a person were to say that he does not know what colour is, any more than what figure is-- what sort of answer would you have given him? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: How can it be otherwise? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: How do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Then you have never met Gorgias when he was at Athens? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: True; but do you think that there are no teachers of virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Well, Socrates, and is not the argument sound? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Well, what of that? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Well; and why are you so slow of heart to believe that knowledge is virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: What do you mean by the word''right''? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: What do you mean? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: What have they to do with the question? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: What of that? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: What was it? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Where does he say so? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Why do you say that, Socrates? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Why do you think so? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Why not? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Why, how can there be virtue without these? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Why? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Will you have one definition of them all? |
plato-meno-911 | MENO: Yes, Socrates; but what do you mean by saying that we do not learn, and that what we call learning is only a process of recollection? |
plato-meno-911 | Meanwhile I will return to you, Meno; for I suppose that there are gentlemen in your region too? |
plato-meno-911 | Now, has any one ever taught him all this? |
plato-meno-911 | Now, to whom should he go in order that he may learn this virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | Now, when you say that they deceived and corrupted the youth, are they to be supposed to have corrupted them consciously or unconsciously? |
plato-meno-911 | Once more, I suspect, friend Anytus, that virtue is not a thing which can be taught? |
plato-meno-911 | Or is the nature of health always the same, whether in man or woman? |
plato-meno-911 | Ought I not to ask the question over again; for can any one who does not know virtue know a part of virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | Please, Anytus, to help me and your friend Meno in answering our question, Who are the teachers? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: A square may be of any size? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And a person who had a right opinion about the way, but had never been and did not know, might be a good guide also, might he not? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And a third, which is equal to either of them? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And am I not also right in saying that true opinion leading the way perfects action quite as well as knowledge? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And are there not here four equal lines which contain this space? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And are there not these four divisions in the figure, each of which is equal to the figure of four feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And are they willing to teach the young? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And can either a young man or an elder one be good, if they are intemperate and unjust? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And can either house or state or anything be well ordered without temperance and without justice? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And conversely, may not the art of which neither teachers nor disciples exist be assumed to be incapable of being taught? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And desire is of possession? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And did not he train his son Lysimachus better than any other Athenian in all that could be done for him by the help of masters? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And do you really imagine, Meno, that a man knows evils to be evils and desires them notwithstanding? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And does any one desire to be miserable and ill- fated? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And does he really know? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And does he think that the evils will do good to him who possesses them, or does he know that they will do him harm? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And does he who desires the honourable also desire the good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And does not this line, reaching from corner to corner, bisect each of these spaces? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And does this definition of virtue include all virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And for this reason-- that there are other figures? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And four is how many times two? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And four such lines will make a space containing eight feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And four times is not double? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And from what line do you get this figure? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And how many are twice two feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And how many in this? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And how many spaces are there in this section? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And how many times larger is this space than this other? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And how much are three times three feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And how much is the double of four? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And if he proceeded to ask, What other figures are there? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And if it was taught it was wisdom? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And if one man is not better than another in desiring good, he must be better in the power of attaining it? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And if one side of the figure be of two feet, and the other side be of two feet, how much will the whole be? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And if there are no teachers, neither are there disciples? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And if there are no teachers, neither are there scholars? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And if there were teachers, it might be taught; and if there were no teachers, not? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And if we are good, then we are profitable; for all good things are profitable? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And in speaking thus, you do not mean to say that the round is round any more than straight, or the straight any more straight than round? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And in supposing that they will be useful only if they are true guides to us of action-- there we were also right? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And is not that four times four? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And is not this true of size and strength? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And is not this universally true of human nature? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And may we not, Meno, truly call those men''divine''who, having no understanding, yet succeed in many a grand deed and word? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And might not the same be said of flute- playing, and of the other arts? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And might there not be another square twice as large as this, and having like this the lines equal? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And must not he then have been a good teacher, if any man ever was a good teacher, of his own virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And must they not suppose that those who are hurt are miserable in proportion to the hurt which is inflicted upon them? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And nature being excluded, then came the question whether virtue is acquired by teaching? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And now I add another square equal to the former one? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And now try and tell me the length of the line which forms the side of that double square: this is two feet-- what will that be? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And of how many feet will that be? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And passages into which and through which the effluences pass? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And shall I explain this wonder to you? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And so forth? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And some of the effluences fit into the passages, and some of them are too small or too large? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And surely the good man has been acknowledged by us to be useful? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And the right guide is useful and good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And the space of four feet is made from this half line? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And the women too, Meno, call good men divine-- do they not? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And then you will tell me about virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And there are no teachers of virtue to be found anywhere? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And there is such a thing as sight? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And these lines which I have drawn through the middle of the square are also equal? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And they surely would not have been good in the same way, unless their virtue had been the same? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And this knowledge which he now has must he not either have acquired or always possessed? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And this space is of how many feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And this spontaneous recovery of knowledge in him is recollection? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And thus we arrive at the conclusion that virtue is either wholly or partly wisdom? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And virtue makes us good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And we have admitted that a thing can not be taught of which there are neither teachers nor disciples? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And were we not saying just now that justice, temperance, and the like, were each of them a part of virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And what do you think of these Sophists, who are the only professors? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And what is the guiding principle which makes them profitable or the reverse? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And will not virtue, as virtue, be the same, whether in a child or in a grown- up person, in a woman or in a man? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And yet he has the knowledge? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And yet these things may also sometimes do us harm: would you not think so? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And yet we admitted that it was a good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And yet, as we were just now saying, he did not know? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And yet, were you not saying just now that virtue is the desire and power of attaining good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And you know that a square figure has these four lines equal? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: And, in your opinion, do those who think that they will do them good know that they are evils? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But are not the miserable ill- fated? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But did any one, old or young, ever say in your hearing that Cleophantus, son of Themistocles, was a wise or good man, as his father was? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But does not this line become doubled if we add another such line here? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But how much? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But if he did not acquire the knowledge in this life, then he must have had and learned it at some other time? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But if neither the Sophists nor the gentlemen are teachers, clearly there can be no other teachers? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But if the good are not by nature good, are they made good by instruction? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But if there are three feet this way and three feet that way, the whole space will be three times three feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But if this be affirmed, then the desire of good is common to all, and one man is no better than another in that respect? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But if this is true, then the good are not by nature good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But since this side is also of two feet, there are twice two feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But still he had in him those notions of his-- had he not? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But surely we acknowledged that there were no teachers of virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But why? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: But would he not have wanted? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Can we call those teachers who do not acknowledge the possibility of their own vocation? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Do not he and you and Empedocles say that there are certain effluences of existence? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Do you mean that they think the evils which they desire, to be good; or do they know that they are evil and yet desire them? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Do you remember how, in the example of figure, we rejected any answer given in terms which were as yet unexplained or unadmitted? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Do you see, Meno, what advances he has made in his power of recollection? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Four times four are sixteen-- are they not? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Good; and is not a space of eight feet twice the size of this, and half the size of the other? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Has any of the Sophists wronged you, Anytus? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Has not each interior line cut off half of the four spaces? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: He is Greek, and speaks Greek, does he not? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Here, then, there are four equal spaces? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: I will tell you why: I have heard from certain wise men and women who spoke of things divine that-- MENO: What did they say? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: If virtue was wisdom( or knowledge), then, as we thought, it was taught? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: If we have made him doubt, and given him the''torpedo''s shock,''have we done him any harm? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Is he not better off in knowing his ignorance? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Let us describe such a figure: Would you not say that this is the figure of eight feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Or if we wanted him to be a good cobbler, should we not send him to the cobblers? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Shall I indulge you? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Such a space, then, will be made out of a line greater than this one, and less than that one? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Suppose that we fill up the vacant corner? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Tell me, boy, do you know that a figure like this is a square? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: That is, from the line which extends from corner to corner of the figure of four feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: The next question is, whether virtue is knowledge or of another species? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then all men are good in the same way, and by participation in the same virtues? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then are there some who desire the evil and others who desire the good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then begin again, and answer me, What, according to you and your friend Gorgias, is the definition of virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then both men and women, if they are to be good men and women, must have the same virtues of temperance and justice? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then do you not think that the Sophists are teachers? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then he was the better for the torpedo''s touch? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then he who does not know may still have true notions of that which he does not know? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then if they are not given by nature, neither are the good by nature good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then if virtue is knowledge, virtue will be taught? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then no one could say that his son showed any want of capacity? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then now we have made a quick end of this question: if virtue is of such a nature, it will be taught; and if not, not? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then right opinion is not less useful than knowledge? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then the figure of eight is not made out of a line of three? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then the line which forms the side of eight feet ought to be more than this line of two feet, and less than the other of four feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then the square is of twice two feet? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then they who order a state or a house temperately or justly order them with temperance and justice? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then virtue can not be taught? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then virtue is profitable? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then we acknowledged that it was not taught, and was not wisdom? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then you are entirely unacquainted with them? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then, according to your definition, virtue would appear to be the power of attaining good? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Then, my dear friend, how can you know whether a thing is good or bad of which you are wholly ignorant? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: There are some who desire evil? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: They must be temperate and just? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: To what then do we give the name of figure? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: What are they? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: What do you say of him, Meno? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: What line would give you a space of eight feet, as this gives one of sixteen feet;--do you see? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: What, Anytus? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Which must have been the time when he was not a man? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Why simple? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Without any one teaching him he will recover his knowledge for himself, if he is only asked questions? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Would you like me to answer you after the manner of Gorgias, which is familiar to you? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Would you say''virtue,''Meno, or''a virtue''? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: Yes, indeed; but what if the supposition is erroneous? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: You only assert that the round figure is not more a figure than the straight, or the straight than the round? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: You surely know, do you not, Anytus, that these are the people whom mankind call Sophists? |
plato-meno-911 | SOCRATES: You would not wonder if you had ever observed the images of Daedalus( Compare Euthyphro); but perhaps you have not got them in your country? |
plato-meno-911 | Should we not send him to the physicians? |
plato-meno-911 | Suppose now that some one asked you the question which I asked before: Meno, he would say, what is figure? |
plato-meno-911 | Suppose that I carry on the figure of the swarm, and ask of you, What is the nature of the bee? |
plato-meno-911 | Tell me, boy, is not this a square of four feet which I have drawn? |
plato-meno-911 | Were not all these answers given out of his own head? |
plato-meno-911 | Were we not right in admitting this? |
plato-meno-911 | Were you not saying that the virtue of a man was to order a state, and the virtue of a woman was to order a house? |
plato-meno-911 | What makes you so angry with them? |
plato-meno-911 | What will you put forth as the subject of enquiry? |
plato-meno-911 | When a man has no sense he is harmed by courage, but when he has sense he is profited? |
plato-meno-911 | Whom would you name? |
plato-meno-911 | Why, did not I ask you to tell me the nature of virtue as a whole? |
plato-meno-911 | Will you be satisfied with it, as I am sure that I should be, if you would let me have a similar definition of virtue? |
plato-meno-911 | Will you reply that he was a mean man, and had not many friends among the Athenians and allies? |
plato-meno-911 | Yet once more, fair friend; according to you, virtue is''the power of governing;''but do you not add''justly and not unjustly''? |
plato-meno-911 | and do they agree that virtue is taught? |
plato-meno-911 | and do they profess to be teachers? |
plato-meno-911 | and who were they? |
plato-meno-911 | or is there anything about which even the acknowledged''gentlemen''are sometimes saying that''this thing can be taught,''and sometimes the opposite? |
plato-meno-911 | or rather, does not every one see that knowledge alone is taught? |
plato-meno-911 | or, as we were just now saying,''remembered''? |
plato-meno-911 | would do well to have his eye fixed: Do you understand? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | AGRIPPA What''s Antony? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | AGRIPPA Who does he accuse? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | ALEXAS Ay, madam, twenty several messengers: Why do you send so thick? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Aboard my galley I invite you all: Will you lead, lords? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | All come to this? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CANIDIUS Who''s his lieutenant, hear you? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CANIDIUS Why will my lord do so? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CHARMIAN Hath he seen majesty? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CHARMIAN Is this the man? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CHARMIAN Madam? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CHARMIAN Then belike my children shall have no names: prithee, how many boys and wenches must I have? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CHARMIAN Well, if you were but an inch of fortune better than I, where would you choose it? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CHARMIAN Why, madam? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Bear''st thou her face in mind? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Didst hear her speak? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA For what good turn? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA He is married? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA I thank you, sir, Know you what Caesar means to do with me? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA If not denounced against us, why should not we Be there in person? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Is Antony or we in fault for this? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Is he married? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Is not this buckled well? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Is she as tall as me? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Is this certain? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Nay, pray you, sir,-- DOLABELLA Though he be honourable,-- CLEOPATRA He''ll lead me, then, in triumph? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Noblest of men, woo''t die? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Not know me yet? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA O Charmian, Where think''st thou he is now? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA O, is''t come to this? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Rememberest thou any that have died on''t? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA That Herod''s head I''ll have: but how, when Antony is gone Through whom I might command it? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA That head, my lord? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Think you there was, or might be, such a man As this I dream''d of? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Though age from folly could not give me freedom, It does from childishness: can Fulvia die? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Was he not here? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What have I kept back? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What is''t you say? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What say you? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What should I do, I do not? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What''s thy name? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What''s your name? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What, no more ceremony? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What, of death too, That rids our dogs of languish? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA What, was he sad or merry? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Where art thou, death? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Where? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Wherefore is this? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Why is my lord enraged against his love? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA Will it eat me? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA[ Aside to DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS] What does he mean? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | CLEOPATRA[ Aside to DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS] What means this? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Caesar''s I would say? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Charmian, is this well done? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Come, sir, will you aboard? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Come, you''ll play with me, sir? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DIOMEDES Lives he? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOLABELLA Who was last with them? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS A''bears the third part of the world, man; see''st not? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Ay, are you thereabouts? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS But why, why, why? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Caesar? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS How appears the fight? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Madam? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Sir? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Spake you of Caesar? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS This is old: what is the success? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Well, is it, is it? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS What mean you, sir, To give them this discomfort? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS What, man? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS[ Aside to AGRIPPA] Will Caesar weep? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Did I, Charmian, Ever love Caesar so? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Did he not rather Discredit my authority with yours; And make the wars alike against my stomach, Having alike your cause? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Dost fall? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Dost thou hear, lady? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Dost thou lie still? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Dost thou not see my baby at my breast, That sucks the nurse asleep? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | EROS See you here, sir? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | First Attendant The man from Sicyon,--is there such an one? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | First Soldier Ay; is''t not strange? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | First Soldier Walk; let''s see if other watchmen Do hear what we do? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Fourth Soldier It signs well, does it not? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Hast thou affections? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Hast thou no care of me? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Have I my pillow left unpress''d in Rome, Forborne the getting of a lawful race, And by a gem of women, to be abused By one that looks on feeders? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Have you no ears? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | He is married? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | He''s speaking now, Or murmuring''Where''s my serpent of old Nile?'' |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Heard you of nothing strange about the streets? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Her hair, what colour? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | How do you, women? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | How goes it with my brave Mark Antony? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | IRAS Am I not an inch of fortune better than she? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | IRAS But how, but how? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | IRAS falls and dies] Have I the aspic in my lips? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Is''t you, sir, that know things? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Know you him? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | LEPIDUS What colour is it of? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | LEPIDUS What manner o''thing is your crocodile? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Like boys unto a muss, kings would start forth, And cry''Your will?'' |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARDIAN What''s your highness''pleasure? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Against my brother Lucius? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Can he be there in person? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Cold- hearted toward me? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Cried he? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Dead, then? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY How intend you, practised? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY If you can, your reason? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Is he gone? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY My being in Egypt, Caesar, What was''t to you? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY O, whither hast thou led me, Egypt? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Say to me, Whose fortunes shall rise higher, Caesar''s or mine? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY To flatter Caesar, would you mingle eyes With one that ties his points? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Well, what worst? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY What is his strength by land? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY What power is in Agrippa, If I would say,''Agrippa, be it so,''To make this good? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY What say''st thou? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY When I did make thee free, sworest thou not then To do this when I bade thee? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY When did she send thee? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Where died she? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Where is she? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Where lies he? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Who''s gone this morning? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Why should he not? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MARK ANTONY Will Caesar speak? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MECAENAS Eight wild- boars roasted whole at a breakfast, and but twelve persons there; is this true? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MECAENAS This in the public eye? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MENAS Pray ye, sir? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MENAS Who would not have his wife so? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MENAS Wilt thou be lord of all the world? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | MENAS Wilt thou be lord of the whole world? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Messenger Most gracious majesty,-- CLEOPATRA Didst thou behold Octavia? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Messenger Should I lie, madam? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Messenger Will''t please you hear me? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Met''st thou my posts? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | O infinite virtue, comest thou smiling from The world''s great snare uncaught? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | OCTAVIA Is it so, sir? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | OCTAVIA Sir, look well to my husband''s house; and-- OCTAVIUS CAESAR What, Octavia? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | OCTAVIUS CAESAR Look you sad, friends? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | OCTAVIUS CAESAR What is''t thou say''st? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | OCTAVIUS CAESAR What would you more? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | OCTAVIUS CAESAR Will this description satisfy him? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Or does he walk? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | POMPEY Hast thou drunk well? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | POMPEY How should that be? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | POMPEY I know thee now: how farest thou, soldier? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | POMPEY O Antony, You have my father''s house,--But, what? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | POMPEY What say''st thou? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | POMPEY What, I pray you? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | POMPEY Where have you this? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | POMPEY[ Aside to MENAS] Say in mine ear: what is''t? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | SILIUS Where is he now? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Second Soldier Hear you, sir? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Seest thou, my good fellow? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Shall I do that which all the Parthian darts, Though enemy, lost aim, and could not? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Shall I strike now? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Shall they hoist me up And show me to the shouting varletry Of censuring Rome? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | So; have you done? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Soldier O noble emperor, do not fight by sea; Trust not to rotten planks: do you misdoubt This sword and these my wounds? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Soldier You keep by land The legions and the horse whole, do you not? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Soothsayer Your will? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Stands he, or sits he? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Strike the vessels, ho? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | TAURUS My lord? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Tell me of that? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | The manner of their deaths? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | The matter? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Think on me, That am with Phoebus''amorous pinches black, And wrinkled deep in time? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Third Soldier Do you hear, masters? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | We looked not for Mark Antony here: pray you, is he married to Cleopatra? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | We sent our schoolmaster; Is he come back? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What art thou, fellow? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What majesty is in her gait? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What mean you, madam? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What needs more words? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What news? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What says the married woman? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What should this mean? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What sport tonight? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What though you fled From that great face of war, whose several ranges Frighted each other? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What''s else to say? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What''s this for? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | What, goest thou back? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Whence are you? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Where be the sacred vials thou shouldst fill With sorrowful water? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Where hast thou been, my heart? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Where is he now? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Where''s Alexas? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Where''s Antony? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Where''s Fulvia''s process? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Where''s Seleucus? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Where''s this cup I call''d for? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Wherefore''s this noise? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Why did he marry Fulvia, and not love her? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Wilt thou not answer, man? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | Woo''t thou fight well? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | You have heard on''t, sweet? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | You laugh when boys or women tell their dreams; Is''t not your trick? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Applying another asp to her arm] What should I stay--[ Dies] CHARMIAN In this vile world? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Dies][ Re- enter DOLABELLA] DOLABELLA How goes it here? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter AGRIPPA at one door, DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS at another] AGRIPPA What, are the brothers parted? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMIAN, IRAS, and ALEXAS] CLEOPATRA Where is he? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMIAN, IRAS, and ALEXAS] CLEOPATRA Where is the fellow? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter CLEOPATRA, DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS, CHARMIAN, and IRAS] CLEOPATRA What shall we do, Enobarbus? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter CLEOPATRA] CLEOPATRA Saw you my lord? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter DERCETAS and Guard] First Guard What''s the noise? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter DIOMEDES] DIOMEDES Where''s Antony? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS] DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS O, bear me witness, night,-- Third Soldier What man is this? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter MARK ANTONY and EROS] MARK ANTONY Eros, thou yet behold''st me? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter MARK ANTONY with EUPHRONIUS, the Ambassador] MARK ANTONY Is that his answer? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter OCTAVIUS CAESAR, GALLUS, PROCULEIUS, MECAENAS, SELEUCUS, and others of his Train] OCTAVIUS CAESAR Which is the Queen of Egypt? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter THYREUS] CLEOPATRA Caesar''s will? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter a Messenger] Thy business? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter a Soldier] How now, worthy soldier? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter another Messenger] What are you? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Enter the Guard, rushing in] First Guard Where is the queen? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exeunt MARK ANTONY and CLEOPATRA with their train] DEMETRIUS Is Caesar with Antonius prized so slight? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exeunt OCTAVIUS CAESAR and OCTAVIA][ Enter Soothsayer] MARK ANTONY Now, sirrah; you do wish yourself in Egypt? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exeunt PROCULEIUS and Soldiers] DOLABELLA Most noble empress, you have heard of me? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exit DERCETAS] MARK ANTONY Art thou there, Diomed? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exit DOLABELLA] Now, Iras, what think''st thou? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exit GALLUS] Where''s Dolabella, To second Proculeius? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exit Guardsman] Hast thou the pretty worm of Nilus there, That kills and pains not? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exit THYREUS] CLEOPATRA Have you done yet? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exit] THYREUS Shall I say to Caesar What you require of him? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Exit][ Enter DERCETAS, with the sword of MARK ANTONY] OCTAVIUS CAESAR Wherefore is that? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Pointing to the Attendant who carries off LEPIDUS] MENAS Why? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Re- enter Attendants with THYREUS] Is he whipp''d? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Re- enter DOLABELLA] DOLABELLA Where is the queen? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Re- enter DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS] DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS What''s your pleasure, sir? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ Re- enter EROS] EROS What would my lord? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | [ To MARK ANTONY] Shall we dance now the Egyptian Bacchanals, And celebrate our drink? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | and begg''d a''pardon? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | and what art thou that darest Appear thus to us? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | both? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | do you hear this? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | do you hear? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | dost thou hold there still? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | for wot''st thou whom thou movest? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | is he dead? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | is she shrill- tongued or low? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | is''t long or round? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | not dead? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | not dead? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | or is he on his horse? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | shall I abide In this dull world, which in thy absence is No better than a sty? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | what else? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | what noise? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | why should he follow? |
shakespeare-antony-3027 | why: what else? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | A goodly humour, is it not, my lords? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | A scroll; and written round about? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | AARON Had he not reason, Lord Demetrius? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | AARON O Lord, sir,''tis a deed of policy: Shall she live to betray this guilt of ours, A long- tongued babbling gossip? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | AARON O, why should wrath be mute, and fury dumb? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | AARON To whom? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | AARON Well, more or less, or ne''er a whit at all, Here Aaron is; and what with Aaron now? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | AARON What if I do not? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | AARON What, must it, nurse? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | AARON Why, are ye mad? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Ah, wherefore dost thou urge the name of hands; To bid AEneas tell the tale twice o''er, How Troy was burnt and he made miserable? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | And in the fountain shall we gaze so long Till the fresh taste be taken from that clearness, And made a brine- pit with our bitter tears? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | And now, young lords, was''t not a happy star Led us to Rome, strangers, and more than so, Captives, to be advanced to this height? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | And wander''d hither to an obscure plot, Accompanied but with a barbarous Moor, If foul desire had not conducted you? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | And what an if His sorrows have so overwhelm''d his wits, Shall we be thus afflicted in his wreaks, His fits, his frenzy, and his bitterness? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | And wilt thou have a reason for this coil? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Andronicus, stain not thy tomb with blood: Wilt thou draw near the nature of the gods? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | BASSIANUS Lavinia, how say you? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | BASSIANUS Rape, call you it, my lord, to seize my own, My truth- betrothed love and now my wife? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Barr''st me my way in Rome? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Be chosen with proclamations to- day, To- morrow yield up rule, resign my life, And set abroad new business for you all? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Boy, what say you? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | But say, again; how many saw the child? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | But who comes here, led by a lusty Goth? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | But who comes with our brother Marcus here? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | CHIRON Was ever Scythia half so barbarous? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | CHIRON What, wouldst thou have me prove myself a bastard? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Clown How much money must I have? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Cousin, a word; where is your husband? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | DEMETRIUS Ay, boy, grow ye so brave? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | DEMETRIUS Gramercy, lovely Lucius: what''s the news? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | DEMETRIUS Then why should he despair that knows to court it With words, fair looks and liberality? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | DEMETRIUS Villain, what hast thou done? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | DEMETRIUS What mean''st thou, Aaron? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | DEMETRIUS Why makest thou it so strange? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | DEMETRIUS Why, boy, although our mother, unadvised, Gave you a dancing- rapier by your side, Are you so desperate grown, to threat your friends? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | DEMETRIUS Wilt thou betray thy noble mistress thus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Did ever raven sing so like a lark, That gives sweet tidings of the sun''s uprise? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Did you not use his daughter very friendly? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | First Goth What says our general? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | First Goth What, canst thou say all this, and never blush? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Had I but seen thy picture in this plight, It would have madded me: what shall I do Now I behold thy lively body so? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | If the winds rage, doth not the sea wax mad, Threatening the welkin with his big- swoln face? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Is he sure bound? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Is it your trick to make me ope the door, That so my sad decrees may fly away, And all my study be to no effect? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Is the sun dimm''d, that gnats do fly in it? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | LAVINIA No grace? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | LAVINIA When did the tiger''s young ones teach the dam? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | LUCIUS Art thou not sorry for these heinous deeds? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | LUCIUS O, say thou for her, who hath done this deed? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | LUCIUS Speak, gentle sister, who hath martyr''d thee? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | LUCIUS What boots it thee to call thyself a sun? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | LUCIUS Who should I swear by? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Lavinia, shall I read? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Lavinia, you are not displeased with this? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | MARCUS ANDRONICUS Canst thou not guess wherefore she plies thee thus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | MARCUS ANDRONICUS My lord, to step out of these dreary dumps, How comes it that the subtle Queen of Goths Is of a sudden thus advanced in Rome? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | MARCUS ANDRONICUS O Publius, is not this a heavy case, To see thy noble uncle thus distract? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | MARCUS ANDRONICUS O, why should nature build so foul a den, Unless the gods delight in tragedies? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | MARCUS ANDRONICUS What means my niece Lavinia by these signs? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | MARCUS ANDRONICUS Which of your hands hath not defended Rome, And rear''d aloft the bloody battle- axe, Writing destruction on the enemy''s castle? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | MARCUS ANDRONICUS Why dost thou laugh? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Marcus, what means this? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Now you have heard the truth, what say you, Romans? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Nurse Aaron, what shall I say unto the empress? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Or is it Dian, habited like her, Who hath abandoned her holy groves To see the general hunting in this forest? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Or shall we bite our tongues, and in dumb shows Pass the remainder of our hateful days? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Or shall we cut away our hands, like thine? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Publius, Publius, what hast thou done? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | QUINTUS If it be dark, how dost thou know''tis he? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Rome''s royal empress, Unfurnish''d of her well- beseeming troop? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | SATURNINUS Is warlike Lucius general of the Goths? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | SATURNINUS Proud and ambitious tribune, canst thou tell? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | SATURNINUS What hast thou done, unnatural and unkind? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | SATURNINUS What, was she ravish''d? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | SATURNINUS Why art thou thus attired, Andronicus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Say who art thou that lately didst descend Into this gaping hollow of the earth? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Say, wall- eyed slave, whither wouldst thou convey This growing image of thy fiend- like face? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Seest thou this letter? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Shall I endure this monstrous villany? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Shall I have justice? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Shall I speak for thee? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Sirrah, can you with a grace deliver a supplication? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Sirrah, what tidings? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | So near the emperor''s palace dare you draw, And maintain such a quarrel openly? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Speak, Lavinia, what accursed hand Hath made thee handless in thy father''s sight? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Speak, brother, hast thou hurt thee with the fall? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA Have I not reason, think you, to look pale? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA What begg''st thou, then? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA What wouldst thou have us do, Andronicus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA What, are they in this pit? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA Where is thy brother Bassianus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA Why hast thou slain thine only daughter thus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA Why have I patience to endure all this? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA Why should you fear? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TAMORA[ Aside to her sons] What say you, boys? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS A better head her glorious body fits Than his that shakes for age and feebleness: What should I don this robe, and trouble you? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Are these thy ministers? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Art thou Revenge? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS But how, if that fly had a father and mother? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS But what says Jupiter, I ask thee? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS If there were reason for these miseries, Then into limits could I bind my woes: When heaven doth weep, doth not the earth o''erflow? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Is not my sorrow deep, having no bottom? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Know you these two? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Lucius, what book is that she tosseth so? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Magni Dominator poli, Tam lentus audis scelera? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS No, not a word; how can I grace my talk, Wanting a hand to give it action? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS People of Rome, and people''s tribunes here, I ask your voices and your suffrages: Will you bestow them friendly on Andronicus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Sirrah, hast thou a knife? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Tell me, can you deliver an oration to the emperor with a grace? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS What, would you bury him in my despite? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS When will this fearful slumber have an end? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Why, didst thou not come from heaven? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Why, villain, art not thou the carrier? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Will it consume me? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Will''t please you eat? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | TITUS ANDRONICUS Your reason, mighty lord? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Tamora, was it you? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Titus, unkind and careless of thine own, Why suffer''st thou thy sons, unburied yet, To hover on the dreadful shore of Styx? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Titus, when wert thou wo nt to walk alone, Dishonour''d thus, and challenged of wrongs? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | To wait, said I? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Was there none else in Rome to make a stale, But Saturnine? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Well are you fitted, had you but a Moor: Could not all hell afford you such a devil? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What dost thou wrap and fumble in thine arms? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What fool hath added water to the sea, Or brought a faggot to bright- burning Troy? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What hath he sent her? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What says Andronicus to this device? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What shall we do? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What shall we do? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What violent hands can she lay on her life? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What would you say, if I should let you speak? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What''s this but libelling against the senate, And blazoning our injustice every where? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What, hast not thou full often struck a doe, And borne her cleanly by the keeper''s nose? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | What, have you met with her? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Where is the emperor''s guard? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Which is it, girl, of these? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Who found this letter? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Why dost not speak to me? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Why dost not speak? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Why doth your highness look so pale and wan? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Why lifts she up her arms in sequence thus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Why, foolish Lucius, dost thou not perceive That Rome is but a wilderness of tigers? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | Why, lords, and think you not how dangerous It is to jet upon a prince''s right? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | With all my heart, I''ll send the emperor My hand: Good Aaron, wilt thou help to chop it off? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Enter AEMILIUS] Welcome, AEmilius what''s the news from Rome? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Enter AEMILIUS] What news with thee, AEmilius? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Enter PUBLIUS and others] PUBLIUS What is your will? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Enter SATURNINUS and TAMORA, with AEMILIUS, Tribunes, Senators, and others] SATURNINUS What, hath the firmament more suns than one? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Enter TAMORA] TAMORA My lovely Aaron, wherefore look''st thou sad, When every thing doth make a gleeful boast? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Enter a Nurse, with a blackamoor Child in her arms] Nurse Good morrow, lords: O, tell me, did you see Aaron the Moor? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Exeunt DEMETRIUS and CHIRON][ Enter MARCUS] MARCUS Who is this? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Exeunt TITUS, LAVINIA, and Young LUCIUS] MARCUS ANDRONICUS O heavens, can you hear a good man groan, And not relent, or not compassion him? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Exeunt Young LUCIUS, and Attendant] DEMETRIUS What''s here? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Exit TAMORA] CHIRON Tell us, old man, how shall we be employ''d? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Exit] MARTIUS Why dost not comfort me, and help me out From this unhallowed and blood- stained hole? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Exit][ Enter BASSIANUS and LAVINIA] BASSIANUS Who have we here? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Falls into the pit] QUINTUS What art thou fall''n? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Helping her] What would she find? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Kills TITUS] LUCIUS Can the son''s eye behold his father bleed? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ MARCUS strikes the dish with a knife] What dost thou strike at, Marcus, with thy knife? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Re- enter TAMORA, with Attendants; TITUS ANDRONICUS, and Lucius] TAMORA Where is my lord the king? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Rises] But wherefore stand''st thou with thy weapon drawn? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ She takes the staff in her mouth, and guides it with her stumps, and writes] TITUS ANDRONICUS O, do ye read, my lord, what she hath writ? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ They knock][ Enter TITUS, above] TITUS ANDRONICUS Who doth molest my contemplation? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ They sit] DEMETRIUS How many women saw this child of his? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ To LAVINIA] What, wilt thou kneel with me? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | [ Trumpets sound within] DEMETRIUS Why do the emperor''s trumpets flourish thus? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | and are you such fools To square for this? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | and art thou sent to me, To be a torment to mine enemies? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | are you in earnest then, my lord? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | be dishonour''d openly, And basely put it up without revenge? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | by whom? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | call''st thou that trimming? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | has sorrow made thee dote already? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | have you any letters? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | how? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | is black so base a hue? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | is not your city strong? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | no womanhood? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | not a word? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | or know ye not, in Rome How furious and impatient they be, And can not brook competitors in love? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | shall I say''tis so? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | tam lentus vides? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | the lustful sons of Tamora Performers of this heinous, bloody deed? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | thou believest no god: That granted, how canst thou believe an oath? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | was ever heard the like? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | was ever seen An emperor in Rome thus overborne, Troubled, confronted thus; and, for the extent Of egal justice, used in such contempt? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | what are they call''d? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | what reproachful words are these? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | what says Jupiter? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | what storm is this? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | what villain was it that spake that word? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | what, deaf? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | wherefore didst thou this? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | who comes here? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | will you bide with him, Whiles I go tell my lord the emperor How I have govern''d our determined jest? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | will you kill your brother? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | will''t please your highness feed? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | would it offend you, then That both should speed? |
shakespeare-titus-2747 | wouldst thou speak with us? |
james-principles-2863 | Why so? |
james-principles-2863 | ''* Then are they not entitled to all the rights of humanity?" |
james-principles-2863 | ''If any- one there in the sun fired off a cannon straight at you, what should you do? |
james-principles-2863 | ''The cause of sickness?'' |
james-principles-2863 | ( 1) How is the subdivision and measurement of the several sensorial spaces completely effected? |
james-principles-2863 | ( 1) What special diffusive effects do the various special ob- jective and subjective experiences excite? |
james-principles-2863 | * Are Vague Images* Abstract Ideas''? |
james-principles-2863 | * How is it that men are only of the size they are? |
james-principles-2863 | * Now what is the direction of this common place? |
james-principles-2863 | * When we do doubt, however, in what does the subsequent resolution of the doubt consist? |
james-principles-2863 | * Whence does the extension come which gets so insepa- rably associated with these non- extended colored sensations? |
james-principles-2863 | * Why do you come with guns in your hands, in such numbers, as though you were coming to fight? |
james-principles-2863 | * Why may not the several joint- feelings be so many perceptions of movement in so many difl*erent directions''? |
james-principles-2863 | * but the practical* Who goes there?'' |
james-principles-2863 | * or^Doesn''t it smell just like, etc.? |
james-principles-2863 | * • Hiis the bird a gland for the secretion of oil? |
james-principles-2863 | *"How far can this kind of unnamed or non- conceptional ideation extend?" |
james-principles-2863 | *''Can a doubleness, so easily neutralized by our knowledge, ever be a datum of sensation at all?" |
james-principles-2863 | ** What is that?" |
james-principles-2863 | ** Why is a glass a glass, a chair a chair?'' |
james-principles-2863 | *** What is the matter, my friends?'' |
james-principles-2863 | 101 hear,- said the friend,* the noise of a hunt on the mountain?'' |
james-principles-2863 | 18 Sensation, does attention increase its strength? |
james-principles-2863 | 357 Howy then, does the general purpose arise? |
james-principles-2863 | 36? |
james-principles-2863 | 49. two first lined? |
james-principles-2863 | 58 and 59)? |
james-principles-2863 | 876 1 ■^ sL 4,? |
james-principles-2863 | ? |
james-principles-2863 | ? |
james-principles-2863 | ? •*-J. for blooti, which he endeavored to satisfy by going to an abat\»ir in Paris. |
james-principles-2863 | Achilles advanced, shouting"Where''s my Patroklos?" |
james-principles-2863 | Am I thinking rightly? |
james-principles-2863 | Ambiguity of Retinal Impressions, What does each theory try to do? |
james-principles-2863 | And how about belief in things which cheek action?" |
james-principles-2863 | And need she care or know anything about the future maggot and its food? |
james-principles-2863 | And now what shall be said of Helmholtz? |
james-principles-2863 | And the question still persists, what neural process is it that underlies the sense of this distance- value? |
james-principles-2863 | And why do we feel it so much larger than it really is? |
james-principles-2863 | And yet what ancestral''outer rela- tion''is responsible for this peculiar reaction of ours? |
james-principles-2863 | And, when guide< l by sight alone, they 8oem to have no more disposition to follow a hen than to follow a duck or a human beinj?. |
james-principles-2863 | Are not some of the wonderful discriminations of animals expH- cabb in the same way? |
james-principles-2863 | Are not these latter the sensible data that make us aware of the lengths and directions we discern in the traced line? |
james-principles-2863 | Are the duration and intensity of this effort fixed functions of the object, or are they not? |
james-principles-2863 | Are they excited in imagi- nation? |
james-principles-2863 | Baiu the emotion of puYstdt- y the pleasure of a cre»- cvr? |
james-principles-2863 | Bui why is it necessary that in this larger spaciousness the sign a should appear always at one end of the line, z at the other, and m in the middle? |
james-principles-2863 | But because as we listen we see the actor, it is almost impossible not to? tear the music as if coming from where he sits or stands. |
james-principles-2863 | But can we think of such a sum? |
james-principles-2863 | But does n''t this mean that he is a mere eye- man and not a complete psychologist? |
james-principles-2863 | But does not this virtually sur- render their existence altogether? |
james-principles-2863 | But hers again, what grounds of fact are there for admitting this recall? |
james-principles-2863 | But how about past things, or remote things, upon which no reaction of ours is pos- sible? |
james-principles-2863 | But how can the similarity strike him? |
james-principles-2863 | But how much depth? |
james-principles-2863 | But how? |
james-principles-2863 | But if this is so, it may be asked, why do we feel the figure to be traced, not within the joint itself, but in such an altogether different place? |
james-principles-2863 | But in man what impulses do exist? |
james-principles-2863 | But is this so? |
james-principles-2863 | But the question always remains,"Are not the mists and vai)or8^torth re- taining?" |
james-principles-2863 | But these cases are none of them primitive ases. |
james-principles-2863 | But to feel it is to know it, is it not? |
james-principles-2863 | But what determines which element we shall attend to first? |
james-principles-2863 | But what is our purpose in predicating? |
james-principles-2863 | But who does not see that for this sort of pleasure to be possible, the impulse must be there already as an independent fact? |
james-principles-2863 | But why should we always have so found them? |
james-principles-2863 | Can I find fault with a book which, on the whole, I imagine to be one of the four or five greatest monuments of human genius in the scientific line? |
james-principles-2863 | Can i ve assign the physiological conditions which make ths elementary sensible largeness of one sensation vary so much from that of another? |
james-principles-2863 | Can mutual dependence be so intricate and go so far? |
james-principles-2863 | Can we discover anything about their intrinsic nature? |
james-principles-2863 | Can we now discover anything about such susceptibility in itself before it has borne its ulterior fruits in the developed consciousness? |
james-principles-2863 | Can we realize for an instant what a cross- section of all existence at a definite point of time would be? |
james-principles-2863 | Can* suggestions of experience''repro- duce elements which no particular experience originally contained? |
james-principles-2863 | Could representations of the movement''s different sensory effects in the two cases be so delicately foreshadowed in the mind? |
james-principles-2863 | Could that possibly be the feeling of any special tohereiiess or thereness? |
james-principles-2863 | Docs not all true lovo base itself on agreeable perceptions much more than on representations of utility?" |
james-principles-2863 | Does not the discharge then seem to her the only fitting thing? |
james-principles-2863 | Does the smoothing out of the locomotor interruptions from the blind man''s tactile space- sphere offer any greater paradox? |
james-principles-2863 | Does the theory of projection fare any better? |
james-principles-2863 | Driven thus from tlie body at large, where next shall the circumstantial evidence for the feeling of innervation lodge itself? |
james-principles-2863 | Fear of the supernatural is one variety of fear,-It i? |
james-principles-2863 | Fight? |
james-principles-2863 | First, the way of analysis: What does it consist in? |
james-principles-2863 | For what can be gained by the interposition of this relay of feeling between the idea of the movement and the movement? |
james-principles-2863 | For what is it to imagine a winged horse but to affirm that the horse[ that horse, namely] has wings? |
james-principles-2863 | For where shonld a past feeling be embodied, if not in the same organs as the feeling when, present? |
james-principles-2863 | Has the hawk talons? |
james-principles-2863 | Has the mind such a structure or not? |
james-principles-2863 | Has thesilk- worm the function of secret- ing the fluid silk? |
james-principles-2863 | He mnde the question"which horse?" |
james-principles-2863 | How are spatial subdivisions brought to consciousness? |
james-principles-2863 | How can it suggest its position? |
james-principles-2863 | How can the hand supply the place of the eye? |
james-principles-2863 | How can we by induction or analogy infer what we do not already generically know? |
james-principles-2863 | How else could he be so conscious of its absence and of that of its effects? |
james-principles-2863 | How is a fresh path ever formed? |
james-principles-2863 | How is the chaos smoothed and straightened out? |
james-principles-2863 | How is this possible? |
james-principles-2863 | How now is such an orderly concatenation of movements originally learned? |
james-principles-2863 | How should n''t it? |
james-principles-2863 | How stands it with the instincts of mankind? |
james-principles-2863 | How was this? |
james-principles-2863 | How, then, is it that we receive accurate information, by the eye, of size and shape and distance? |
james-principles-2863 | I 1^ 7? |
james-principles-2863 | I will answer these questions by asking another: Why do we move our joints at all? |
james-principles-2863 | If I were told that the staircase was on fire and I had only a minute to escape, and the thought arose —''Have they sent for tireengincs? |
james-principles-2863 | If belief consists in an emotional reaction of the entire man on an object, how can we believe at will? |
james-principles-2863 | If the words of Mill be taken to apply to the mere sub- jective analysis of belief — to the question, What does it feel like when we have it? |
james-principles-2863 | If they do not, what happens? |
james-principles-2863 | If, at birth, there exists noth- ing but a passive receptivity of impressions, why is not a horse as educable as a man? |
james-principles-2863 | In a word, his mental procedure tends to/a? |
james-principles-2863 | In like manner of grief: what would it be without its tears, its sobs, its suffocation of the heart, its pang in the breast- bone? |
james-principles-2863 | In other words, can peripheral sense- organs be excited from € xbove, or only from ivithout? |
james-principles-2863 | Innervation is there, or there would be no movement; why is the feeling of the innervation gone? |
james-principles-2863 | Is each thing born fitted to particular other things^ and to them exclusively, as locks are fitted to their keys?'' |
james-principles-2863 | Is it not better just to let his aching body lie, and let the ship go down if she will? |
james-principles-2863 | Is it not in very sooth a retinal sensation itself? |
james-principles-2863 | Is it probable that the man who has the key is on band? |
james-principles-2863 | Is its bright- ness comparable to that of the actual scene? |
james-principles-2863 | Is not the sum of your actual experience taken at this moment and impar- tially added together an utter chaos? |
james-principles-2863 | Is not this the mental state of the* feigning''animal? |
james-principles-2863 | Is perception an unconscious inference? |
james-principles-2863 | Is the man a careful sort of person? |
james-principles-2863 | Is there no way out from this level of individual description in the case of the emotions? |
james-principles-2863 | Is this the tara- tara, friends, that you wish burned?'' |
james-principles-2863 | Is your image under these conditions distinct? |
james-principles-2863 | It is deliberately driving a thorn into one''s flesh; and the sense of? |
james-principles-2863 | It is easy to say that Mho Intellect produces it,''but what does that mean? |
james-principles-2863 | It lies in the nature of tht? |
james-principles-2863 | It ran thus:*''* What being destroys what it has itself brought forth? |
james-principles-2863 | It was this:"Are not women human? |
james-principles-2863 | Just how far? |
james-principles-2863 | Let now the idea of the letter A arise in the mind, or, in other words, let S* be aroused: what happens? |
james-principles-2863 | Let some between mankiDd should make any impression on our understandings? |
james-principles-2863 | No doubt this is true; but why the particular forms of sham occupation? |
james-principles-2863 | Noio, why do the various anirndls do what seem to us such strange things^ in the presence of such outlandish stimuli? |
james-principles-2863 | Now do not these actions clearly show that she had in her mind a general idea, or concept, that some animal is to be discovered and hunted?'' |
james-principles-2863 | Now do resident images, exclusively, form what I have called the mental cue, or will remote ones equally suffice? |
james-principles-2863 | Now for the next step in our construction of real space: How are the variovs sense- spaces added together into a consolidated and unitary continuum? |
james-principles-2863 | Now how do we ever get up under such circumstances? |
james-principles-2863 | Now if this is the elementary law which Loeb calls it, why does it only manifest its effect when both hands are moving simultaneously? |
james-principles-2863 | Now is there anything else in the mind when toe tmU to do an act? |
james-principles-2863 | Now what are these things severally? |
james-principles-2863 | Now, how comes it that one thing though^, of can be con- tradicted by another? |
james-principles-2863 | Now, what may the impulsive root be? |
james-principles-2863 | Of what sort of mind- stuff is it composed? |
james-principles-2863 | One can ask, then, with what particular muscular con- traction the sense of strained attention in the effort to recall something is associated? |
james-principles-2863 | Or we answer the question:"Why is snow white?" |
james-principles-2863 | Or what shall be said of a shy and unsociable man who receives point- blank an invitation to a small party? |
james-principles-2863 | Or who in anger, grief, or fear is actuated to the movements which he makes by the pleasures which they yield? |
james-principles-2863 | Ought we not, in short, to say unhesitatingly that distance must be an intellectual and not a sensible content of consciousness? |
james-principles-2863 | PraMerea in transtormaiione qme lingitur, natura prioris spcci< M, scrvaturaut dcstruitur? |
james-principles-2863 | Quite omt- i"i.\ nence comes this curiosity, thia irresistible desire to open eve''> iliiii;^ and iscr •''hat is inside? |
james-principles-2863 | REA80NIN0, 363 the State? |
james-principles-2863 | Second, the way of history: What are its conditions of production, and its connection with other facts? |
james-principles-2863 | Shall he, can he, obey it? |
james-principles-2863 | Shall wa add the propensity to walk along a curbstone or any other narrow path, to the list of instincts? |
james-principles-2863 | Shall we continue to call these sciences* intuitive,''* in- nate,''or* a priori''bodies of truth, or not? t Personally* Cf. |
james-principles-2863 | Since there is no direct introspective evidence for the feelings of innervation, is there any indirect or circumstan- tial evidence? |
james-principles-2863 | The germinal question concerning « 14 P8T0n0L0Q7, things brought for the first time before consciousness is not the theo> retic* What is that? |
james-principles-2863 | The old lady admiring the Academician''s picture, says to him:"And is it really all done by hand?'''' |
james-principles-2863 | The only question would be, does this grouping or that suit our purpose best? |
james-principles-2863 | The outgoing current being the effect, what psychic antecedent could contain or prefigure it better than a feeling of it? |
james-principles-2863 | The question immediately returns^ Can any of them be said in any strictness to be optical sensations? |
james-principles-2863 | The question is: How do this conception and this belief arise? |
james-principles-2863 | The question''''What are the antecedents and determinants?" |
james-principles-2863 | The same forms, treated in the same way( added, subtracted, or compared), give the same results — how should n''t they? |
james-principles-2863 | The syllable ea? |
james-principles-2863 | The test would be, Would the most intelligent Eskimo dogs that ever lived act so when placed upon ice for the first time together? |
james-principles-2863 | The two questions,"Can we see single with disparate points?" |
james-principles-2863 | The various answers to the familiar question, How large is the moon? |
james-principles-2863 | This is surely a de- lusion here; why is it not a delusion everywhere? |
james-principles-2863 | Those were questions of classification:"Which are the proper gen ■ era of emotion, and which the species under each?" |
james-principles-2863 | To the metaphysician alone can such questions occur as: Why do we smile, when pleased, and not scowl? |
james-principles-2863 | WILL, 563 were unwise? |
james-principles-2863 | Was it anything over and above the no- tion of the different feelings to which the movement when effected would give rise? |
james-principles-2863 | Wh.i: is the obvious inferenct? |
james-principles-2863 | What does that mean? |
james-principles-2863 | What does the scientific man do who searches for the reason or law embedded in a phenomenon? |
james-principles-2863 | What does this surnngf tbis exciting power, this interest, consist in, which some objects have? |
james-principles-2863 | What evi- dence is required beyond this intimate sense of the culprit''s responsibility, to which our very viscera and limbs reply? |
james-principles-2863 | What happens in such a case? |
james-principles-2863 | What have we done to you that you should wish to kill us? |
james-principles-2863 | What is its inner nature? |
james-principles-2863 | What is the foundation of this postulate? |
james-principles-2863 | What is the here when we say that the joint- feeling is there? |
james-principles-2863 | What is the manner of occupation of the brain with a resuscitated feeling of resistance, a smell or a sound? |
james-principles-2863 | What is the meaning of the human brain? |
james-principles-2863 | What is this further condition? |
james-principles-2863 | What possible sense( for that mind) would a suspicion have that the candle was not real? |
james-principles-2863 | What shall measure its amount? |
james-principles-2863 | What would doubt or disbelief of it imply? |
james-principles-2863 | When a savage asks the cause of anything he means to ask exclusively* What is to blame?'' |
james-principles-2863 | Whence this loss of power? |
james-principles-2863 | Where shall these endless turnings and twistings have an end? |
james-principles-2863 | Where, then, do we feel the objects of our original sensa- tions to be? |
james-principles-2863 | Whereupon the would- be Hector piped up, quite distract- ed from his role,"Where''s my Patroklos? |
james-principles-2863 | Which theory is then to be believed? |
james-principles-2863 | Who blushes to escape the discomfort of not blushing? |
james-principles-2863 | Who in cold blood wants the fox for its own sake, or cares whether the ball be at this goal or that? |
james-principles-2863 | Who is not conscious of this? |
james-principles-2863 | Who knows? |
james-principles-2863 | Who smiles for the pleasure of the smiling, or frowns for the pleasure of the frown? |
james-principles-2863 | Who taught you politeness? |
james-principles-2863 | Why are we unable to talk to a crowd as we talk to a single friend? |
james-principles-2863 | Why are* sweet''and* soft''used so synonymously in most languages? |
james-principles-2863 | Why ascribe the former exclusively to the knotver and the latter to the hwion? |
james-principles-2863 | Why can not anybody reason as well as anybody else? |
james-principles-2863 | Why do they prefer saddle of mutton and champagne to hard- tack and ditch- water? |
james-principles-2863 | Why do they sit round the stove on a cold day? |
james-principles-2863 | Why do we thus invincibly crave to alter the given order of nature? |
james-principles-2863 | Why doeQ.a particular maiden turn our wits so upside- down? |
james-principles-2863 | Why does it need a Newton to notice tlie law of the squares, a Darwin to notice the survival of the fittest? |
james-principles-2863 | Why does tlie maiden interest the youth so that everything about her seems more important and significant than any- thing else in the world? |
james-principles-2863 | Why is not the feeling of effort the same? |
james-principles-2863 | Why is the Mundele so wicked? |
james-principles-2863 | Why may it not have been so of the original ele- ments of consciousness, sensation, time, space, resemblance, difference, and other relations? |
james-principles-2863 | Why not when the same hand makes succeasive movements? |
james-principles-2863 | Why shall not the specifieness of the quality just consist in the feeling of a peculiar direc- lion? |
james-principles-2863 | Why should a more lively feeling grow up towards a fellow- being than towards a perennial fountain? |
james-principles-2863 | Why should difference have popped into our heads so invariably with the thought of them? |
james-principles-2863 | Why should that absent and imagined slant- legged image displace the present and felt square image from our mind? |
james-principles-2863 | Why should the affection of new points on the 9ame retina have so different a result? |
james-principles-2863 | Why, for instance, does the death of Othello so stir the spectator''s blood and leave him with a sense of reconcilement? |
james-principles-2863 | Why, in a room, do they place themselves, ninety- nine times out of a hundred, with their faces towards its middle rather than to the wall? |
james-principles-2863 | WiU you or tvorCt you have it so?" |
james-principles-2863 | Will much knowledge create thee a double belly, or wilt thou seek Paradise with thine eyes? |
james-principles-2863 | Will the key be hanging on a peg? |
james-principles-2863 | Will this hallu- cinatory candle be believed in, vnW it have a real existence for the mind? |
james-principles-2863 | Wliat wonder, then, that, under these experimental conditions, the tran^^ subject excels him in touching the right line again? |
james-principles-2863 | ^ Why do I stand here where I stand? |
james-principles-2863 | ^^ What does the reader do when he wishes to see in what the precise likeness or diflFerence of two objects lies? |
james-principles-2863 | and"Can we see double with identical points? |
james-principles-2863 | and''''How come tliej to excite these particiilai changes and not others?" |
james-principles-2863 | and( 2) Hoiv do their mutual addition and fusion and reduction to the same scale, in a ivord, hoiv does their synthesis, occur? |
james-principles-2863 | and( 2) How come they to excite them? |
james-principles-2863 | as due to shyness cr to fear? |
james-principles-2863 | but which a blind Instinct saves from the ash- barrel? |
james-principles-2863 | evident and obvious than those of entire phenomena? |
james-principles-2863 | excite?" |
james-principles-2863 | in a world where every time we add a drop to a crumb of quicklime we get a dozen or more? |
james-principles-2863 | in other words, How does spatial discrimination occur? |
james-principles-2863 | is this proposition a true proposition or not?'' |
james-principles-2863 | juxta Darwin, species inferior se evolvit in superiorem, unde trahit maiorem illam Lobilitatem? |
james-principles-2863 | or being there, is it credible that they should, all unaided, so delicately graduate the stimulation of the unconscious motor centres to their work?" |
james-principles-2863 | or is it such an independent* variable''that with a constant object more or less of it may be made? |
james-principles-2863 | or of description:"By what expression is each emotion char^ acterized? |
james-principles-2863 | or rather, as Horwicz has admirably put it,* What is to be done?'' |
james-principles-2863 | qualities/ more real than those* secondary''qualities which eye and ear and nose reveaL Why do we thus so markedly select the tangible to be the real? |
james-principles-2863 | see by means of them are equally such conclusions? |
james-principles-2863 | t It would be foolish to suj)pose that none of the reartions called emo- tional could have arisen in this 5''? |
james-principles-2863 | that we have no memory-images of how their contraction feels? |
james-principles-2863 | then, if the pain seem a little space- world all by itself? |
james-principles-2863 | three angles are equal to two right ones? |
james-principles-2863 | whatsoever it frf,<>? |
james-principles-2863 | whence arise the different degrees of that power possessed by different races of organisms, and different individuals of the same race? |
james-principles-2863 | where is it?" |
james-principles-2863 | which are those* intimate rela- tions''with our life which give reality? |
james-principles-2863 | — Is the image dim or fairly clear? |
james-principles-2863 | — had it no better warrant than such experiences? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | --` My lordes and my ladyes, it stant thus; What sholde I lenger,''quod he,` do yow dwelle?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1015` But, dere frend, how shal myn wo ben lesse Til this be doon? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1090 Why list thee so thy- self for- doon for drede, That in thyn heed thyn eyen semen dede? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1095 Hath kinde thee wroughte al- only hir to plese? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 110 What nede were it this preyere for to werne, Sin ye shul bothe han folk and toun as yerne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1125 Quod tho Criseyde,` Is this a mannes game? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1155` We han nought elles for to don, y- wis. And Pandarus, now woltow trowen me? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1160 Al wrong, by god; what seystow, man, wher art? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1190 What mighte or may the sely larke seye, Whan that the sperhauk hath it in his foot? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1265 But who may bet bigylen, yf him liste, Than he on whom men weneth best to triste? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1355 Though ther be mercy writen in your chere, God wot, the text ful hard is, sooth, to finde, How coude ye with- outen bond me binde?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 135` And why so, uncle myn? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1460 What proferestow thy light here for to selle? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1470` What is he more aboute, me to drecche And doon me wrong? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1475 For how sholde I my lyf an houre save, Sin that with yow is al the lyf I have? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1505` Thow thinkest now,"How sholde I doon al this? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1610` Thus hastow me no litel thing y- yive, Fo which to thee obliged be for ay My lyf, and why? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1680` Who shal now trowe on any othes mo? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 1705 O god,''quod he,` that oughtest taken hede To fortheren trouthe, and wronges to punyce, Why niltow doon a vengeaunce of this vyce? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 200 Quod Troilus,` How longe shal I dwelle Er this be doon?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 210` What eyleth yow to be thus wery sone, And namelich of wommen? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 235 Who speketh for me right now in myn absence? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 240 How shal she doon eek, sorwful creature? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 260 What have I doon, what have I thus a- gilt? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 315` O my Criseyde, O lady sovereyne Of thilke woful soule that thus cryeth, Who shal now yeven comfort to the peyne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 320 Lo, here is al, what sholde I more seye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 335 What nede is thee to maken al this care? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 370 Who woot in sooth thus what they signifye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 385 Criseyde, which that herde him in this wyse, Thoughte,` I shal fele what he meneth, y- wis.''` Now, eem,''quod she,` what wolde ye devyse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 40 Were it not bet at ones for to dye Than ever- more in langour thus to drye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 410 O quike deeth, O swete harm so queynte, How may of thee in me swich quantitee, But- if that I consente that it be? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 420` What? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 45 Why nil I sleen this Diomede also? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 480 Why gabbestow, that seydest thus to me That"him is wors that is fro wele y- throwe, Than he hadde erst non of that wele y- knowe?" |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 490` But may I truste wel ther- to,''quod he,` That of this thing that ye han hight me here, Ye wol it holden trewly un- to me?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 495 O where hastow ben hid so longe in muwe, That canst so wel and formely arguwe? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 535 Now is not this a nyce vanitee? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 560 At whiche she lough, and gan hir faste excuse, And seyde,` It rayneth; lo, how sholde I goon?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 585 What nede is thee to seke on me victorie, Sin I am thyn, and hoolly at thy wille? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 620` This were a wonder thing,''quod Troylus,` Thou coudest never in love thy- selven wisse; How devel maystow bringen me to blisse?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 735 Quod Pandarus,` Thou wrecched mouses herte, Art thou agast so that she wol thee byte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 765 What is Criseyde worth, from Troilus? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 770` What, Not as bisily,''quod Pandarus,` As though myn owene lyf lay on this nede?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 780 How wostow so that thou art gracelees? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 875 And of hir song right with that word she stente, And therwith- al,` Now, nece,''quod Criseyde,` Who made this song with so good entente?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 910` What wole ye more, lufsom lady dere? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 945 What shold I telle his wordes that he seyde? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | 980` But Lord, how shal I doon, how shal I liven? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Al be I not the first that dide amis, What helpeth that to do my blame awey? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And as he com ayeinward prively, 750 His nece awook, and asked,` Who goth there?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And falsen Troilus? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And goode, eek tel me this, How wiltow seyn of me and my destresse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And ner he com, and seyde,` How stont it now This mery morwe, nece, how can ye fare?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And of him- self imagened he ofte To ben defet, and pale, and waxen lesse Than he was wo nt, and that men seyden softe,` What may it be? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And seyde,` Leve brother Pandarus, Intendestow that we shal here bleve Til Sarpedoun wol forth congeyen us? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And shal I go? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And she answerde,` Swete, al were it so, What harm was that, sin I non yvel mene? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And sin he best to love is, and most meke, What nedeth feyned loves for to seke? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And therwithal he heng a- doun the heed, And fil on knees, and sorwfully he sighte; 1080 What mighte he seyn? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And why hir fader tarieth so longe To wedden hir un- to som worthy wight? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | And why? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Artow for hir and for non other born? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Be ye nought war how that fals Poliphete Is now aboute eft- sones for to plete, And bringe on yow advocacyes newe?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Bet than swiche fyve? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | But canstow pleyen raket, to and fro, 460 Netle in, dokke out, now this, now that, Pandare? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | But how shul ye don in this sorwful cas, How shal you re tendre herte this sustene? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | But tel me than, hastow hir wil assayed, That sorwest thus?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | But tel me, if I wiste what she were 765 For whom that thee al this misaunter ayleth? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | But what avayleth this to Troilus, That for his sorwe no- thing of it roughte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | But what is thanne a remede un- to this, But that we shape us sone for to mete? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | But who may al eschewe, or al devyne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | But who was glad y- nough but Calkas tho? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Can he for me so pitously compleyne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Can he ther- on? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Cryseyda gan al his chere aspyen, And leet so softe it in hir herte sinke, 650 That to hir- self she seyde,` Who yaf me drinke?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Deiphebus him answerde,` O, is not this, That thow spekest of to me thus straungely, Criseyda, my freend?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Dorstestow that I tolde hir in hir ere Thy wo, sith thou darst not thy- self for fere, And hir bisoughte on thee to han som routhe?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Eek I nil not be cured, I wol deye; What knowe I of the quene Niobe? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Eek wostow how it fareth of som servyse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Encressen eek the causes of my care; So wel- a- wey, why nil myn herte breste? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Envyous day, what list thee so to spyen? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | For love of god,''quod she, 225` Shal I not witen what ye mene of this?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | For me hath he swich hevinesse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | For tendernesse, how shal she this sustene, Swich wo for me? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | For who may holde thing that wol a- way? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Fro that demaunde he so descendeth doun To asken hir, if that hir straunge thoughte 860 The Grekes gyse, and werkes that they wroughte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Fro yow soiourne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Han now thus sone Grekes maad yow lene? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Hastow nought herd at parlement,''he seyde,` For Antenor how lost is my Criseyde?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Hastow swich lust to been thyn owene fo? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | He seyde,` Ye, but wole ye now me here? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How darstow seyn that fals thy lady is, For any dreem, right for thyn owene drede? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How dorste I thenken that folye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How maystow in thyn herte finde 265 To been to me thus cruel and unkinde? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How might a wight in torment and in drede And helelees, yow sende as yet gladnesse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How mighte I have in that so hard an herte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How mighte it ever y- red ben or y- songe, The pleynte that she made in hir distresse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How mightestow for reuthe me bigyle? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How shal I, wrecche, fare? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How shal this longe tyme a- wey be driven, Til that thou be ayein at hir fro me? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How sholde I live, if that I from him twinne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How sholde a fish with- oute water dure? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | How sholde a plaunte or lyves creature Live, with- oute his kinde noriture? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | I knowe also, and alday here and see, Men loven wommen al this toun aboute; Be they the wers? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | If harme agree me, wher- to pleyne I thenne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | If love be good, from whennes comth my wo? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Is it of love? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Is that a widewes lyf, so god you save? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Is ther no grace, and shal I thus be spilt? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Is this al the Ioye and al the feste? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Is this the verray mede of your beheste? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Is this your reed, is this my blisful cas? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | It be repeled? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Liveth not thy lady? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Lo, nece myn, see ye nought how I swete? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | May I him lette of that? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | May I not stonden here?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | May I nought wel in other folk aspye 775 Hir dredful Ioye, hir constreynt, and hir peyne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | May it be no bet?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | May ye not ten dayes thanne abyde, For myn honour, in swich an aventure? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Maystow not see?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Men mosten axe at seyntes if it is Aught fair in hevene; Why? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Now I am gon, whom yeve ye audience? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | O dere herte eek, that I love so, Who shal that sorwe sleen that ye ben inne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | O mercy, god, who wolde have trowed this? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | O trust, O feyth, O depe aseuraunce, Who hath me reft Criseyde, al my plesaunce? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Or love the wers, though wrecches on it cryen? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Or woot it Troilus?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Pandare answerde and seyde,` Allas the whyle 1275 That I was born; have I not seyd er this, That dremes many a maner man bigyle? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Pandare answerde,` Be we comen hider To fecchen fyr, and rennen hoom ayeyn? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Quod Pandarus,` And it your wille be That she may take hir leve, er that she go?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Quod Pandarus,` Ye, nece, wol ye here? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Quod she;` And how thus unwist of hem alle?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Quod tho Criseyde,` Wole ye doon o thing, And ye therwith shal stinte al his disese? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Right for this fyn? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Sey ye me never er now? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Shal I nat loven, in cas if that me leste? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Shal thus Criseyde awey, for that thou wilt? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | She seyde,` How shal he doon, and I also? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | She shal come hastely ayeyn;"And whanne, allas? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Shulde be therfor fallen in despeyr, Or be recreaunt for his owene tene, Or sleen him- self, al be his lady fayr? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Sin I am free, Sholde I now love, and putte in Iupartye My sikernesse, and thrallen libertee? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Slombrestow as in a lytargye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Sone after this, to him she gan to rowne, And asked him if Troilus were there? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Spak than Eleyne, and seyde,` Pandarus, 1625 Woot ought my lord, my brother, this matere, I mene, Ector? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Sumwhat I bringe,''And seyde,` Who is in his bed so sone 1310 Y- buried thus?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Swich arguments ne been not worth a bene; Wol ye the childish Ialous contrefete? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Than spak he thus,` O lady myn Criseyde, Wher is your feyth, and wher is your biheste? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | That endeth in swich wyse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | That knowest best myn herte and al my thought, What shal my sorwful lyf don in this cas 290 If I for- go that I so dere have bought? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Thenk eek how Paris hath, that is thy brother, A love; and why shaltow not have another? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Tho lough this Pandare, and anoon answerde,` And I thy borw? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Thou wenest been a greet devyneresse; Now seestow not this fool of fantasye Peyneth hir on ladyes for to lye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Thyn advertence? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Til that the breeth me fayle? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | To what fyn live I thus? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Whan he was come un- to his neces place,` Wher is my lady?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Whan shal I next my dere herte see? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Whan shal she com ayeyn? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What Ioye hastow thyn owene folk to spille? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What eyleth thee To been a Greek, sin thou art born Troian? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What han thise loveres thee agilt, Dispitous day? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What hastow lost, why sekestow this place, 1455 Ther god thy lyght so quenche, for his grace? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What helpeth it to wepen ful a strete, Or though ye bothe in salte teres dreynte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What is me best to do?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What is this to seye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What is your reed I sholde doon of this?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What may this be, That thou dispeyred art thus causelees? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What mighte I more doon or seye?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What newe lust, what beautee, what science, 1255 What wratthe of iuste cause have ye to me? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What sey ye, no?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What shal I do, allas? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What sholde I drecche, or telle of his aray? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What sholde I lenger in this tale tarien? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What sholde I lenger proces of it make? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What sholde I lenger sermon of it holde? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What sholde I make of this a long sermoun? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What sholde I more telle? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What sholden straunge to me doon, Whan he, that for my beste freend I wende, Ret me to love, and sholde it me defende? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What shulde I seyn? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What unhap may this mene? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What wikked spirit tolde him thus? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What wol my dere herte seyn to me, Which that I drede never- mo to see? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What wolt thow seyn, if I for Eleyne sente To speke of this? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What womman coude love swich a wrecche? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What wonder is it though he of me have Ioye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What wonder is though that hir sore smerte, Whan she forgoth hir owene swete herte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What woot my fader what lyf that I lede? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | What?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Wher ben hir armes and hir eyen clere, 220 That yesternight this tyme with me were? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Whether yet thou thenke up- on Criseyde? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Which wey be ye comen, benedicite?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who can conforten now your hertes werre? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who can the sothe gesse 620 Why Troilus hath al this hevinesse?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who coude telle aright or ful discryve His wo, his pleynt, his langour, and his pyne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who is al there? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who may it leve? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who mighte han seyd, that I had doon a- mis To stele awey with swich on as he is? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who mighte telle half the Ioye or feste Which that the sowle of Troilus tho felte, 345 Heringe theffect of Pandarus biheste? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who seigh ever a wys man faren so? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who sey ever or this so dul a man?" |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who shal now trowe on any othes mo? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who sit right now or stant in your presence? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who wol deme, though he see a man To temple go, that he the images eteth? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Who wolde have wend that, in so litel a throwe, Fortune our Ioye wolde han over- throwe? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Whom shal I leve? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why do ye so, Syn wel ye woot the tyme is faste by, That he shal come? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why doth my dere herte thus, allas?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why leet I you from hennes go, For which wel neigh out of my wit I breyde? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why leet ich hir to go? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why lystow in this wyse, Sin thy desyr al holly hastow had, 395 So that, by right, it oughte y- now suffyse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why ne hadde I swich on with my soule y- bought, Ye, or the leeste Ioye that was there? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why ne hastow to thy- selven som resport, 850 Why woltow thus thy- selve, allas, for- do? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why nere I deed? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why nil I bringe al Troye upon a rore? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why nil I helpen to myn owene cure?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why nil I rather with a man or two Stele hir a- way? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why niltow do me deye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why niltow lete hir fro thyn herte go? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why niltow love an- other lady swete, That may thyn herte setten in quiete? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why niltow over us hove, As longe as whanne Almena lay by Iove? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why sholde than for ferd thyn herte quake? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why so?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why twinned be we tweyne?"'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why wiltow me fro Ioye thus depryve? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why wol I this endure? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Why, Troilus, what thenkestow to done? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Wol he have pleynte or teres, er I wende? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Wol ye do thus, for shame?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | Wol ye so? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` A ring?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` And if that at myn owene lust I brenne, Fro whennes cometh my wailing and my pleynte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` And therfor wostow what I thee beseche? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` And thou, my suster, ful of discomfort,''Quod Pandarus,` what thenkestow to do? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` And wostow why I am the lasse a- fered Of this matere with my nece trete? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Artow in Troye, and hast non hardiment To take a womman which that loveth thee, And wolde hir- selven been of thyn assent? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Be ye mad? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Beth nought agast, ne quaketh nat; wher- to? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` But Troilus, I pray thee tel me now, 330 If that thou trowe, er this, that any wight Hath loved paramours as wel as thou? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` But he that parted is in every place 960 Is no- wher hool, as writen clerkes wyse; What wonder is, though swich oon have no grace? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` But tel me how, thou that woost al this matere, How I might best avaylen? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` But tel me this, why thou art now so mad To sorwen thus? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` But wene ye that every wrecche woot 890 The parfit blisse of love? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` But whider is thy reed,''quod Troilus,` That we may pleye us best in al this toun?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Can he wel speke of love?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Ector,''quod they,` what goost may yow enspyre This womman thus to shilde and doon us lese Daun Antenor? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Endeth than love in wo? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` For how might ever sweetnesse have be knowe To him that never tasted bitternesse? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Hadde I him never leef? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Hastow not lived many a yeer biforn With- outen hir, and ferd ful wel at ese? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Have I thee nought honoured al my lyve, As thou wel wost, above the goddes alle? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` How bisy, if I love, eek moste I be To plesen hem that Iangle of love, and demen, 800 And coye hem, that they sey non harm of me? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` How doon this folk that seen hir loves wedded By freendes might, as it bi- tit ful ofte, 345 And seen hem in hir spouses bed y- bedded? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` How hastow thus unkindely and longe Hid this fro me, thou fool?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` How mighte I thanne do?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` How ofte tyme hath it y- knowen be, The treson, that to womman hath be do? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` How shal I do? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` How sholde I thus ten dayes ful endure, Whan I the firste night have al this tene? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` I? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` I? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` I? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` If no love is, O god, what fele I so? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Loke up, I seye, and tel me what she is Anoon, that I may goon aboute thy nede; Knowe ich hir ought? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Ne that I shal han cause in this matere,''495 Quod he,` to pleyne, or after yow to preche?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` No, certes, brother,''quod this Troilus,` And why?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` No? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Now set a cas, the hardest is, y- wis, Men mighten deme that he loveth me; 730 What dishonour were it un- to me, this? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Now wherby that I telle yow al this? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Now, uncle dere,''quod she,` tel it us For goddes love; is than the assege aweye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` O mercy, god, what lyf is this?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` O wery goost, that errest to and fro, Why niltow fleen out of the wofulleste Body, that ever mighte on grounde go? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Thanne if I ne hadde spoken, as grace was, Ye wolde han slayn your- self anoon?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` To what fyn sholde I live and sorwen thus? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` To- morwe? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What cas,''quod Troilus,` or what aventure Hath gyded thee to see my languisshinge, That am refus of euery creature? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What is the sonne wers, of kinde righte, Though that a man, for feblesse of his yen, May nought endure on it to see for brighte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What mighte I wene, and I hadde swich a thought, 1065 But that god purveyth thing that is to come For that it is to come, and elles nought? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What shal I doon? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What that I mene, O swete herte dere?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What trowe ye the peple eek al aboute Wolde of it seye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What wene ye your wyse fader wolde Han yeven Antenor for yow anoon, 905 If he ne wiste that the citee sholde Destroyed been? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` What? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Which hous?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Who seeth yow now, my righte lode- sterre? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Who, Troilus? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Whom sholde I thanke but yow, god of love, Of al this blisse, in which to bathe I ginne? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Why do ye with your- selven thus amis?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Why nil I make at ones riche and pore To have y- nough to done, er that she go? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Why, no, parde; what nedeth more speche?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Why, uncle myn,''quod she,` who tolde him this? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Wostow that wel?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Wot ye not wel that noble and heigh corage Ne sorweth not, ne stinteth eek for lyte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Ye, holy god,''quod she,` what thing is that? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Ye, nece, wole ye pullen out the thorn That stiketh in his herte?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | ` Ye, swete herte? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | is this nought wysly spoken?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | quod Troilus,` To knowe of this, ye, were it never so lyte?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | quod he,` who causeth al this fare? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | quod she,` what wordes may ye bringe? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | thoughte he,` wher hastow woned, That art so fair and goodly to devyse?'' |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | what is this wonder maladye? |
chaucer-troilus-2616 | what may this be? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | ''tis better hope he is; For his designs crave haste, his haste good hope: Then wherefore dost thou hope he is not shipp''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Against whom comest thou? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Alack, and what shall good old York there see But empty lodgings and unfurnish''d walls, Unpeopled offices, untrodden stones? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Am I both priest and clerk? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | And what hear there for welcome but my groans? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | And who sits here that is not Richard''s subject? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | And wilt thou pluck my fair son from mine age, And rob me of a happy mother''s name? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | BUSHY Why have you not proclaim''d Northumberland And all the rest revolted faction traitors? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | But then more''why?'' |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Come down? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Comest thou because the anointed king is hence? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Cousin Aumerle, How far brought you high Hereford on his way? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Cousin of Hereford, what dost thou object Against the Duke of Norfolk, Thomas Mowbray? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS Finds brotherhood in thee no sharper spur? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS OF YORK Dost thou teach pardon pardon to destroy? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS OF YORK He shall be none; We''ll keep him here: then what is that to him? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS OF YORK Pleads he in earnest? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS OF YORK What is the matter, my lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS OF YORK What is the matter? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS OF YORK Why, York, what wilt thou do? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS OF YORK Why, what is it, my lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUCHESS Where then, alas, may I complain myself? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF AUMERLE Comfort, my liege; why looks your grace so pale? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF AUMERLE Is Bushy, Green, and the Earl of Wiltshire dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF AUMERLE Princes and noble lords, What answer shall I make to this base man? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF AUMERLE Where is the duke my father with his power? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF AUMERLE Who sets me else? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF AUMERLE You holy clergymen, is there no plot To rid the realm of this pernicious blot? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF YORK He was? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF YORK How long shall I be patient? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF YORK Thou fond mad woman, Wilt thou conceal this dark conspiracy? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF YORK Thou frantic woman, what dost thou make here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF YORK What is''t, knave? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF YORK What seal is that, that hangs without thy bosom? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF YORK Where did I leave? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | DUKE OF YORK[ Within] Open the door, secure, foolhardy king: Shall I for love speak treason to thy face? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Darest thou, thou little better thing than earth, Divine his downfall? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Did not the one deserve to have an heir? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | EXTON''Have I no friend?'' |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Enter KING RICHARD II, the BISHOP OF CARLISLE, DUKE OF AUMERLE, and Soldiers] KING RICHARD II Barkloughly castle call they this at hand? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Gentle Northumberland, If thy offences were upon record, Would it not shame thee in so fair a troop To read a lecture of them? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Greater he shall not be; if he serve God, We''ll serve Him too and be his fellow so: Revolt our subjects? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE And what said the gallant? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE Are you contented to resign the crown? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE Intended or committed was this fault? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE My gracious uncle, let me know my fault: On what condition stands it and wherein? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE O, who can hold a fire in his hand By thinking on the frosty Caucasus? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE What means our cousin, that he stares and looks So wildly? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE What shrill- voiced suppliant makes this eager cry? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE Whither? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | HENRY BOLINGBROKE Why, bishop, is Norfolk dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Harry, how fares your uncle? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Hath love in thy old blood no living fire? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Have we more sons? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | How brooks your grace the air, After your late tossing on the breaking seas? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | How shall we do for money for these wars? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | I fear, I fear,-- DUCHESS OF YORK What should you fear? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | In the base court? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | In the base court? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Is he not like thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Is not Gaunt dead, and doth not Hereford live? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Is not his heir a well- deserving son? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Is not my teeming date drunk up with time? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Is not the king''s name twenty thousand names? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | JOHN OF GAUNT O, to what purpose dost thou hoard thy words, That thou return''st no greeting to thy friends? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | JOHN OF GAUNT What is six winters? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | JOHN OF GAUNT When, Harry, when? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II And say, what store of parting tears were shed? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II And shall I have? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II Can sick men play so nicely with their names? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II I had forgot myself; am I not king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II Must I do so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II Rode he on Barbary? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II Should dying men flatter with those that live? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II Thy son is banish''d upon good advice, Whereto thy tongue a party- verdict gave: Why at our justice seem''st thou then to lour? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II Too well, too well thou tell''st a tale so ill. Where is the Earl of Wiltshire? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II What comfort, man? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II What doth our cousin lay to Mowbray''s charge? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II What must the king do now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II What said our cousin when you parted with him? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II What says he? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II Where lies he? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II Why, uncle, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | KING RICHARD II''Fair cousin''? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | LORD WILLOUGHBY And daily new exactions are devised, As blanks, benevolences, and I wot not what: But what, o''God''s name, doth become of this? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | LORD WILLOUGHBY Tends that thou wouldst speak to the Duke of Hereford? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Look not to the ground, Ye favourites of a king: are we not high? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Lord Marshal What is thy name? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Most mighty prince, my Lord Northumberland, What says King Bolingbroke? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Music do I hear? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | NORTHUMBERLAND Have you forgot the Duke of Hereford, boy? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | NORTHUMBERLAND How far is it to Berkeley? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | NORTHUMBERLAND What was his reason? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | NORTHUMBERLAND Why, is he not with the queen? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | No deeper wrinkles yet? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Old Gaunt indeed, and gaunt in being old: Within me grief hath kept a tedious fast; And who abstains from meat that is not gaunt? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Or shall we play the wantons with our woes, And make some pretty match with shedding tears? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Or wallow naked in December snow By thinking on fantastic summer''s heat? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Or with pale beggar- fear impeach my height Before this out- dared dastard? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | QUEEN And must we be divided? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | QUEEN How fares our noble uncle, Lancaster? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | QUEEN Nimble mischance, that art so light of foot, Doth not thy embassage belong to me, And am I last that knows it? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | QUEEN Of sorrow or of joy? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | QUEEN What, is my Richard both in shape and mind Transform''d and weaken''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | QUEEN Who shall hinder me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | QUEEN Why hopest thou so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Say, Scroop, where lies our uncle with his power? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Say, is my kingdom lost? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Say, where, when, and how, Camest thou by this ill tidings? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Seek you to seize and gripe into your hands The royalties and rights of banish''d Hereford? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Servant What, are they dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Servant What, think you then the king shall be deposed? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Set on towards London, cousin, is it so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Shall I obtain it? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Shall I seem crest- fall''n in my father''s sight? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Shall I so much dishonour my fair stars, On equal terms to give him chastisement? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Shall thy old dugs once more a traitor rear? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Shall we call back Northumberland, and send Defiance to the traitor, and so die? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Strives Bolingbroke to be as great as we? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Swell''st thou, proud heart? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Tell me, gentle friend, How went he under him? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | That they have let the dangerous enemy Measure our confines with such peaceful steps? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | The king shall be contented: must he lose The name of king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | The king shall do it: must he be deposed? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Thomas of Norfolk, what say''st thou to this? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | To do what service am I sent for hither? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Was it not so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Was not Gaunt just, and is not Harry true? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Was this face the face That every day under his household roof Did keep ten thousand men? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Was this the face that faced so many follies, And was at last out- faced by Bolingbroke? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | We do debase ourselves, cousin, do we not,[ To DUKE OF AUMERLE] To look so poorly and to speak so fair? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What Eve, what serpent, hath suggested thee To make a second fall of cursed man? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What art thou? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What is become of Bushy? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What more remains? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What news from Oxford? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What say you now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What shall I say? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What subject can give sentence on his king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What would you have me do? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What, are there no posts dispatch''d for Ireland? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | What, was I born to this, that my sad look Should grace the triumph of great Bolingbroke? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Where doth the world thrust forth a vanity-- So it be new, there''s no respect how vile-- That is not quickly buzzed into his ears? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Wherefore was I born? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Why dost thou say King Richard is deposed? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Why have those banish''d and forbidden legs Dared once to touch a dust of England''s ground? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Why, it contains no king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Will no man say amen? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Will you go along with us? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Wilt thou not hide the trespass of thine own? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Would he not stumble? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Would not this ill do well? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Would they make peace? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Yea, look''st thou pale? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | Yet I well remember The favours of these men: were they not mine? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Coming forward] Thou, old Adam''s likeness, set to dress this garden, How dares thy harsh rude tongue sound this unpleasing news? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter BUSHY] Bushy, what news? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter DUKE OF AUMERLE] DUCHESS OF YORK Welcome, my son: who are the violets now That strew the green lap of the new come spring? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter DUKE OF AUMERLE] DUKE OF AUMERLE Where is the king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter DUKE OF YORK] HENRY BOLINGBROKE What is the matter, uncle? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter EARL OF SALISBURY] Welcome, my lord how far off lies your power? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter EXTON and Servant] EXTON Didst thou not mark the king, what words he spake,''Have I no friend will rid me of this living fear?'' |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter HENRY BOLINGBROKE and NORTHUMBERLAND, with Forces] HENRY BOLINGBROKE How far is it, my lord, to Berkeley now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter HENRY BOLINGBROKE, HENRY PERCY, and other Lords] HENRY BOLINGBROKE Can no man tell me of my unthrifty son? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter HENRY PERCY] Welcome, Harry: what, will not this castle yield? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter NORTHUMBERLAND] Welcome, my lord what is the news? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter the Lord Marshal and the DUKE OF AUMERLE] Lord Marshal My Lord Aumerle, is Harry Hereford arm''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Enter the QUEEN and two Ladies] QUEEN What sport shall we devise here in this garden, To drive away the heavy thought of care? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Exeunt HENRY PERCY and Lords] What is the matter with our cousin now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Exeunt from above] HENRY BOLINGBROKE What says his majesty? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Exit Servant] Gentlemen, will you go muster men? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | [ Exit] Keeper My lord, will''t please you to fall to? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | ah, how long Shall tender duty make me suffer wrong? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | and how comest thou hither, Where no man never comes but that sad dog That brings me food to make misfortune live? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | and must I ravel out My weaved- up folly? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | and what stir Keeps good old York there with his men of war? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | and what''s thy quarrel? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | and wherefore comest thou hither, Before King Richard in his royal lists? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | convey? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | hath Bolingbroke deposed Thine intellect? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | hath he been in thy heart? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | hath sorrow struck So many blows upon this face of mine, And made no deeper wounds? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | hold those justs and triumphs? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | how is''t with aged Gaunt? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | is he not thine own? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | must he submit? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | must we part? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | or are we like to have? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | quoth he: he spake it twice, And urged it twice together, did he not? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | to me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | was this the face That, like the sun, did make beholders wink? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | what comfort have we now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | what doth he with a bond That he is bound to? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | what means death in this rude assault? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | where is Bagot? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | where is Green? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | where rode he the whilst? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | who is within there? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | why do I rail on thee, Since thou, created to be awed by man, Wast born to bear? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | why have they dared to march So many miles upon her peaceful bosom, Frighting her pale- faced villages with war And ostentation of despised arms? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | why,''twas my care And what loss is it to be rid of care? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | will his majesty Give Richard leave to live till Richard die? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4180 | would he not fall down, Since pride must have a fall, and break the neck Of that proud man that did usurp his back? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Are they not always inciting their country to go to war, owing to their excessive love of the military life? |
plato-statesman-1456 | But supposing that he does use some gentle violence for their good, what is this violence to be called? |
plato-statesman-1456 | But what shall be done with Theaetetus? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Can you remember? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Can you, and will you, determine which of them you deem the happier? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Do you see why this is? |
plato-statesman-1456 | I think, however, that we may fairly assume something of this sort-- YOUNG SOCRATES: What? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Is not that true? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Is not the definition, although true, wanting in clearness and completeness; for do not all those other arts require to be first cleared away? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Is not this the true principle of government, according to which the wise and good man will order the affairs of his subjects? |
plato-statesman-1456 | May not any man, rich or poor, with or without laws, with the will of the citizens or against the will of the citizens, do what is for their interest? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Might not an idiot, so to speak, know that he is a pedestrian? |
plato-statesman-1456 | O my dear Theodorus, do my ears truly witness that this is the estimate formed of them by the great calculator and geometrician? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Or ought this science to be the overseer and governor of all the others? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Or shall we assign to him the art of command-- for he is a ruler? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Ought we not rather to wonder at the natural strength of the political bond? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Again, a large household may be compared to a small state:--will they differ at all, as far as government is concerned? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And a science of a peculiar kind, which was selected out of the rest as having a character which is at once judicial and authoritative? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And are''statesman,''''king,''''master,''or''householder,''one and the same; or is there a science or art answering to each of these names? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And do not these three expand in a manner into five, producing out of themselves two other names? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And do we acknowledge this science to be different from the others? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And do we not often praise the quiet strain of action also? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And do we not then say the opposite of what we said of the other? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And do you agree to his proposal? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And do you remember the terms in which they are praised? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And do you think, Socrates, that we really have done as you say? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And is not the herald under command, and does he not receive orders, and in his turn give them to others? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And is our enquiry about the Statesman intended only to improve our knowledge of politics, or our power of reasoning generally? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And is the art which is able and knows how to advise when we are to go to war, or to make peace, the same as this or different? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And is there any higher art or science, having power to decide which of these arts are and are not to be learned;--what do you say? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And may therefore be justly said to share in theoretical science? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And now we shall only be proceeding in due order if we go on to divide the sphere of knowledge? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And now, in which of these divisions shall we place the king?--Is he a judge and a kind of spectator? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And of which has the Statesman charge,--of the mixed or of the unmixed race? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And ought the other sciences to be superior to this, or no single science to any other? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And shall we say that the violence, if exercised by a rich man, is just, and if by a poor man, unjust? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And the householder and master are the same? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And the science which determines whether we ought to persuade or not, must be superior to the science which is able to persuade? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And this the argument defined to be the art of rearing, not horses or other brutes, but the art of rearing man collectively? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And we must also suppose that this rules the other, if we are not to give up our former notion? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And what are the rules which are enforced on their pupils by professional trainers or by others having similar authority? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And when men have anything to do in common, that they should be of one mind is surely a desirable thing? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And where shall we look for the political animal? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And would you not expect the slowest to arrive last? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And you would think temperance to be different from courage; and likewise to be a part of virtue? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And, after monarchy, next in order comes the government of the few? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: And, considering how great and terrible the whole art of war is, can we imagine any which is superior to it but the truly royal? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Any one can divide the herds which feed on dry land? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Are not examples formed in this manner? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: But if this is as you say, can our argument about the king be true and unimpeachable? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: But surely the science of a true king is royal science? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: But the first process is a separation of the clotted and matted fibres? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: But what would you say of some other serviceable officials? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: But what would you think of another sort of power or science? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: But why did we not say at once that weaving is the art of entwining warp and woof, instead of making a long and useless circuit? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: But yet the division will not be the same? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: But, perhaps, in a city of a thousand men, there would be a hundred, or say fifty, who could? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Could any one, my friend, who began with false opinion ever expect to arrive even at a small portion of truth and to attain wisdom? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Did you ever hear that the men of former times were earth- born, and not begotten of one another? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Do you know a plausible saying of the common people which is in point? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Do you think that the multitude in a State can attain political science? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: He contributes knowledge, not manual labour? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: How does man walk, but as a diameter whose power is two feet? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: I want to ask, whether any one of the other herdsmen has a rival who professes and claims to share with him in the management of the herd? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: If I am not mistaken, we said that royal power was a science? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: If any one who is in a private station has the skill to advise one of the public physicians, must not he also be called a physician? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Is not monarchy a recognized form of government? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Is not the third form of government the rule of the multitude, which is called by the name of democracy? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Let me put the matter in another way: I suppose that you would consider courage to be a part of virtue? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: May not all rulers be supposed to command for the sake of producing something? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: May we not very properly say, that of all knowledge, there are two divisions-- one which rules, and the other which judges? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Must we not admit, then, that where these two classes exist, they always feel the greatest antipathy and antagonism towards one another? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Shall we abide by what we said at first, or shall we retract our words? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Shall we break up this hornless herd into sections, and endeavour to assign to him what is his? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Shall we call this art of tending many animals together, the art of managing a herd, or the art of collective management? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Shall we distinguish them by their having or not having cloven feet, or by their mixing or not mixing the breed? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Shall we relieve him, and take his companion, the Young Socrates, instead of him? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Such as this: You may remember that we made an art of calculation? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: The art of the general is only ministerial, and therefore not political? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: The points on which I think that we ought to dwell are the following:-- YOUNG SOCRATES: What? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: The science which has to do with military operations against our enemies-- is that to be regarded as a science or not? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Then here, Socrates, is still clearer evidence of the truth of what was said in the enquiry about the Sophist? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Then if the law is not the perfection of right, why are we compelled to make laws at all? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Then shall I determine for you as well as I can? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Then the next thing will be to separate them, in order that the argument may proceed in a regular manner? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Then the sciences must be divided as before? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Then while we are at unity among ourselves, we need not mind about the fancies of others? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Then, now that we have discovered the various classes in a State, shall I analyse politics after the pattern which weaving supplied? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Then, shall we say that the king has a greater affinity to knowledge than to manual arts and to practical life in general? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: There is such a thing as learning music or handicraft arts in general? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: There were many arts of shepherding, and one of them was the political, which had the charge of one particular herd? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Together? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Very good; and to what science do we assign the power of persuading a multitude by a pleasing tale and not by teaching? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Weaving is a sort of uniting? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Well, and are not arithmetic and certain other kindred arts, merely abstract knowledge, wholly separated from action? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: What model is there which is small, and yet has any analogy with the political occupation? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Where shall we discover the path of the Statesman? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Which was, unmistakeably, one of the arts of knowledge? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Which, if I am not mistaken, will be politics? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Why, does not the retailer receive and sell over again the productions of others, which have been sold before? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Why, is not''care''of herds applicable to all? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Will not the best and easiest way of bringing them to a knowledge of what they do not as yet know be-- YOUNG SOCRATES: Be what? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Yes, and of the woof too; how, if not by twisting, is the woof made? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: Yes, quite right; for how can he sit at every man''s side all through his life, prescribing for him the exact particulars of his duty? |
plato-statesman-1456 | STRANGER: You know that the master- builder does not work himself, but is the ruler of workmen? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Shall I explain the nature of what I call the second best? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Shall we do as I say? |
plato-statesman-1456 | THEODORUS: In what respect? |
plato-statesman-1456 | THEODORUS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Tell me, then-- YOUNG SOCRATES: What? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Viewed in the light of science and true art, would not all such enactments be utterly ridiculous? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Were we right in selecting him out of ten thousand other claimants to be the shepherd and rearer of the human flock? |
plato-statesman-1456 | What do you advise? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Who, Socrates, would be equal to such a task? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Will you proceed? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Would you ever dream of calling it a violation of the art, or a breach of the laws of health? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: And are they not right? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: And what is that? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: And which are the kindred arts? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Are they not right in saying so? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: At what point? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: At what point? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Can not we have both ways? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not; but how shall we divide the two remaining species? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Do I understand you, in speaking of twisting, to be referring to manufacture of the warp? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Explain; what are they? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How and why is that? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How can generalship and military tactics be regarded as other than a science? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How can they be made? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How can we be safe? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How could we? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How is that the cause? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How is that, and what bonds do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How is that? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How is this? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How must I speak of them, then? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How shall I define them? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How so? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How so? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How so? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How then? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How was that? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How would you divide them? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How would you divide them? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How would you make the division? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: How? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: In what direction? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: In what respect? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: In what way? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: On what principle of division? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: On what principle? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Quite right; but how shall we take the next step in the division? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Then how, Stranger, were the animals created in those days; and in what way were they begotten of one another? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: True; and what is the next step? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Upon what principle? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true; but what is the imperfection which still remains? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: We had better not take the whole? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What are they? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What are they? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What are they? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What class do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What did I hear, then? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean, Stranger? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What images? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is that? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is the error? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is this new question? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is this? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is to be done in this case? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What is your meaning? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What misfortune? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What question? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What road? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What science? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What sort of an image? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What was it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What was it? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What was the error of which, as you say, we were guilty in our recent division? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What was this great error of which you speak? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: What? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Where would you make the division? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Which of the two halves do you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Who are they, and what services do they perform? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Who are they? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Who are they? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Who is he? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Whom can you mean? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Why is that? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Why not? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Why not? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Why so? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Why strange? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Why? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Why? |
plato-statesman-1456 | YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes; what else should it be? |
plato-statesman-1456 | You have heard, no doubt, and remember what they say happened at that time? |
plato-statesman-1456 | Young Socrates, do you hear what the elder Socrates is proposing? |
plato-statesman-1456 | they raise up enemies against themselves many and mighty, and either utterly ruin their native- land or enslave and subject it to its foes? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | And I think that I ought to stop and ask myself What am I saying? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | And Socrates? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | And is there not an essence of colour and sound as well as of anything else which may be said to have an essence? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | And now let me see; where are we? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | And what do you consider to be the meaning of this word? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Are not actions also a class of being? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Are there any names which witness of themselves that they are not given arbitrarily, but have a natural fitness? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Are we to count them like votes? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Are we to say of whichever sort there are most, those are the true ones? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But I should like to know whether you are one of those philosophers who think that falsehood may be spoken but not said? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But I wish that you would tell me, Socrates, what sort of an imitation is a name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But have we any more explanations of the names of the Gods, like that which you were giving of Zeus? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But how shall we further analyse them, and where does the imitator begin? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But let me ask you, what is the force of names, and what is the use of them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But to what are you referring? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But what do you say of the month and the stars? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But why do you not give me another word? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | But why should we not discuss another kind of Gods-- the sun, moon, stars, earth, aether, air, fire, water, the seasons, and the year? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | CRATYLUS: But, Socrates, am I not right in thinking that he must surely have known; or else, as I was saying, his names would not be names at all? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | CRATYLUS: How so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | CRATYLUS: How so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | CRATYLUS: What do you mean? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | CRATYLUS: Why, Socrates, how can a man say that which is not?--say something and yet say nothing? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Consider this in the light of the previous instances: to what does the carpenter look in making the shuttle? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Did you ever observe in speaking that all the words which you utter have a common character and purpose? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Do you agree with him, or would you say that things have a permanent essence of their own? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Do you agree with me that the letter rho is expressive of rapidity, motion, and hardness? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Do you agree with me? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Do you not conceive that to be the meaning of them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Do you not perceive that images are very far from having qualities which are the exact counterpart of the realities which they represent? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Do you not suppose this to be true? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Do you think that likely? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Does he not in these passages make a remarkable statement about the correctness of names? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Does he not look to that which is naturally fitted to act as a shuttle? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | For is not falsehood saying the thing which is not? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | For the Gods must clearly be supposed to call things by their right and natural names; do you not think so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | For were we not saying just now that he made some names expressive of rest and others of motion? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: And what are the traditions? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: And what do you say of their opposites? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: And what is the true derivation? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: And where does Homer say anything about names, and what does he say? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: But what do you say of Hephaestus? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: But what do you say of kalon? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: But what is selene( the moon)? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: But what is the meaning of kakon, which has played so great a part in your previous discourse? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: But what shall we say of the next word? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How do you make that out? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How do you mean? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How do you mean? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How is that, Socrates? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How plausible? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How shall I reflect? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: How so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: May I ask you to examine another word about which I am curious? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Must not demons and heroes and men come next? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: No, indeed; not I. SOCRATES: But tell me, friend, did not Homer himself also give Hector his name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Of what nature? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Suppose that we make Socrates a party to the argument? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Then I rather think that I am of one mind with you; but what is the meaning of the word''hero''? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Very good; and what do we say of Demeter, and Here, and Apollo, and Athene, and Hephaestus, and Ares, and the other deities? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Very true; but what is the derivation of zemiodes? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Well, and what of them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Well, but what is lusiteloun( profitable)? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What device? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What do you mean? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What do you mean? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What do you mean? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What do you mean? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What do you mean? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What do you say of edone( pleasure), lupe( pain), epithumia( desire), and the like, Socrates? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What do you say of pur( fire) and udor( water)? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What do you think of doxa( opinion), and that class of words? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What is Ares? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What is it? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What is the inference? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What is the inference? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What is the meaning of Dionysus and Aphrodite? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What of that? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What other appellation? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What then? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What was the name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: What way? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Which are they? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Why do you say so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Why not? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Why, Socrates? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Why, how is that? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Yes; but what do you say of the other name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | HERMOGENES: Yes; what other answer is possible? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Have we not been saying that the correct name indicates the nature of the thing:--has this proposition been sufficiently proven? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Have you remarked this fact? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | I utter a sound which I understand, and you know that I understand the meaning of the sound: this is what you are saying? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Is it the best sort of information? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Is not all that quite possible? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Is the giving of the names of streams to both of them purely accidental? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Let me explain what I mean: of painters, some are better and some worse? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Let me put the matter as follows: All objects have sound and figure, and many have colour? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Let us consider:--does he not himself suggest a very good reason, when he says,''For he alone defended their city and long walls''? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | May I not say to him--''This is your name''? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Or about Batieia and Myrina? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Regarding the name as an instrument, what do we do when we name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Again, is there not an essence of each thing, just as there is a colour, or sound? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And I ask again,''What do we do when we weave?'' |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And a true proposition says that which is, and a false proposition says that which is not? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And among legislators, there are some who do their work better and some worse? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And are both modes of assigning them right, or only the first? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And are not the good wise? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And are not the works of intelligence and mind worthy of praise, and are not other works worthy of blame? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And are the men or the women of a city, taken as a class, the wiser? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And at what point ought he to lose heart and give up the enquiry? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And conversely you may attribute the likeness of the man to the woman, and of the woman to the man? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And do you know that the ancients said duogon and not zugon? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And do you not believe with Anaxagoras, that mind or soul is the ordering and containing principle of all things? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And do you not suppose that good men of our own day would by him be said to be of golden race? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And do you not think that many a one would escape from Hades, if he did not bind those who depart to him by the strongest of chains? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And does this art grow up among men like other arts? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And him who knows how to ask and answer you would call a dialectician? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And how does the legislator make names? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And how to answer them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And how to put into wood forms of shuttles adapted by nature to their uses? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And if a man were to call him Hermogenes, would he not be even speaking falsely? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And if by the greatest of chains, then by some desire, as I should certainly infer, and not by necessity? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And if speaking is a sort of action and has a relation to acts, is not naming also a sort of action? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And if when I speak you know my meaning, there is an indication given by me to you? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And is any desire stronger than the thought that you will be made better by associating with another? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And is every man a carpenter, or the skilled only? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And is every man a legislator, or the skilled only? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And is every man a smith, or only the skilled? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And is not Apollo the purifier, and the washer, and the absolver from all impurities? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And is not naming a part of speaking? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And is not that the reason, Hermogenes, why no one, who has been to him, is willing to come back to us? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And is not the part of a falsehood also a falsehood? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And may not a similar description be given of an awl, and of instruments in general? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And may not the same be said of a king? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And must not Homer have imagined the Trojans to be wiser than their wives? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And must not this be the mind of Gods, or of men, or of both? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And naming is an art, and has artificers? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And not the rest? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And now suppose that I ask a similar question about names: will you answer me? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And speech is a kind of action? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And suppose the shuttle to be broken in making, will he make another, looking to the broken one? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And that lamda was expressive of smoothness, and softness, and the like? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And that principle we affirm to be mind? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And that which has to be named has to be named with something? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And that which has to be woven or pierced has to be woven or pierced with something? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And the name of anything is that which any one affirms to be the name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And the principle of beauty does the works of beauty? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And the proper letters are those which are like the things? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And the shuttle is the instrument of the weaver? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And the work of the legislator is to give names, and the dialectician must be his director if the names are to be rightly given? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And there are many desires? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And there are true and false propositions? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And therefore by the greatest desire, if the chain is to be the greatest? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And this artist of names is called the legislator? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And this holds good of all actions? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And this is he who knows how to ask questions? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And we saw that actions were not relative to ourselves, but had a special nature of their own? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And what do you say of the insertion of the lamda? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And what is custom but convention? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And what is the nature of this truth or correctness of names? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And what is the reason of this? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And what of those who follow out of the course of nature, and are prodigies? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And when the piercer uses the awl, whose work will he be using well? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And when the teacher uses the name, whose work will he be using? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And when the weaver uses the shuttle, whose work will he be using well? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And which, then, did he make, my good friend; those which are expressive of rest, or those which are expressive of motion? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And who are they? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And who is he? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And who uses the work of the lyre- maker? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And who will be best able to direct the legislator in his work, and will know whether the work is well done, in this or any other country? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And who will direct the shipwright? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And will a man speak correctly who speaks as he pleases? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And will there be so many names of each thing as everybody says that there are? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And with which we name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And with which we weave? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And would you further acknowledge that the name is an imitation of the thing? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And would you hold that the very good were the very wise, and the very evil very foolish? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And would you say that the giver of the first names had also a knowledge of the things which he named? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: And you would say that pictures are also imitations of things, but in another way? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Are they altogether alike? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Are you maintaining that falsehood is impossible? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Athene? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But again, that which has to be cut has to be cut with something? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But are these the only primary names, or are there others? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But do you not allow that some nouns are primitive, and some derived? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But how about truth, then? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But how could he have learned or discovered things from names if the primitive names were not yet given? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But how would you expect to know them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But if Protagoras is right, and the truth is that things are as they appear to any one, how can some of us be wise and some of us foolish? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But if that is true, Cratylus, then I suppose that things may be known without names? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But is a proposition true as a whole only, and are the parts untrue? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But let us see, Cratylus, whether we can not find a meeting- point, for you would admit that the name is not the same with the thing named? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But the art of naming appears not to be concerned with imitations of this kind; the arts which have to do with them are music and drawing? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But who then is to determine whether the proper form is given to the shuttle, whatever sort of wood may be used? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: But would you say, Hermogenes, that the things differ as the names differ? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Can not you at least say who gives us the names which we use? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Do we not give information to one another, and distinguish things according to their natures? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Do you admit a name to be the representation of a thing? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Do you not know that the heroes are demigods? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Do you not know what he says about the river in Troy who had a single combat with Hephaestus? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Do you not remember that he speaks of a golden race of men who came first? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Do you observe that only the ancient form shows the intention of the giver of the name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Does not the law seem to you to give us them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Does what I am saying apply only to the things themselves, or equally to the actions which proceed from them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: First look at the matter thus: you may attribute the likeness of the man to the man, and of the woman to the woman; and so on? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: How would you answer, if you were asked whether the wise or the unwise are more likely to give correct names? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: How would you have me begin? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: I will tell you my own opinion; but first, I should like to ask you which chain does any animal feel to be the stronger? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: I will tell you; but I should like to know first whether you can tell me what is the meaning of the pur? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: In as far as they are like, or in as far as they are unlike? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Is a proposition resolvable into any part smaller than a name? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Is not mind that which called( kalesan) things by their names, and is not mind the beautiful( kalon)? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Let me ask you what is the cause why anything has a name; is not the principle which imposes the name the cause? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Let me ask you, then, which did Homer think the more correct of the names given to Hector''s son-- Astyanax or Scamandrius? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Might not that be justly called the true or ideal shuttle? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Names, then, are given in order to instruct? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Nor uttered nor addressed? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Or that one name is better than another? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Ought we not to begin with the consideration of the Gods, and show that they are rightly named Gods? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Physic does the work of a physician, and carpentering does the works of a carpenter? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Shall we begin, then, with Hestia, according to custom? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Shall we leave them, then? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Speak you of the princely lord of light( Phaeos istora)? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Still you have found them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Suppose that I ask,''What sort of instrument is a shuttle?'' |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Tell me, then, did the first legislators, who were the givers of the first names, know or not know the things which they named? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: That is to say, the mode of assignment which attributes to each that which belongs to them and is like them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: The same names, then, ought to be assigned to those who follow in the course of nature? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: The two words selas( brightness) and phos( light) have much the same meaning? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then a name is a vocal imitation of that which the vocal imitator names or imitates? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then all names are rightly imposed? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then could I have been right in what I was saying? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then he must have thought Astyanax to be a more correct name for the boy than Scamandrius? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then how came the giver of the names, if he was an inspired being or God, to contradict himself? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then how can that be a real thing which is never in the same state? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then in a proposition there is a true and false? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then let us proceed; and where would you have us begin, now that we have got a sort of outline of the enquiry? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then like other artists the legislator may be good or he may be bad; it must surely be so if our former admissions hold good? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then mind is rightly called beauty because she does the works which we recognize and speak of as the beautiful? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then that is the explanation of the name Pallas? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then the actions also are done according to their proper nature, and not according to our opinion of them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then the artist of names may be sometimes good, or he may be bad? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then the irreligious son of a religious father should be called irreligious? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then the name is a part of the true proposition? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then the teacher, when he gives us a name, uses the work of the legislator? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then the weaver will use the shuttle well-- and well means like a weaver? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then you do not think that some laws are better and others worse? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Then, if propositions may be true and false, names may be true and false? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Very good: then a name is an instrument? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Well, and about this river-- to know that he ought to be called Xanthus and not Scamander-- is not that a solemn lesson? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Well, and have you ever found any very good ones? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Well, and if any one could express the essence of each thing in letters and syllables, would he not express the nature of each thing? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Well, but do you suppose that you will be able to analyse them in this way? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: What is that which holds and carries and gives life and motion to the entire nature of the body? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: What is that with which we pierce? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: What may we suppose him to have meant who gave the name Hestia? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: What more names remain to us? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: What of that, Cratylus? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: What shall follow the Gods? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: What shall we take next? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Whether the giver of the name be an individual or a city? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Why clearly he who first gave names gave them according to his conception of the things which they signified-- did he not? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Why, Hermogenes, I do not as yet see myself; and do you? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Why, what is the difference? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: Would you say the large parts and not the smaller ones, or every part? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: You are aware that speech signifies all things( pan), and is always turning them round and round, and has two forms, true and false? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: You know how Hesiod uses the word? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: You know the word maiesthai( to seek)? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: You mean to say, how should I answer him? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | SOCRATES: You want me first of all to examine the natural fitness of the word psuche( soul), and then of the word soma( body)? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Shall I take first of all him whom you mentioned first-- the sun? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Shall we not be deceived by him? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Take, for example, the word katoptron; why is the letter rho inserted? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Was I not telling you just now( but you have forgotten), that I knew nothing, and proposing to share the enquiry with you? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Were we mistaken? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Were we right or wrong in saying so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | What do you say to another? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | What do you say, Cratylus? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | What do you say? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | What do you think? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | What else but the soul? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | What principle of correctness is there in those charming words-- wisdom, understanding, justice, and the rest of them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | What remains after justice? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | What will this imitator be called? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Which of these two notions do you prefer? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Will not he be the man who knows how to direct what is being done, and who will know also whether the work is being well done or not? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Will not the user be the man? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Would that be your view? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | Would you not say so? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | You know the distinction of soul and body? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | You were saying, if you remember, that he who gave names must have known the things which he named; are you still of that opinion? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | and are they relative to individuals, as Protagoras tells us? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | and is correctness of names the voice of the majority? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | and the teacher will use the name well-- and well means like a teacher? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | and to what does he look? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | and which confines him more to the same spot,--desire or necessity? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | and will they be true names at the time of uttering them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | have you ever been driven to admit that there was no such thing as a bad man? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | or is there any other? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | or will he look to the form according to which he made the other? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | the carpenter who makes, or the weaver who is to use them? |
plato-cratylus-1367 | you would acknowledge that there is in words a true and a false? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | ''tis he, indeed: Is this the honour they do one another? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | A woman, I dare say without vain- glory, Never yet branded with suspicion? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | ABERGAVENNY Is it therefore The ambassador is silenced? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | ANNE Was he mad, sir? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Alas, sir, In what have I offended you? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | All fast? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Almost forgot my prayers to content him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | And am I thus rewarded? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | And from this fellow? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | BUCKINGHAM I pray you, who, my lord? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | BUCKINGHAM O, Nicholas Hopkins? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | BUCKINGHAM Who did guide, I mean, who set the body and the limbs Of this great sport together, as you guess? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | BUCKINGHAM Why the devil, Upon this French going out, took he upon him, Without the privity o''the king, to appoint Who should attend on him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Been, out of fondness, superstitious to him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | But on; what hence? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | But, I beseech you, what''s become of Katharine, The princess dowager? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | But, I pray you, What is your pleasure with me? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | By this time I know your back will bear a duchess: say, Are you not stronger than you were? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL CAMPEIUS Was he not held a learned man? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY Is he in person ready? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY Is he ready To come abroad? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY Look''d he o''the inside of the paper? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY Now, madam, may his highness live in freedom, and this man out of prison? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY Sir Thomas Lovell, is the banquet ready I''the privy chamber? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY Stay: Where''s your commission, lords? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY What, amazed At my misfortunes? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY Your pleasure, madam? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CARDINAL WOLSEY[ Aside] What should this mean? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CRANMER Is there no other way of mercy, But I must needs to the Tower, my lords? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CRANMER The greatest monarch now alive may glory In such an honour: how may I deserve it That am a poor and humble subject to you? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CRANMER Why? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CROMWELL How does your grace? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CROMWELL Not sound? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CROMWELL O my lord, Must I, then, leave you? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | CROMWELL Why, my lord? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Canterbury? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Chamberlain Sir Thomas, Whither were you a- going? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Chamberlain Sweet ladies, will it please you sit? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Chamberlain What is''t for? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Chamberlain Your grace? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Chancellor''Tis now too certain: How much more is his life in value with him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition: By that sin fell the angels; how can man, then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Did my commission Bid ye so far forget yourselves? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Didst thou not tell me, Griffith, as thou led''st me, That the great child of honour, Cardinal Wolsey, Was dead? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Enter Porter and his Man] Porter You''ll leave your noise anon, ye rascals: do you take the court for Paris- garden? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | First Gentleman How was it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | First Gentleman You come to take your stand here, and behold The Lady Anne pass from her coronation? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Fit for a fool to fall by: what cross devil Made me put this main secret in the packet I sent the king? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | GARDINER Do not I know you for a favourer Of this new sect? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | GARDINER Has he had knowledge of it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | GARDINER What other Would you expect? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Gave''t you the king? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Have I with all my full affections Still met the king? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Have you a precedent Of this commission? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | How dare you thrust yourselves Into my private meditations? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | How does his highness? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | How have ye done Since last we saw in France? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | How long her face is drawn? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | I''ll scratch your heads: you must be seeing christenings? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | If we suffer, Out of our easiness and childish pity To one man''s honour, this contagious sickness, Farewell all physic: and what follows then? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Is the queen deliver''d? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Is there no way to cure this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Is this Moorfields to muster in? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Is this your comfort? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KATHARINE It is not you I call for: Saw ye none enter since I slept? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KATHARINE No? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII Body o''me, where is it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII Have I not made you, The prime man of the state? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII How know''st thou this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII Know you not How your state stands i''the world, with the whole world? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII My lord chamberlain, Prithee, come hither: what fair lady''s that? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII Speak on: How grounded he his title to the crown, Upon our fail? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII Thank you, good lord archbishop: What is her name? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII There''s something more would out of thee; what say''st? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII What say''st thou, ha? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII What was that Hopkins? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII What''s the need? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII Who''s there, I say? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII Who''s there, ha? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII Ye are too bold: Go to; I''ll make ye know your times of business: Is this an hour for temporal affairs, ha? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | KING HENRY VIII''Tis true: where is he, Denny? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Keeper Without, my noble lords? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Keeper at the door] Chancellor Speak to the business, master- secretary: Why are we met in council? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Know you not, The fire that mounts the liquor til run o''er, In seeming to augment it wastes it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | LOVELL Faith, how easy? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | LOVELL Sir? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Ladies, you are not merry: gentlemen, Whose fault is this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Lo, who comes here? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Man Alas, I know not; how gets the tide in? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Man What would you have me do? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | May it please your highness To hear me speak his good now? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Must I go like a traitor thither? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | My lord cardinal, You that are blamed for it alike with us, Know you of this taxation? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | My lords, Can ye endure to hear this arrogance? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | NORFOLK But, my lord, When returns Cranmer? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | NORFOLK Do you think, my lords, The king will suffer but the little finger Of this man to be vex''d? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | NORFOLK Let''s in; And with some other business put the king From these sad thoughts, that work too much upon him: My lord, you''ll bear us company? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | NORFOLK What''s the cause? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | NORFOLK What, are you chafed? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | NORFOLK Who waits there? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | NORFOLK[ Aside to SUFFOLK] This priest has no pride in him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | No new device to beat this from his brains? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Now, Lovell, from the queen what is the news? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Now, my lords, Saw you the cardinal? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | O, my lord, Would it not grieve an able man to leave So sweet a bedfellow? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Old Lady How tastes it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Old Lady What do you think me? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Old Lady Yes, troth, and troth; you would not be a queen? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Old Lady:''Tis strange: a three- pence bow''d would hire me, Old as I am, to queen it: but, I pray you, What think you of a duchess? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Or be a known friend,''gainst his highness''pleasure, Though he be grown so desperate to be honest, And live a subject? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Or which of your friends Have I not strove to love, although I knew He were mine enemy? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Patience, is that letter, I caused you write, yet sent away? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Porter How got they in, and be hang''d? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Porter What should you do, but knock''em down by the dozens? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | QUEEN KATHARINE Have I lived thus long-- let me speak myself, Since virtue finds no friends-- a wife, a true one? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | QUEEN KATHARINE How, sir? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | QUEEN KATHARINE In England But little for my profit: can you think, lords, That any Englishman dare give me counsel? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | QUEEN KATHARINE What need you note it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | QUEEN KATHARINE Would they speak with me? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | QUEEN KATHARINE Ye tell me what ye wish for both,--my ruin: Is this your Christian counsel? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | SUFFOLK How is the king employ''d? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | SUFFOLK Which of the peers Have uncontemn''d gone by him, or at least Strangely neglected? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | SUFFOLK Who dare cross''em, Bearing the king''s will from his mouth expressly? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | SURREY But, will the king Digest this letter of the cardinal''s? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | SURREY Has the king this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | SURREY How came His practises to light? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | SURREY O, how, how? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | SURREY Will this work? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Said I for this, the girl was like to him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Saw you not, even now, a blessed troop Invite me to a banquet; whose bright faces Cast thousand beams upon me, like the sun? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman After all this, how did he bear himself? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman And that my Lord of Norfolk? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman But, pray, how pass''d it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman But, what follow''d? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman I am confident, You shall, sir: did you not of late days hear A buzzing of a separation Between the king and Katharine? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman I think you have hit the mark: but is''t not cruel That she should feel the smart of this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman Is he found guilty? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman May I be bold to ask at what that contains, That paper in your hand? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman That was he That fed him with his prophecies? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman Were you there? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman What two reverend bishops Were those that went on each side of the queen? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman Who may that be, I pray you? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Second Gentleman You saw The ceremony? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Sixth part of each? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Sure, you know me? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | That should be The Duke of Suffolk? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | The archbishop Is the king''s hand and tongue; and who dare speak One syllable against him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | The cordial that ye bring a wretched lady, A woman lost among ye, laugh''d at, scorn''d? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | The music continues] KATHARINE Spirits of peace, where are ye? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | The nature of it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | There was a lady once,''tis an old story, That would not be a queen, that would she not, For all the mud in Egypt: have you heard it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | There''s mischief in this man: canst thou say further? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | These I know: Who''s that that bears the sceptre? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | This morning Papers of state he sent me to peruse, As I required: and wot you what I found There,--on my conscience, put unwittingly? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | To pray for her? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Ween you of better luck, I mean, in perjured witness, than your master, Whose minister you are, whiles here he lived Upon this naughty earth? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What are your pleasures with me, reverend lords? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What can happen To me above this wretchedness? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What did this vanity But minister communication of A most poor issue? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What had he To do in these fierce vanities? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What manner of man are you? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What may it be? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What more? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What news abroad? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What news, Sir Thomas Lovell? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What say you? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What sudden anger''s this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What though I know her virtuous And well deserving? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What were''t worth to know The secret of your conference? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | What''s this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Where are these porters, These lazy knaves? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Where''s Gardiner? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Where''s his examination? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Wherein? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Whither so late? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Who am I? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Who waits there? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | Ye have made a fine hand, fellows: There''s a trim rabble let in: are all these Your faithful friends o''the suburbs? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | You do not doubt my faith, sir? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | You''re excused: But will you be more justified? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Drum and trumpet, chambers discharged] CARDINAL WOLSEY What''s that? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Enter CARDINAL WOLSEY and CARDINAL CAMPEIUS, with a commission] Who''s there? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Enter Chamberlain and SANDS] Chamberlain Is''t possible the spells of France should juggle Men into such strange mysteries? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Enter GARDINER, Bishop of Winchester, a Page with a torch before him, met by LOVELL] GARDINER It''s one o''clock, boy, is''t not? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Enter Guard] CRANMER For me? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Enter KATHARINE, Dowager, sick; led between GRIFFITH, her gentleman usher, and PATIENCE, her woman] GRIFFITH How does your grace? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Enter Old Lady, LOVELL following] Gentleman[ Within] Come back: what mean you? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Enter a Messenger] Messenger An''t like your grace,-- KATHARINE You are a saucy fellow: Deserve we no more reverence? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Enter two Gentlemen, meeting] First Gentleman Whither away so fast? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Exeunt LOVELL and DENNY] CRANMER[ Aside] I am fearful: wherefore frowns he thus? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Exit Gentleman] What can be their business With me, a poor weak woman, fall''n from favour? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Exit KING HENRY VIII, frowning upon CARDINAL WOLSEY: the Nobles throng after him, smiling and whispering] CARDINAL WOLSEY What should this mean? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Exit SUFFOLK][ Enter DENNY] Well, sir, what follows? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Exit Servant] CARDINAL WOLSEY What warlike voice, And to what end is this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Music ceases] PATIENCE Do you note How much her grace is alter''d on the sudden? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Walks and whispers] CARDINAL CAMPEIUS My Lord of York, was not one Doctor Pace In this man''s place before him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Whispers the Masquers] CARDINAL WOLSEY What say they? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | [ Within] Do you hear, master porter? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | and one as great as you are? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | and what taxation? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | are ye all gone, And leave me here in wretchedness behind ye? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | can thy spirit wonder A great man should decline? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | do you look for ale and cakes here, you rude rascals? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | ha? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | have you limbs To bear that load of title? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | how goes her business? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | how have I reap''d it? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | how pale she looks, And of an earthy cold? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | in what kind, let''s know, Is this exaction? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | is it bitter? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | is this a place to roar in? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | loved him next heaven? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | must I needs forego So good, so noble and so true a master? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | my good lord cardinal? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | obey''d him? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | of me? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | or have we some strange Indian with the great tool come to court, the women so besiege us? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | to this point hast thou heard him At any time speak aught? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | what are their pleasures? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | what cause Hath my behavior given to your displeasure, That thus you should proceed to put me off, And take your good grace from me? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | what envy reach you? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | what friend of mine That had to him derived your anger, did I Continue in my liking? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | what is''t? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | what means this? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | what, is she crying out? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | what, so rank? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | when did he regard The stamp of nobleness in any person Out of himself? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | where have you been broiling? |
shakespeare-life-3658 | would you have me-- If you have any justice, any pity; If ye be any thing but churchmen''s habits-- Put my sick cause into his hands that hates me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | ''Twill warm thy heart with new desire: Art with the Devil hand and glove, And wilt thou be afraid of fire? |
goethe-faust-1119 | ( MEPHISTOPHELES_ knocks_) FAUST(_ stamping his foot_) Who''s there? |
goethe-faust-1119 | (_ To some, who are sitting around dying embers_:) Old gentlemen, why at the outskirts? |
goethe-faust-1119 | (_ To the Animals_) But tell me now, ye cursed puppets, Why do ye stir the porridge so? |
goethe-faust-1119 | (_ To the Animals_) It seems the mistress has gone away? |
goethe-faust-1119 | (_ To_ FAUST,_ who has left the dance_:) Wherefore forsakest thou the lovely maiden, That in the dance so sweetly sang? |
goethe-faust-1119 | (_ To_ MARGARET) How fares the heart within your breast? |
goethe-faust-1119 | A FIFTH You swaggering fellow, is your hide A third time itching to be tried? |
goethe-faust-1119 | A FOURTH Come up to Burgdorf? |
goethe-faust-1119 | A VOICE Which way com''st thou hither? |
goethe-faust-1119 | ALTMAYER How? |
goethe-faust-1119 | ALTMAYER Where am I? |
goethe-faust-1119 | AUTHOR Who, now, a work of moderate sense will read? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Again my quiet broken? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Ah, know''st thou what it means? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Ah, thought I, in my conduct has he read it-- Something immodest or unseemly free? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Ah, who may all this splendor own? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Air? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And I? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And do I ask, wherefore my heart Falters, oppressed with unknown needs? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And first, of course, we''ll make the journey thither? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And must I find her body, there reclining, Of all the heavens the bright epitome? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And rise not, on us shining, Friendly, the everlasting stars? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And stirreth not and quickens Something beneath thy heart, Thy life disquieting With most foreboding presence? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And supping there with Hans occasioned your delay? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And that damned stuff, the bestial, human brood,-- What use, in having that to play with? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And this one Book of Mystery From Nostradamus''very hand, Is''t not sufficient company? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And thus, thou''rt prisoner to me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And will her foul mess take away Full thirty years from my existence? |
goethe-faust-1119 | And, if you''ll probe the thing profoundly, Knew you so much-- and you''ll confess it roundly!-- As here of Schwerdtlein''s death and place of rest? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Another baffled hope must be lamented: Has Nature, then, and has a noble mind Not any potent balsam yet invented? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Arches not there the sky above us? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Are we the sport of every changeful atmosphere? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Art thou, my gay one, Hell''s fugitive stray- one? |
goethe-faust-1119 | At night, one learns his house to prize:-- Why stand you thus, with such astonished eyes? |
goethe-faust-1119 | BRANDER But with the grapes how was it, pray? |
goethe-faust-1119 | BRANDER Perhaps you''ll warmly take their part? |
goethe-faust-1119 | BRANDER What shall therewith be done? |
goethe-faust-1119 | BRANDER(_ to_ SIEBEL) And yours that still I have in hand? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Base Being, hearest thou? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Believest thou in God? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Both hands and feet are, truly-- And head and virile forces-- thine: Yet all that I indulge in newly, Is''t thence less wholly mine? |
goethe-faust-1119 | But is there one in all the land Like sister Margaret, good as gold,-- One that to her can a candle hold?" |
goethe-faust-1119 | But what comes sneaking, there, to view? |
goethe-faust-1119 | But what do I see in the creature? |
goethe-faust-1119 | CHORUS OF DISCIPLES Has He, victoriously, Burst from the vaulted Grave, and all- gloriously Now sits exalted? |
goethe-faust-1119 | CHORUS_ Quid sum miser tunc dicturus, Quem patronem rogaturus, Cum vix Justus sit securus_? |
goethe-faust-1119 | CHORUS_ Quid sum miser tune dicturus_? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Can Earth with such a thing be mated? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Can I trust my eyes? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Can woman, then, so lovely be? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Canst thou thyself not brew the potion? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Com''st ever, thus, with ill intention? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Could such a spirit be so cheated? |
goethe-faust-1119 | D''ye rightly take the jest? |
goethe-faust-1119 | DOGMATIST I''ll not be led by any lure Of doubts or critic- cavils: The Devil must be something, sure,-- Or how should there be devils? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Dare such a human voice disturb the flow, Around me here, of spirit- presence fullest? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Did we thrust ourselves upon thee, or thou thyself upon us? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Do I find you burning? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Dost recognize no more the tall cock''s- feather? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Dost thou thy father honor, as a youth? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Ah, can I not remain? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Ah, shall there never be A quiet hour, to see us fondly plighted, With breast to breast, and soul to soul united? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST And Margaret? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST And shall I see-- possess her? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST And thou forgiv''st my freedom, and the blame To my impertinence befitting, As the Cathedral thou wert quitting? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST And what shall be my counter- service therefor? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST But who is that? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Can we go thither? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Canst thou, poor Devil, give me whatsoever? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Demand''st thou, Pedant, too, a document? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Fear not that I this pact shall seek to sever? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Gnash not thus thy devouring teeth at me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Hast played the spy again? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST How shall we leave the house, and start? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST How so? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST How? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST I know not, should I do it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST If''twould, my love, would I advise it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST In Hell itself, then, laws are reckoned? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Inspect him close: for what tak''st thou the beast? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Is parchment, then, the holy fount before thee, A draught wherefrom thy thirst forever slakes? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST MEPHISTOPHELES MEPHISTOPHELES DOST thou not wish a broomstick- steed''s assistance? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST May I not, then, upon you wait? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Meanwhile, may not the treasure risen be, Which there, behind, I glimmering see? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Mephisto, seest thou there, Alone and far, a girl most pale and fair? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Must we? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST No doubt you''re much alone? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Not even a jewel, not a ring, To deck therewith my darling girl? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Now, whither shall we go? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Seest thou the black dog coursing there, through corn and stubble? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Seest thou the spiral circles, narrowing faster, Which he, approaching, round us seems to wind? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Shall I outlive this misery? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Shall that a nosegay be? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST That, too, from thee? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST The pentagram prohibits thee? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST The same thing, in all places, All hearts that beat beneath the heavenly day-- Each in its language-- say; Then why not I, in mine, as well? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Thee, form of flame, shall I then fear? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Then how shall we begin? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST This was the poodle''s real core, A travelling scholar, then? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Thou nam''st thyself a part, yet show''st complete to me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What ails thee? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What am I, then, if''tis denied my part The crown of all humanity to win me, Whereto yearns every sense within me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What are, within her arms, the heavenly blisses? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What fresh and vital forces, canst thou guess, Spring from my commerce with the wilderness? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What hidden sense in this enigma lies? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What is thy name? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What murmurest thou? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What weave they there round the raven- stone? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST What''s that to thee? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Wherefore the hag, and her alone? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Who? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Why, here in dust, entice me with your spell, Ye gentle, powerful sounds of Heaven? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST Wilt thou, to introduce us to the revel, Assume the part of wizard or of devil? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST(_ to_ MEPHISTOPHELES) Now, what shall come of this? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST(_ who during all this time has been standing before a mirror, now approaching and now retreating from it_) What do I see? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FAUST_( awaking)_ Am I again so foully cheated? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FROSCH Are you, perhaps, a virtuoso? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FROSCH But what has happened, tell me now? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FROSCH How do you mean? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FROSCH No doubt''twas late when you from Rippach started? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FROSCH Vines? |
goethe-faust-1119 | FROSCH Was that your nose I tightened? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Far away, or nearer singing? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Find''st nothing right on earth, eternally? |
goethe-faust-1119 | For wilt thou not, no lover fairer, Poor Margaret flatter, and ensnare her, And all thy soul''s devotion swear her? |
goethe-faust-1119 | From an old hag shall I demand assistance? |
goethe-faust-1119 | GENERAL Say, who would put his trust in nations, Howe''er for them one may have worked and planned? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Greet her? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Had you not, long since, demonstration That ghosts ca n''t stand on ordinary foundation? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Has not your heart been anywhere subjected? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Hast for the scarlet coat no reverence? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Hast never known a man, nor proved his word''s intent? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Have I all the power in Heaven and on Earth? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Have I concealed this countenance?-- Must tell my name, old face of leather? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Have you so many kinds? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Have you, perchance, elsewhere begun? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Hear I noises? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Hear I tender love- petitions? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Hear''st thou voices higher ringing? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Here am I balked: who, now can help afford? |
goethe-faust-1119 | How can a further test delight you? |
goethe-faust-1119 | How comes it that thou dost not shrink from me?-- Say, dost thou know, my friend, whom thou mak''st free? |
goethe-faust-1119 | How comes that lovely casket here to me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | How dare you venture thus? |
goethe-faust-1119 | How has he helped the town, I say? |
goethe-faust-1119 | How is it, then? |
goethe-faust-1119 | How shall we plan, that all be fresh and new,-- Important matter, yet attractive too? |
goethe-faust-1119 | How would the pearl- chain suit my hair? |
goethe-faust-1119 | However is it, such A man can think and know so much? |
goethe-faust-1119 | I delay to free her? |
goethe-faust-1119 | I dread, once again to see her? |
goethe-faust-1119 | I feel, I know not why, such fear!-- Would mother came!--where can she bide? |
goethe-faust-1119 | I shall recover, dost thou tell me, Through this insane, chaotic play? |
goethe-faust-1119 | I''ll levy thine attendance: Why waste so vainly thy resplendence? |
goethe-faust-1119 | I, or thou? |
goethe-faust-1119 | INQUISITIVE TRAVELLER Is''t but masquerading play? |
goethe-faust-1119 | INQUISITIVE TRAVELLER Say, who''s the stiff and pompous man? |
goethe-faust-1119 | IV THE STUDY FAUST MEPHISTOPHELES FAUST A knock? |
goethe-faust-1119 | If I''ve six stallions in my stall, Are not their forces also lent me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | If buried, did he own it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | If the fount of wine should still be playing? |
goethe-faust-1119 | If_ I_ should choose to preach Posterity, Where would you get contemporary fun? |
goethe-faust-1119 | In all its tides sweeps not the world away, And shall a promise bind my being? |
goethe-faust-1119 | In brooding souls the sunset burn above? |
goethe-faust-1119 | In one foot is the fellow lame? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is He, in glow of birth, Rapture creative near? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is it the first time in your life you''re driven To bear false witness in a case? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is it the_ Thought_ which works, creates, indeed? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is she gone? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is that in the course of nature? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is there a magic vapor here? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is''t actual fact? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is''t life, I ask, is''t even prudence, To bore thyself and bore the students? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is''t not enough, that what I speak to- day Shall stand, with all my future days agreeing? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is''t not his heart''s accord, urged outward far and dim, To wind the world in unison with him? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is''t not soon enough when morning chime has run? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is''t suffering, or pleasure? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Is''t the salamander pushes, Bloated- bellied, through the bushes? |
goethe-faust-1119 | It will not harm her, when one tries it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Know''st thou the thief, And darest not name him? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Know''st thou, at last, thy Lord and Master? |
goethe-faust-1119 | LISBETH Dost pity her, at that? |
goethe-faust-1119 | LISBETH Hast nothing heard of Barbara? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Lies not beneath us, firm, the earth? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Light? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET Day? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET Did you not see it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET How is''t with thy religion, pray? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET How so? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET How so? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET Kiss me!--canst no longer do it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET Out yonder? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET What means the gentleman? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET What rises up from the threshold here? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET What would I not, to give thee pleasure? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET Whoever could have brought me things so precious? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET(_ coming out_) Who lies here? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARGARET(_ turning to him_) And is it thou? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA And you, Sir, travel always, do you not? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA Had he all love, all faith forgotten in his riot? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA He gave you, further, no commission? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA I mean, have you not felt desire, though ne''er so slightly? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA I meant to say, were you not touched in earnest, ever? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA I''m she: what does the gentleman desire? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA Is dead? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA Say, how? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA Speak plainly, Sir, have you no one detected? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA What is your business? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MARTHA(_ coming from the house_) The murderers, whither have they run? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES And the danger to which thou wilt expose thyself? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES And this young lady will be present, too? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Ask you, pray? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Hast thou done? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Have you not led this life quite long enough? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Indeed? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Is it permitted that we share your leisure? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Poor Son of Earth, how couldst thou thus alone Have led thy life, bereft of me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Presents at once? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES She, there? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES The Doctor Faust? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES What means the sieve? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES What time takes she for dissipating? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES What will you bet? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES What wouldst thou, then? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES What? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Which, then? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Who knows, now, whither the four winds have blown it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Why heat thyself, thus instantly, With eloquence exaggerated? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES Why not? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES(_ approaching the fire)_ And what''s this pot? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES(_ to_ BRANDER) And you? |
goethe-faust-1119 | MEPHISTOPHELES(_ to_ FAUST) How findest thou the tender creatures? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Might I again presume, with trust unbounded, To hear your wisdom thoroughly expounded? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Might I, perhaps, depart at present? |
goethe-faust-1119 | My friend, so short a time thou''rt missing, And hast unlearned thy kissing? |
goethe-faust-1119 | My mother can that have been? |
goethe-faust-1119 | My powers I have not rashly estimated: A slave am I, whate''er I do-- If thine, or whose? |
goethe-faust-1119 | My work and worry, day and night? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Nearer hover Jay and screech- owl, and the plover,-- Are they all awake and crying? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Not a pocket- piece? |
goethe-faust-1119 | On the brink of death he slandered? |
goethe-faust-1119 | PROKTOPHANTASMIST You still are here? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Perceiv''st thou yonder snail? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Perhaps''twas brought by some one as a pawn, And mother gave a loan thereon? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Pray''st thou for mercy on thy mother''s soul, That fell asleep to long, long torment, and through thee? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Remains there naught of lofty spirit- sway, But that a dream the Devil counterfeited, And that a poodle ran away? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Rescue her? |
goethe-faust-1119 | SEVERAL APPRENTICES Why do you go that way? |
goethe-faust-1119 | SHOOTING- STAR Darting hither from the sky, In star and fire light shooting, Cross- wise now in grass I lie: Who''ll help me to my footing? |
goethe-faust-1119 | SIEBEL What happened? |
goethe-faust-1119 | SIEBEL What mean you? |
goethe-faust-1119 | SIEBEL Where is he? |
goethe-faust-1119 | SIEBEL Who are the strangers, should you guess? |
goethe-faust-1119 | SIEBEL(_ as_ MEPHISTOPHELES_ approaches his seat_) For me, I grant, sour wine is out of place; Fill up my glass with sweetest, will you? |
goethe-faust-1119 | SPIRIT Who calls me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Say, where? |
goethe-faust-1119 | See I with precision? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Sees not the gardener, even while buds his tree, Both flower and fruit the future years adorning? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Shall I attempt, this once, to seize and bind ye? |
goethe-faust-1119 | So might a compact be Made with you gentlemen-- and binding,--surely? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Still o''er my heart is that illusion thrown? |
goethe-faust-1119 | THE FAIR ONE(_ dancing_) Why does he come, then, to our ball? |
goethe-faust-1119 | THE LORD Hast thou, then, nothing more to mention? |
goethe-faust-1119 | THE LORD Know''st Faust? |
goethe-faust-1119 | THE OTHERS And what will_ you_? |
goethe-faust-1119 | THE WITCH Wherein, Sirs, can I be of use? |
goethe-faust-1119 | THE WITCH Why so? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Tell me, if we still are standing, Or if further we''re ascending? |
goethe-faust-1119 | That is no little space: what say''st thou, friend? |
goethe-faust-1119 | The All- enfolding, The All- upholding, Folds and upholds he not Thee, me, Himself? |
goethe-faust-1119 | The anguish of the dungeon, and the chain? |
goethe-faust-1119 | The days of that old Northern phantom now are over: Where canst thou horns and tail and claws discover? |
goethe-faust-1119 | The elements of Life how conquers he? |
goethe-faust-1119 | The spring- time stirs within the fragrant birches, And even the fir- tree feels it now: Should then our limbs escape its gentle searches? |
goethe-faust-1119 | The terms with graver, quill, or chisel, stated? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Thee, boundless Nature, how make thee my own? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Then may his teaching cheerfully impel thee: Dost thou, as man, increase the stores of truth? |
goethe-faust-1119 | There''s an old story has the same refrain; Who bade them so construe it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | They dance, they chat, they cook, they drink, they court: Now where, just tell me, is there better sport? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Thine endless love, thy faith assuring, The one almighty force enduring,-- Will that, too, prompt this heart of thine? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Things worsen,--what improvement names he? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Thou, surely, certainly? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Though I be glowing with her kisses, Do I not always share her need? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Thy soul''s high calling, where? |
goethe-faust-1119 | To satisfy them is a task.-- What ails you now? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Upon thy threshold whose the blood? |
goethe-faust-1119 | V AUERBACH''S CELLAR IN LEIPZIG CAROUSAL OF JOLLY COMPANIONS FROSCH I no one laughing? |
goethe-faust-1119 | VALENTINE(_ comes forward_) Whom wilt thou lure? |
goethe-faust-1119 | VOICE(_ from above_) Who calls from the rocky cleft below there? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Voices of those heavenly visions? |
goethe-faust-1119 | WAGNER Pardon, I heard your declamation;''Twas sure an old Greek tragedy you read? |
goethe-faust-1119 | WAGNER Why, therefore, yield to such depression? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Was it not given to thee and me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Well, well,--to- night--? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What are my lord''s commands? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What can within it be? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What does he want in this holy spot? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What dost thou here In daybreak clear, Kathrina dear, Before thy lover''s door? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What dreams are yours in high poetic places? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What drew me here with power? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What every journeyman within his wallet spares, And as a token with him bears, And rather starves or begs, than loses? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What from the world have I to gain? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What has it done to thee? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What have I done to thee? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What helps one''s beauty, youthful blood? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What hinders me from smiting now Thee and thy monkey- sprites with fell disaster? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What is that here? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What is that? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What is''t gripes thee, elf? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What need to shorten so the way? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What need to talk of Inspiration? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What seek I? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What use, a Whole compactly to present? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What want you thus? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What wilt from me, Base Spirit, say?-- Brass, marble, parchment, paper, clay? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What''s going on? |
goethe-faust-1119 | What, in the twilight, can your mind so trouble? |
goethe-faust-1119 | When was a human soul, in its supreme endeavor, E''er understood by such as thou? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Whence came Such things? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Whence o''er the heart his empire free? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Where art thou, Faust, whose voice has pierced to me, Who towards me pressed with all thine energy? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Where hast thou servant, coach and horses? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Where is he? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Where is our couple now? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Where now is all my pain? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Where tends thy thought? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Where you, ye beasts? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who are you here? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who art thou, then? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who bids the storm to passion stir the bosom? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who braids the noteless leaves to crowns, requiting Desert with fame, in Action''s every field? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who brings the One to join the general ordination, Where it may throb in grandest consonance? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who dare express Him? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who dares the child''s true name in public mention? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who has done me this ill? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who makes Olympus sure, the Gods uniting? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who scatters every fairest April blossom Along the shining path of Love? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who sneaks to us? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who was it that plunged her into ruin? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who would n''t lose his heart, that met you? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Who''d think of that in love''s selected season? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Whom then? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why at the threshold wilt snuffing be? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why didst thou enter into fellowship with us, if thou canst not carry it out? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why howl, you women there? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why is my heart so anxious, on thy breast? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why must the stream so soon run dry and fail us, And burning thirst again assail us? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why plague thyself with threshing straw forever? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why should I fly? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why so fast and so fell? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why so full my heart, and sore? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why some inexplicable smart All movement of my life impedes? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why such a noise? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why suck''st, from sodden moss and dripping stone, Toad- like, thy nourishment alone? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why, all at once, exhaust the joyance? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Why, tell me now, thou Son of Hades, If that prevents, how cam''st thou in to me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Wilt fly, and art not secure against dizziness? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Wilt thou grasp the thunder? |
goethe-faust-1119 | With little art, clear wit and sense Suggest their own delivery; And if thou''rt moved to speak in earnest, What need, that after words thou yearnest? |
goethe-faust-1119 | With what a vintage can I serve you? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Within thy bosom What hidden crime? |
goethe-faust-1119 | XI A STREET FAUST MEPHISTOPHELES FAUST How is it? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Yet I perceive no cloven foot; And both your ravens, where are_ they_ now? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Yet this delusion in our hearts we bear: Who would himself therefrom deliver? |
goethe-faust-1119 | You are not miserly, I trust? |
goethe-faust-1119 | You face it out, impertinent and heady? |
goethe-faust-1119 | You''ll have him, when and where you wander: His partner in the dance you''ll be,-- But what is all your fun to me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | You''re pleased, forsooth, full houses to behold? |
goethe-faust-1119 | You''ve not the casks already at the door? |
goethe-faust-1119 | Yourself, perhaps, would keep the bubble? |
goethe-faust-1119 | [ Illustration:_ Under the old ribs of the rock retreating_,] MEPHISTOPHELES Has not Sir Mammon grandly lighted His palace for this festal night? |
goethe-faust-1119 | _ He_ art thou, who, my presence breathing, seeing, Trembles through all the depths of being, A writhing worm, a terror- stricken form? |
goethe-faust-1119 | _ The dear old holy Roman realm, How does it hold together_? |
goethe-faust-1119 | and soon complete? |
goethe-faust-1119 | didst thou recognize, As through the garden- gate I came? |
goethe-faust-1119 | know''st thou me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | no jewelry? |
goethe-faust-1119 | no one drinking? |
goethe-faust-1119 | or Fancy''s shows? |
goethe-faust-1119 | or we are parted, in our turn, Where art thou? |
goethe-faust-1119 | shall the Poet that which Nature gave, The highest right, supreme Humanity, Forfeit so wantonly, to swell your treasure? |
goethe-faust-1119 | songs that follow? |
goethe-faust-1119 | such words to me? |
goethe-faust-1119 | to say? |
goethe-faust-1119 | transform the reptile again into his dog- shape? |
goethe-faust-1119 | under way? |
goethe-faust-1119 | unto thee such power Over me could give? |
goethe-faust-1119 | what hast thou done? |
goethe-faust-1119 | what''s happened thee? |
goethe-faust-1119 | whirled so far astray? |
goethe-faust-1119 | who can the field embrace? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ''Shall Rome,& c.''Thus must I piece it out: Shall Rome stand under one man''s awe? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ANTONY Caesar, my lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ANTONY Caesar? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ANTONY Where is he? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ANTONY Where is he? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ANTONY Why do you cross me in this exigent? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ANTONY Why, friends, you go to do you know not what: Wherein hath Caesar thus deserved your loves? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ANTONY Will you be patient? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | ANTONY You will compel me, then, to read the will? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Am I a married man or a bachelor? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Am I entreated To speak and strike? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Am I not stay''d for, Cinna? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Am I yourself But, as it were, in sort or limitation, To keep with you at meals, comfort your bed, And talk to you sometimes? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | And do you now cull out a holiday? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | And do you now put on your best attire? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | And do you now strew flowers in his way That comes in triumph over Pompey''s blood? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | And not my husband''s secrets? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | And so return to you, and nothing else? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | And, if not so, how should I wrong a brother? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils, Shrunk to this little measure? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Art thou any thing? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Art thou here yet? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Art thou some god, some angel, or some devil, That makest my blood cold and my hair to stare? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS And after that, he came, thus sad, away? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Are yet two Romans living such as these? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS By the eighth hour: is that the uttermost? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Didst thou dream, Lucius, that thou so criedst out? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Do you know them? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS I''ll know his humour, when he knows his time: What should the wars do with these jigging fools? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Into what dangers would you lead me, Cassius, That you would have me seek into myself For that which is not in me? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Is he alone? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Portia, what mean you? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Remember March, the ides of March remember: Did not great Julius bleed for justice''sake? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Was the crown offered him thrice? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Well; then I shall see thee again? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS What said he when he came unto himself? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS What was the second noise for? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS What, thou speak''st drowsily? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Where''s Publius? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Why ask you? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Why comest thou? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Why did you so cry out, sirs, in your sleep? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS With what addition? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Words before blows: is it so, countrymen? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Yes, that thou didst: didst thou see any thing? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | BRUTUS Your reason? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Brutus and Caesar: what should be in that''Caesar''? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Brutus, what shall be done? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | But wherefore do you hold me here so long? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | But, O grief, Where hast thou led me? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CAESAR Are we all ready? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CAESAR Shall Caesar send a lie? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CAESAR What can be avoided Whose end is purposed by the mighty gods? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CAESAR What man is that? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CAESAR What say''st thou to me now? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CAESAR What, is the fellow mad? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CAESAR Who is it in the press that calls on me? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASCA Are not you moved, when all the sway of earth Shakes like a thing unfirm? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASCA But wherefore did you so much tempt the heavens? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASCA Who ever knew the heavens menace so? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASCA Why, you were with him, were you not? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASCA''Tis Caesar that you mean; is it not, Cassius? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Am I not stay''d for? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS And died so? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS And why should Caesar be a tyrant then? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Ay, do you fear it? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS But what of Cicero? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS But, soft, I pray you: what, did Caesar swound? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Did Cicero say any thing? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Do you confess so much? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Hath Cassius lived To be but mirth and laughter to his Brutus, When grief, and blood ill- temper''d, vexeth him? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Have not you love enough to bear with me, When that rash humour which my mother gave me Makes me forgetful? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS How''scaped I killing when I cross''d you so? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS I blame you not for praising Caesar so; But what compact mean you to have with us? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Is it come to this? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Portia, art thou gone? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Shall I entreat a word? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Then, if we lose this battle, You are contented to be led in triumph Thorough the streets of Rome? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS They shouted thrice: what was the last cry for? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS To what effect? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS What enterprise, Popilius? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS What news? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS What, urge you your petitions in the street? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Who offered him the crown? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Will you dine with me to- morrow? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS Will you sup with me to- night, Casca? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CASSIUS You wrong me every way; you wrong me, Brutus; I said, an elder soldier, not a better: Did I say''better''? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CATO What bastard doth not? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CICERO Why, saw you any thing more wonderful? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CINNA THE POET What is my name? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CLAUDIUS My lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CLAUDIUS| BRUTUS Ay: saw you any thing? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | CLITUS What ill request did Brutus make to thee? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Canst thou hold up thy heavy eyes awhile, And touch thy instrument a strain or two? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Come Caesar to the Capitol to- morrow? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Comes his army on? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | DECIUS BRUTUS Great Caesar,-- CAESAR Doth not Brutus bootless kneel? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | DECIUS BRUTUS Shall no man else be touch''d but only Caesar? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | DECIUS BRUTUS What, shall we forth? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Did I not meet thy friends? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Didst thou not hear their shouts? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Dwell I but in the suburbs Of your good pleasure? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Enter OCTAVIUS, ANTONY, MESSALA, LUCILIUS, and the army] OCTAVIUS What man is that? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Enter from opposite sides, CASCA, with his sword drawn, and CICERO] CICERO Good even, Casca: brought you Caesar home? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Exeunt CAESAR and all his Train, but CASCA] CASCA You pull''d me by the cloak; would you speak with me? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Exeunt all except BRUTUS and CASSIUS] CASSIUS Will you go see the order of the course? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | FLAVIUS But wherefore art not in thy shop today? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | FLAVIUS Thou art a cobbler, art thou? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Fast asleep? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Fellow, wilt thou bestow thy time with me? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | First Citizen As a friend or an enemy? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Fourth Citizen Are you a married man or a bachelor? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Fourth Citizen Mark''d ye his words? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Gentlemen all,--alas, what shall I say? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Had you rather Caesar were living and die all slaves, than that Caesar were dead, to live all free men? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Had you your letters from your wife, my lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Have I in conquest stretch''d mine arm so far, To be afraid to tell graybeards the truth? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in Caesar seem ambitious? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | If Caesar hide himself, shall they not whisper''Lo, Caesar is afraid''? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | If we do lose this battle, then is this The very last time we shall speak together: What are you then determined to do? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Is Decius Brutus and Trebonius there? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Is not to- morrow, boy, the ides of March? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Is thy master coming? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Kind souls, what, weep you when you but behold Our Caesar''s vesture wounded? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Know I these men that come along with you? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | LEPIDUS What, shall I find you here? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | LIGARIUS But are not some whole that we must make sick? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | LUCILIUS[ Standing forth] My lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | LUCIUS Madam, what should I do? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | LUCIUS My lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Let me see, let me see; is not the leaf turn''d down Where I left reading? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Look, look, Titinius; Are those my tents where I perceive the fire? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Look; I draw a sword against conspirators; When think you that the sword goes up again? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MARULLUS But what trade art thou? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MARULLUS May we do so? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MARULLUS What meanest thou by that? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MARULLUS What trade, thou knave? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MARULLUS Where is thy leather apron and thy rule? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MARULLUS Wherefore rejoice? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MESSALA How died my master, Strato? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MESSALA Is not that he that lies upon the ground? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MESSALA Is not that he? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MESSALA Nor nothing in your letters writ of her? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MESSALA Where did you leave him? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | MESSALA[ Standing forth] What says my general? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | METELLUS CIMBER Is there no voice more worthy than my own To sound more sweetly in great Caesar''s ear For the repealing of my banish''d brother? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Metellus Cimber? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Must I budge? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Must I observe you? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Now, in the names of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this our Caesar feed, That he is grown so great? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | O conspiracy, Shamest thou to show thy dangerous brow by night, When evils are most free? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | O hateful error, melancholy''s child, Why dost thou show to the apt thoughts of men The things that are not? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | O murderous slumber, Lay''st thou thy leaden mace upon my boy, That plays thee music? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | O you hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome, Knew you not Pompey? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | O, then by day Where wilt thou find a cavern dark enough To mask thy monstrous visage? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | OCTAVIUS Mark Antony, shall we give sign of battle? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | OCTAVIUS Your brother too must die; consent you, Lepidus? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | PORTIA Is Brutus sick? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | PORTIA Is Caesar yet gone to the Capitol? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | PORTIA Thou hast some suit to Caesar, hast thou not? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | PORTIA What is''t o''clock? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | PORTIA Why, know''st thou any harm''s intended towards him? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Re- enter MESSALA, with BRUTUS, CATO, STRATO, VOLUMNIUS, and LUCILIUS] BRUTUS Where, where, Messala, doth his body lie? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Run to the Capitol, and nothing else? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Second Citizen Whither are you going? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Shall I be frighted when a madman stares? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Shall I descend? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Should I have answer''d Caius Cassius so? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Sirrah, what news? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Speak, what trade art thou? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Strato, where is thy master? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Tell me, good Brutus, can you see your face? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | There is no more to say? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Think you I am no stronger than my sex, Being so father''d and so husbanded? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Third Citizen Has he, masters? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Third Citizen Where do you dwell? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Upon what sickness? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | VARRO My lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | VARRO|| Did we, my lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | VOLUMNIUS What says my lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What conquest brings he home? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What do you think Of marching to Philippi presently? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What dost thou with thy best apparel on? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What is it that you would impart to me? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What is now amiss That Caesar and his senate must redress? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What is''t o''clock? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What tributaries follow him to Rome, To grace in captive bonds his chariot- wheels? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What villain touch''d his body, that did stab, And not for justice? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What watchful cares do interpose themselves Betwixt your eyes and night? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What''s to do? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What, Brutus, are you stirr''d so early too? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | What, Rome? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | When could they say till now, that talk''d of Rome, That her wide walls encompass''d but one man? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | When went there by an age, since the great flood, But it was famed with more than with one man? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | When, Lucius, when? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Where do I dwell? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Where is thy instrument? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Whither am I going? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Who is here so base that would be a bondman? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Who is here so rude that would not be a Roman? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Who is here so vile that will not love his country? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Who will go with me? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Who''s that? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Who''s within? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Why are you breathless? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Why dost thou lead these men about the streets? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Why should that name be sounded more than yours? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Will you be prick''d in number of our friends; Or shall we on, and not depend on you? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Wilt thou, Strato? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | Within the bond of marriage, tell me, Brutus, Is it excepted I should know no secrets That appertain to you? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | You all did love him once, not without cause: What cause withholds you then, to mourn for him? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | You all did see that on the Lupercal I thrice presented him a kingly crown, Which he did thrice refuse: was this ambition? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | You, sir, what trade are you? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Advances to CAESAR] BRUTUS What said Popilius Lena? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ BRUTUS and CASSIUS whisper] DECIUS BRUTUS Here lies the east: doth not the day break here? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Enter CINNA] Cinna, where haste you so? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Enter Citizens] First Citizen What is your name? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Enter LUCIUS] LUCIUS Call''d you, my lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Enter PORTIA and LUCIUS] PORTIA I prithee, boy, run to the senate- house; Stay not to answer me, but get thee gone: Why dost thou stay? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Enter VARRO and CLAUDIUS] VARRO Calls my lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Enter a Servant] Servant My lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Enter a Servant] You serve Octavius Caesar, do you not? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Enter the Soothsayer] PORTIA Come hither, fellow: which way hast thou been? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Exeunt ANTONY and TREBONIUS] DECIUS BRUTUS Where is Metellus Cimber? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Exit CICERO][ Enter CASSIUS] CASSIUS Who''s there? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Exit MESSALA] Why didst thou send me forth, brave Cassius? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Exit PORTIA] Lucius, who''s that knocks? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Exit] LUCILIUS O young and noble Cato, art thou down? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Exit][ Enter CALPURNIA] CALPURNIA What mean you, Caesar? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Flourish, and shout] BRUTUS What means this shouting? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Goes into the pulpit] Fourth Citizen What does he say of Brutus? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Re- enter Servant] What say the augurers? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Re- enter TREBONIUS] CASSIUS Where is Antony? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Whispers] CLITUS What, I, my lord? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | [ Whispers] DARDANIUS Shall I do such a deed? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | and did not they Put on my brows this wreath of victory, And bid me give it thee? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | and is it physical To walk unbraced and suck up the humours Of the dank morning? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | and what other oath Than honesty to honesty engaged, That this shall be, or we will fall for it? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | and why stare you so? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | and will you give me leave? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | dost thou lie so low? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | hear you aught of her in yours? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | home, you idle creatures get you home: Is this a holiday? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | how? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | in the presence of thy corse? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | is Cassius near? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | know you not, Being mechanical, you ought not walk Upon a labouring day without the sign Of your profession? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | must I endure all this? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | must I stand and crouch Under your testy humour? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | shall we sound him? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | think you to walk forth? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | thou naughty knave, what trade? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | what do you mean? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | what noise is that? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | what other bond Than secret Romans, that have spoke the word, And will not palter? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | when comes such another? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | where art thou, Pindarus? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | wherefore rise you now? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | who calls? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | who comes here? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | who comes here? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | will you stay awhile? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | wilt thou lift up Olympus? |
shakespeare-julius-2391 | wrong I mine enemies? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ''nothing doubting,''says he? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES Call''st thou that harm? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES Hast thou gold yet? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES How came the noble Timon to this change? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES Must it be so? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES Noble Timon, What friendship may I do thee? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES What is it, Timon? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES What is thy name? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES When I have laid proud Athens on a heap,-- TIMON Warr''st thou''gainst Athens? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ALCIBIADES Why me, Timon? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Are they not Athenians? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Art not a poet? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Art thou proud yet? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Canst not read? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Dost dialogue with thy shadow? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Dost hate a medlar? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Thy mother''s of my generation: what''s she, if I be a dog? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS What things in the world canst thou nearest compare to thy flatterers? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS What wouldst thou have to Athens? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Where liest o''nights, Timon? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Where wouldst thou send it? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | APEMANTUS Why? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | All Servants Gramercies, good fool: how does your mistress? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | All Servants What are we, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | All Servants Why? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | All those for this? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | And does he send to me? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | And what has he sent now? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Are we undone? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Art not thou a merchant? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Banditti Where? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Both Do we, my lord? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | CAPHIS It is: and yours too, Isidore? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | CAPHIS Where''s the fool now? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Can you eat roots, and drink cold water? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Canst thou the conscience lack, To think I shall lack friends? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Come, shall we in, And taste Lord Timon''s bounty? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Creditors? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Dost please thyself in''t? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Enter a Messenger] TIMON What trumpet''s that? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | FLAMINIUS Is''t possible the world should so much differ, And we alive that lived? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | FLAVIUS Alack, my fellows, what should I say to you? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | FLAVIUS Have you forgot me, sir? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | FLAVIUS My dear lord,-- TIMON What if it should be so? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | FLAVIUS My lord? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | FLAVIUS[ Aside] Lord Lucius and Lucullus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | FLAVIUS[ Aside] What will this come to? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | First Bandit Is not this he? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | First Lord How do you? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | First Lord What of you? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | First Senator Do you dare our anger? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | First Senator Now, captain? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | First Senator What''s that? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Follow thy drum; With man''s blood paint the ground, gules, gules: Religious canons, civil laws are cruel; Then what should war be? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Fool Are you three usurers''men? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Fool How do you, gentlemen? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Fool Will you leave me there? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Full of decay and failing? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Gold? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Good Servilius, will you befriend me so far, as to use mine own words to him? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Has Ventidius and Lucullus denied him? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Has friendship such a faint and milky heart, It turns in less than two nights? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Have I been ever free, and must my house Be my retentive enemy, my gaol? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | He gave me a jewel th''other day, and now he has beat it out of my hat: did you see my jewel? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Here is a touch; is''t good? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | His friends, like physicians, Thrive, give him over: must I take the cure upon me? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | How dost thou, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | I am so much endeared to that lord; he''s ever sending: how shall I thank him, thinkest thou? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | If there be Such valour in the bearing, what make we Abroad? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Is man so hateful to thee, That art thyself a man? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Is this the balsam that the usuring senate Pours into captains''wounds? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Is yond despised and ruinous man my lord? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Jeweller: I have a jewel here-- Merchant O, pray, let''s see''t: for the Lord Timon, sir? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Jeweller: You know me, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | LUCILIUS Dost thou speak seriously, Servilius? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | LUCULLUS I am right glad that his health is well, sir: and what hast thou there under thy cloak, pretty Flaminius? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | LUCULLUS[ Aside] One of Lord Timon''s men? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Lucilius''Servant So much? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | O my lords, As you are great, be pitifully good: Who can not condemn rashness in cold blood? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | O you gods, think I, what need we have any friends, if we should ne''er have need of''em? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | PHILOTUS Is not my lord seen yet? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | PHRYNIA|| Give us some gold, good Timon: hast thou more? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | PHRYNIA|| Well, more gold: what then? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Painter Ay, marry, what of these? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Painter How shall I understand you? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Poet Art not one? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Poet Ay, that''s well known: But what particular rarity? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Poet I have not seen you long: how goes the world? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Poet What have you now to present unto him? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Poet What''s to be thought of him? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Second Lord I pray you, upon what? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Second Lord Know you the quality of Lord Timon''s fury? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Second Lord My noble lord,-- TIMON Ah, my good friend, what cheer? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Second Lord Thou art going to Lord Timon''s feast? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Second Lord Why, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Shall we in? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Sir, a word: pray, is my lord ready to come forth? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Still in motion Of raging waste? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMANDRA Is this the Athenian minion, whom the world Voiced so regardfully? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Art thou Timandra? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Attends he here, or no? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Does she love him? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Had I a steward So true, so just, and now so comfortable? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Have I once lived to see two honest men? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON How dost thou like this jewel, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON How dost thou pity him whom thou dost trouble? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON How has the ass broke the wall, that thou art out of the city? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON How likest thou this picture, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON How shall she be endow''d, if she be mated with an equal husband? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON I have so: what of him? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Is''t true? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Look, who comes here: will you be chid? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON My worthy friends, will you draw near? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Now, thieves? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON O, no doubt, my good friends, but the gods themselves have provided that I shall have much help from you: how had you been my friends else? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON So fitly? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Well; what further? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON What dost thou think''tis worth? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON What wouldst do then, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON What, dost thou weep? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON What, thyself? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Wherefore? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Whither art going? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Who, without those means thou talkest of, didst thou ever know beloved? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Why dost ask that? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Why dost thou call them knaves? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Why dost thou seek me out? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Will you, indeed? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Wilt dine with me, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Wouldst thou have thyself fall in the confusion of men, and remain a beast with the beasts? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON Wrought he not well that painted it? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON[ Aside] Must thou needs stand for a villain in thine own work? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TIMON[ To LUCILIUS] Love you the maid? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | TITUS Do you hear, sir? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | The place which I have feasted, does it now, Like all mankind, show me an iron heart? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | They never flatter''d thee: what hast thou given? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Third Bandit Let us make the assay upon him: if he care not for''t, he will supply us easily; if he covetously reserve it, how shall''s get it? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Third Lord Alcibiades is banished: hear you of it? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Third Lord Did you see my cap? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Third Lord Will''t hold? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | This slave- like habit? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Thou givest so long, Timon, I fear me thou wilt give away thyself in paper shortly: what need these feasts, pomps and vain- glories? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Three? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | To be in anger is impiety; But who is man that is not angry? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | To have his pomp and all what state compounds But only painted, like his varnish''d friends? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Varro''s First Servant Yes, mine''s three thousand crowns: what''s yours? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Varro''s Second Servant By your leave, sir,-- FLAVIUS What do ye ask of me, my friend? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Varro''s Servant How dost, fool? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Varro''s Servant Is''t not your business too? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Varro''s Servant What is a whoremaster, fool? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | We are born to do benefits: and what better or properer can we can our own than the riches of our friends? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What beast couldst thou be, that were not subject to a beast? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What do you think the hour? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What have you there, my friend? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What have you there? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What heart, head, sword, force, means, but is Lord Timon''s? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What is here? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What is this? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What man didst thou ever know unthrift that was beloved after his means? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What shall be done? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What would he have borrowed of you? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What wouldst thou do with the world, Apemantus, if it lay in thy power? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What yours?--and yours? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What''s the news? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What, do we meet together? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What, dost thou go? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | What, think''st That the bleak air, thy boisterous chamberlain, Will put thy shirt on warm? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | When comes your book forth? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Whence are you? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Where feed''st thou o''days, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who can call him His friend that dips in the same dish? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who can speak broader than he that has no house to put his head in? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who dares, who dares, In purity of manhood stand upright, And say''This man''s a flatterer?'' |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who dies, that bears not one spurn to their graves Of their friends''gift? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who is not Timon''s? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who lives that''s not depraved or depraves? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who would be so mock''d with glory? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who would not wish to be from wealth exempt, Since riches point to misery and contempt? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who''s here? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Who, then, dares to be half so kind again? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Why do fond men expose themselves to battle, And not endure all threats? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Why dost thou weep? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Why should you want? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Why shouldst thou hate men? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Why then preferr''d you not your sums and bills, When your false masters eat of my lord''s meat? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Why this spade? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | Why, how shall I requite you? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | With me? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | You three serve three usurers? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter APEMANTUS] More man? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter Banditti] First Bandit Where should he have this gold? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter CAPHIS, and the Servants of Isidore and Varro] CAPHIS Good even, Varro: what, You come for money? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter CAPHIS] CAPHIS Here, sir; what is your pleasure? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter FLAMINIUS, SERVILIUS, and other Servants] Servants My lord? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter FLAVIUS, with two or three Servants] First Servant Hear you, master steward, where''s our master? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter LUCILIUS, with three Strangers] LUCILIUS Who, the Lord Timon? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter SEMPRONIUS, and a Servant of TIMON''s] SEMPRONIUS Must he needs trouble me in''t,--hum!--''bove all others? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter TIMON and Attendants] TIMON With all my heart, gentlemen both; and how fare you? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter TIMON, in a rage, FLAMINIUS following] TIMON What, are my doors opposed against my passage? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter a Servant] How now? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Enter two Senators and a Messenger] First Senator Thou hast painfully discover''d: are his files As full as thy report? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Exeunt all except APEMANTUS][ Enter two Lords] First Lord What time o''day is''t, Apemantus? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Exit Servants] And how does that honourable, complete, free- hearted gentleman of Athens, thy very bountiful good lord and master? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Exit] First Lord Where be our men? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Exit] First Stranger Do you observe this, Hostilius? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Keeping some gold][ Enter ALCIBIADES, with drum and fife, in warlike manner; PHRYNIA and TIMANDRA] ALCIBIADES What art thou there? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ The dishes are uncovered and seen to be full of warm water] Some Speak What does his lordship mean? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Throws the dishes at them, and drives them out] What, all in motion? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | [ Tucket, within] TIMON What means that trump? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | a drum? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | a knave too? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | and at length How goes our reckoning? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | and these looks of care? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | ca n''t be? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | cast off? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | did you see my cap? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | dispraise? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | does the rumour hold for true, that he''s so full of gold? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | hang''d it, have you not? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | have they denied him? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | is not that his steward muffled so? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | my lord? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | nothing remaining? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | or to live But in a dream of friendship? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | sleep upon''t, And let the foes quietly cut their throats, Without repugnancy? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | this place? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | this slave, Unto his honour, has my lord''s meat in him: Why should it thrive and turn to nutriment, When he is turn''d to poison? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what are their wills? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what art thou? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what do you in this wise company? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what does his cashiered worship mutter? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what has he sent? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what is your will? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what news? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what strange, Which manifold record not matches? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | what this, you gods? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | why have you that charitable title from thousands, did not you chiefly belong to my heart? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | why this? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | why want? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | will the cold brook, Candied with ice, caudle thy morning taste, To cure thy o''er- night''s surfeit? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | will these moss''d trees, That have outlived the eagle, page thy heels, And skip where thou point''st out? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | will''t hold? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | wilt thou whip thine own faults in other men? |
shakespeare-timon-2507 | yellow, glittering, precious gold? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ADAM Is''old dog''my reward? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ADAM What, my young master? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | AMIENS What''s that''ducdame''? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | AUDREY Do you wish then that the gods had made me poetical? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | AUDREY I do not know what''poetical''is: is it honest in deed and word? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | AUDREY Would you not have me honest? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Am not I your Rosalind? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | And how, Audrey? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | And wherefore are you gentle, strong and valiant? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | And why, sir, must they so? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Are not these woods More free from peril than the envious court? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Are not you The owner of the house I did inquire for? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Are you he? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Art rich? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Art thou learned? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Art thou wise? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | But what talk we of fathers, when there is such a man as Orlando? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | But what though? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | But what will you be call''d? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | But, in good sooth, are you he that hangs the verses on the trees, wherein Rosalind is so admired? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Are you his brother? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA But didst thou hear without wondering how thy name should be hanged and carved upon these trees? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA But is all this for your father? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Doth it therefore ensue that you should love his son dearly? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA How prove you that, in the great heap of your knowledge? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Is it possible? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA No, hath not? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Prithee, who is''t that thou meanest? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Thou hast not, cousin; Prithee be cheerful: know''st thou not, the duke Hath banish''d me, his daughter? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Trow you who hath done this? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Was''t you that did so oft contrive to kill him? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Well, and what of him? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Were you made the messenger? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA What shall I call thee when thou art a man? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Why should I not? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA Will you go, coz? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CELIA[ Reads] Why should this a desert be? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CHARLES Come, where is this young gallant that is so desirous to lie with his mother earth? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CORIN And they are often tarred over with the surgery of our sheep: and would you have us kiss tar? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CORIN For not being at court? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | CORIN Who calls? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Can a woman rail thus? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Change you colour? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Come, more; another stanzo: call you''em stanzos? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Come, sister, will you go? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | DUKE FREDERICK How dost thou, Charles? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | DUKE SENIOR And did you leave him in this contemplation? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | DUKE SENIOR Art thou thus bolden''d, man, by thy distress, Or else a rude despiser of good manners, That in civility thou seem''st so empty? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | DUKE SENIOR But what said Jaques? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | DUKE SENIOR Come, shall we go and kill us venison? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | DUKE SENIOR What fool is this? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | DUKE SENIOR What would you have? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Did he ask for me? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Did he not moralize this spectacle? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Did you call, sir? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Did you ever hear such railing? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Do you hear, forester? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Doth it not flow as hugely as the sea, Till that the weary very means do ebb? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | First Page Shall we clap into''t roundly, without hawking or spitting or saying we are hoarse, which are the only prologues to a bad voice? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | For it is unpeopled? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Forester What shall he have that kill''d the deer? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Hast any philosophy in thee, shepherd? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Have you no song, forester, for this purpose? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Have you not been acquainted with goldsmiths''wives, and conned them out of rings? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Her love is not the hare that I do hunt: Why writes she so to me? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Horns? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | How looked he? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | How old are you, friend? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | How parted he with thee? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | I pray you, will you take him by the arm? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | I''ll write to him a very taunting letter, And thou shalt bear it: wilt thou, Silvius? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | If I heard you rightly, The duke hath put on a religious life And thrown into neglect the pompous court? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Is his head worth a hat, or his chin worth a beard? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Is it not past two o''clock? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Is the single man therefore blessed? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Is thy name William? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES And how oft did you say his beard was not well cut? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES And how was that ta''en up? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES And will you, being a man of your breeding, be married under a bush like a beggar? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES But, for the seventh cause; how did you find the quarrel on the seventh cause? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES Can you nominate in order now the degrees of the lie? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES How seventh cause? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES Is not this a rare fellow, my lord? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES Of what kind should this cock come of? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES Rosalind is your love''s name? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES What stature is she of? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES What, for a counter, would I do but good? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES Why, who cries out on pride, That can therein tax any private party? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | JAQUES Will you be married, motley? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Know you not, master, to some kind of men Their graces serve them but as enemies? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Let me see; what think you of falling in love? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Looks he as freshly as he did the day he wrestled? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER And what wilt thou do? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER Can you tell if Rosalind, the duke''s daughter, be banished with her father? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER Good Monsieur Charles, what''s the new news at the new court? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER Know you before whom, sir? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER Know you where your are, sir? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER Was not Charles, the duke''s wrestler, here to speak with me? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER What mar you then, sir? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER What, you wrestle to- morrow before the new duke? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER Where will the old duke live? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | OLIVER Wilt thou lay hands on me, villain? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO A man that had a wife with such a wit, he might say''Wit, whither wilt?'' |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO And what wit could wit have to excuse that? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO And why not the swift foot of Time? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO And wilt thou have me? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Are you native of this place? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO But will my Rosalind do so? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Can I not say, I thank you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Can you remember any of the principal evils that he laid to the charge of women? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Did you ever cure any so? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO How if the kiss be denied? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO I prithee, who doth he trot withal? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO I thank you, sir: and, pray you, tell me this: Which of the two was daughter of the duke That here was at the wrestling? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO If this be so, why blame you me to love you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Of a snail? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Shall I keep your hogs and eat husks with them? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Speak you so gently? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Speakest thou in sober meanings? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Very well: what would you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO What sayest thou? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO What were his marks? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO What''s that? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO What, of my suit? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO What, wouldst thou have me go and beg my food? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Where dwell you, pretty youth? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Who ambles Time withal? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Who could be out, being before his beloved mistress? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Who doth he gallop withal? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Who stays it still withal? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Why, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ORLANDO Why, whither, Adam, wouldst thou have me go? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Or with a base and boisterous sword enforce A thievish living on the common road? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | PHEBE If this be so, why blame you me to love you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | PHEBE Know''st now the youth that spoke to me erewhile? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | PHEBE Think not I love him, though I ask for him:''Tis but a peevish boy; yet he talks well; But what care I for words? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | PHEBE Thou hast my love: is not that neighbourly? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Poor men alone? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND And why, I pray you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND And you say, you will have her, when I bring her? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Are you not good? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Ay, but when? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But are you so much in love as your rhymes speak? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But doth he know that I am in this forest and in man''s apparel? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But have I not cause to weep? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But if you do refuse to marry me, You''ll give yourself to this most faithful shepherd? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But is there any else longs to see this broken music in his sides? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But why did he swear he would come this morning, and comes not? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But, cousin, what if we assay''d to steal The clownish fool out of your father''s court? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But, for the bloody napkin? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND But, to Orlando: did he leave him there, Food to the suck''d and hungry lioness? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Dear Celia, I show more mirth than I am mistress of; and would you yet I were merrier? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Did your brother tell you how I counterfeited to swoon when he showed me your handkerchief? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Do you not know I am a woman? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Do you pity him? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Do you think so? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND I am: what must we understand by this? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND I pray you, what is''t o''clock? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND I prithee, who? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Is he of God''s making? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Is it a man? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Is yonder the man? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Me, uncle? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Nay, but who is it? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Not true in love? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Orlando? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Wast you he rescued? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Were it not better, Because that I am more than common tall, That I did suit me all points like a man? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND What is he that shall buy his flock and pasture? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND What shall be our sport, then? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Where learned you that oath, fool? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Who do you speak to,''Why blame you me to love you?'' |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Why then, can one desire too much of a good thing? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Why then, to- morrow I can not serve your turn for Rosalind? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Why, whither shall we go? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND You say, that you''ll have Phebe, if she will? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND You say, you''ll marry me, if I be willing? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND Young man, have you challenged Charles the wrestler? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | ROSALIND[ Reads] Why, thy godhead laid apart, Warr''st thou with a woman''s heart? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Rosalind lacks then the love Which teacheth thee that thou and I am one: Shall we be sunder''d? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | SILVIUS Call you this chiding? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | SILVIUS Call you this railing? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | SILVIUS If this be so, why blame you me to love you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | SILVIUS Sweet Phebe,-- PHEBE Ha, what say''st thou, Silvius? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | SIR OLIVER MARTEXT Is there none here to give the woman? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Shall we go, coz? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Shall we see this wrestling, cousin? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | TOUCHSTONE But what is the sport, monsieur, that the ladies have lost? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | TOUCHSTONE Good even, good Master What- ye- call''t: how do you, sir? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | TOUCHSTONE Why, do not your courtier''s hands sweat? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | TOUCHSTONE Wilt thou rest damned? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | There then; how then? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | This is the very false gallop of verses: why do you infect yourself with them? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Though Nature hath given us wit to flout at Fortune, hath not Fortune sent in this fool to cut off the argument? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Two o''clock is your hour? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | WILLIAM Which he, sir? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Wast born i''the forest here? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Wast ever in court, shepherd? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What did he when thou sawest him? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What do you say, sister? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What is thy name, young man? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What makes him here? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What manner of man? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What prodigal portion have I spent, that I should come to such penury? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What said he? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What woman in the city do I name, When that I say the city- woman bears The cost of princes on unworthy shoulders? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | What would you say to me now, an I were your very very Rosalind? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Where remains he? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Wherein went he? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Who can come in and say that I mean her, When such a one as she such is her neighbour? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Who comes here? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Who might be your mother, That you insult, exult, and all at once, Over the wretched? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Why are you virtuous? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Why do you look on me? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Why look you so upon me? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Why would you be so fond to overcome The bonny priser of the humorous duke? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Why, what means this? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Will you go, sister? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Will you go? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Will you go? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Will you hear the letter? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Will you sing? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Will you sit down with me? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Will you, Orlando, have to wife this Rosalind? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Wilt thou change fathers? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Wilt thou love such a woman? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | Would he not be a comfort to our travel? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | You do love this maid? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | You foolish shepherd, wherefore do you follow her, Like foggy south puffing with wind and rain? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter DENNIS] DENNIS Calls your worship? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter DUKE FREDERICK, Lords, and OLIVER] DUKE FREDERICK Not see him since? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter DUKE FREDERICK, with Lords] DUKE FREDERICK Can it be possible that no man saw them? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter JAQUES, Lords, and Foresters] JAQUES Which is he that killed the deer? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter LE BEAU] Bon jour, Monsieur Le Beau: what''s the news? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter ORLANDO and ADAM, meeting] ORLANDO Who''s there? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter ORLANDO and OLIVER] ORLANDO Is''t possible that on so little acquaintance you should like her? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter ROSALIND and CELIA] ROSALIND How say you now? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter SIR OLIVER MARTEXT] Sir Oliver Martext, you are well met: will you dispatch us here under this tree, or shall we go with you to your chapel? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Enter TOUCHSTONE] CELIA No? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Exeunt CORIN and TOUCHSTONE] CELIA Didst thou hear these verses? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Exeunt DUKE FREDERICK and Lords] CELIA O my poor Rosalind, whither wilt thou go? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Exeunt DUKE FREDERICK, train, and LE BEAU] CELIA Were I my father, coz, would I do this? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Exeunt ORLANDO and ADAM] OLIVER Is it even so? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Exeunt ROSALIND and CELIA] ORLANDO What passion hangs these weights upon my tongue? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Exeunt ROSALIND, CELIA and CORIN] PHEBE Dead Shepherd, now I find thy saw of might,''Who ever loved that loved not at first sight?'' |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Exit][ Enter CORIN and TOUCHSTONE] CORIN And how like you this shepherd''s life, Master Touchstone? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | [ Reads] Art thou god to shepherd turn''d, That a maiden''s heart hath burn''d? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | am I the man yet? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | and is not the grease of a mutton as wholesome as the sweat of a man? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | and loving woo? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | and when shalt thou see him again? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | and will you persever to enjoy her? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | and, wooing, she should grant? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | are you crept hither to see the wrestling? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | beg, when that is spent? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | begin you to grow upon me? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | comes he not here? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | dost thou think, though I am caparisoned like a man, I have a doublet and hose in my disposition? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | doth he not deserve well? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | doth my simple feature content you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | had not that been as proper? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | how shall I answer you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | is it a true thing? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | is there yet another dotes upon rib- breaking? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | no greater heart in thee? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | not a word? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | of what colour? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | shall we part, sweet girl? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | that but seeing you should love her? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | what a life is this, That your poor friends must woo your company? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | what make you here? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | what shall I do with my doublet and hose? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | what then? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | when Nature hath made a fair creature, may she not by Fortune fall into the fire? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | where have you been all this while? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | whither wander you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | why do people love you? |
shakespeare-as-2303 | why, what make you here? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | A book? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | ARVIRAGUS Say, where shall''s lay him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | ARVIRAGUS What pleasure, sir, find we in life, to lock it From action and adventure? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | ARVIRAGUS What should we speak of When we are old as you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | ARVIRAGUS[ To IMOGEN] Brother, stay here Are we not brothers? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | And that was all? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | And when came you to serve our Roman captive? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Are you well? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | BELARIUS What hast thou done? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | BELARIUS What''s your name? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | BELARIUS Whither bound? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | But for her, Where is she gone? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | But how comes it he is to sojourn with you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | But what is this? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | But what occasion Hath Cadwal now to give it motion? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | But, good Pisanio, When shall we hear from him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | But, my gentle queen, Where is our daughter? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | But, pray you, tell me, Is she sole child to the king? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CAIUS LUCIUS But what from Rome? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CAIUS LUCIUS Thy name? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CAIUS LUCIUS When expect you them? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Art not afeard? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Do you call me fool? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN How long is''t since she went to Milford- Haven? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Is it fit I went to look upon him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Sayest thou? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Sirrah, is this letter true? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Thou villain base, Know''st me not by my clothes? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN When a gentleman is disposed to swear, it is not for any standers- by to curtail his oaths, ha? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Where is she, sir? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Where is thy lady? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Wilt thou serve me? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN You''ll go with us? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CLOTEN Your lady''s person: is she ready? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Attend you here the door of our stern daughter? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Did you e''er meet? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Does the world go round? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Heard you all this, her women? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Her doors lock''d? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE New matter still? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE No tidings of him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE O, what, am I A mother to the birth of three? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Past grace? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE That diamond upon your finger, say How came it yours? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE What of him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE What wouldst thou, boy? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE What''s this, Comelius? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE What, art thou mad? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Wherefore eyest him so? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Who worse than a physician Would this report become? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | CYMBELINE Why, old soldier, Wilt thou undo the worth thou art unpaid for, By tasting of our wrath? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Come, away!-- Who''s there? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Day, night, Are they not but in Britain? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Dost thou think in time She will not quench and let instructions enter Where folly now possesses? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | First Lord Did you hear of a stranger that''s come to court to- night? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | First Lord What got he by that? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | First Tribune Is Lucius general of the forces? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | First Tribune Remaining now in Gallia? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | For when fools Shall--[ Enter PISANIO] Who is here? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS Is he at home? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS Money, youth? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS Nay, what hope Have we in hiding us? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS To who? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS What does he mean? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS What''s the matter, sir? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS What''s thy name? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS Where? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | GUIDERIUS Why, worthy father, what have we to lose, But that he swore to take, our lives? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Hast any of thy late master''s garments in thy possession? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Hast thou not learn''d me how To make perfumes? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Hath my poor boy done aught but well, Whose face I never saw? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Have I hurt him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Have I not been Thy pupil long? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Have not I An arm as big as thine? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Have you ta''en of it? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Having thus far proceeded,-- Unless thou think''st me devilish-- is''t not meet That I did amplify my judgment in Other conclusions? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Hear''st thou, Pisanio? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | His health, beseech you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How Can her contempt be answer''d? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How came it? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How creeps acquaintance? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How dare you ghosts Accuse the thunderer, whose bolt, you know, Sky- planted batters all rebelling coasts? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How ended she? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How found you him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How look I, That I should seem to lack humanity so much as this fact comes to? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How of descent As good as we? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How parted with your brothers? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How should I be revenged? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | How should this be? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | I Know her women are about her: what If I do line one of their hands? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | I give him satisfaction? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | I, her? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IACHIMO Can we, with manners, ask what was the difference? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IACHIMO Change you, madam? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IACHIMO She writes so to you, doth she? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IACHIMO Should he make me Live, like Diana''s priest, betwixt cold sheets, Whiles he is vaulting variable ramps, In your despite, upon your purse? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IACHIMO What do you esteem it at? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IACHIMO What''s that? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IACHIMO Which the gods have given you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IACHIMO Will you hear more? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Am I one, sir? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Is he disposed to mirth? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Peace, my lord; hear, hear-- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS Shall''s have a play of this? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Pray, what is''t? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Then waved his handkerchief? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN What do you pity, sir? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN What is the matter, trow? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN What makes your admiration? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN What, dear sir, Thus raps you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Where then Hath Britain all the sun that shines? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Wherefore then Didst undertake it? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Who? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Why did you throw your wedded lady from you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Why good fellow, What shall I do the where? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | IMOGEN Will my lord say so? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | If one of mean affairs May plod it in a week, why may not I Glide thither in a day? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | If this be true,-- As I have such a heart that both mine ears Must not in haste abuse-- if it be true, How should I be revenged? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Is Cadwal mad? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Is he thy kin? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Is she with Posthumus? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Is there more? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Is''t enough I am sorry? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | It''s almost morning, is''t not? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Know''st him thou look''st on? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Lady No more? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Lady Please you, madam IMOGEN What hour is it? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Lord Where was this lane? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Means he not us? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Mine action and thine own? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Mother With marriage wherefore was he mock''d, To be exiled, and thrown From Leonati seat, and cast From her his dearest one, Sweet Imogen? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Must I repent? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | No answer? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | No harm, I trust, is done? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Not seen of late? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Now, sir, What have you dream''d of late of this war''s purpose? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | O my gentle brothers, Have we thus met? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | O noble misery, To be i''the field, and ask''what news?'' |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Once more let me behold it: is it that Which I left with her? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Or dead, or sleeping on him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Or in my life what comfort, when I am Dead to my husband? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Or who was he That, otherwise than noble nature did, Hath alter''d that good picture? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | PHILARIO Was Caius Lucius in the Britain court When you were there? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | PHILARIO What means do you make to him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | PISANIO Alas, my lord, How can she be with him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | PISANIO How fares thy mistress? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | PISANIO What shall I need to draw my sword? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | POSTHUMUS LEONATUS How come these staggers on me? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | POSTHUMUS LEONATUS Still going? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | POSTHUMUS LEONATUS What lady would you choose to assail? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | POSTHUMUS LEONATUS Will you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | POSTHUMUS LEONATUS''Lack, to what end? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | POSTHUMUS LEONATUS[ Aside] What''s that to him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Pisanio? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Prithee, dispatch: The lamb entreats the butcher: where''s thy knife? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Prithee, speak, How many score of miles may we well ride''Twixt hour and hour? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Say what thou art, Why I should yield to thee? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Second Gentleman And why so? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Second Gentleman But what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Second Gentleman How long is this ago? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Second Gentleman None but the king? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Second Gentleman What''s his name and birth? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Senseless bauble, Art thou a feodary for this act, and look''st So virgin- like without? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Sparkles this stone as it was wo nt? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | The drug he gave me, which he said was precious And cordial to me, have I not found it Murderous to the senses? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | The matter? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | The scriptures of the loyal Leonatus, All turn''d to heresy? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | The time inviting thee? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | To lie in watch there and to think on him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | To weep''twixt clock and clock? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | To what end? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Two beggars told me I could not miss my way: will poor folks lie, That have afflictions on them, knowing''tis A punishment or trial? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Upon the love and truth and vows which I Have made to thy command? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Villain, Where is thy lady? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What are you That fly me thus? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What art thou? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What art thou? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What cheer, madam? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What company Discover you abroad? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What fairies haunt this ground? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What false Italian, As poisonous- tongued as handed, hath prevail''d On thy too ready hearing? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What is here? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What is in thy mind, That makes thee stare thus? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What is it to be false? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What news? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What shalt thou expect, To be depender on a thing that leans, Who can not be new built, nor has no friends, So much as but to prop him? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What slave art thou? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What think you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What was the last That he spake to thee? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What''s thy interest In this sad wreck? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What''s thy name? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What''s your lordship''s pleasure? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What, To hide me from the radiant sun and solace I''the dungeon by a snuff? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What, are men mad? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What, are you packing, sirrah? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | What, makest thou me a dullard in this act? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | When shall I hear all through? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | When shall we see again? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | When was she missed? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Where is Posthumus? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Where? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Wherefore breaks that sigh From the inward of thee? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Wherefore write you not What monster''s her accuser? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Who ever yet could sound thy bottom? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Who is it? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Who is this Thou makest thy bloody pillow? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Who is''t can read a woman? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Who may this be? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Who told you of this stranger? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why came you from your master? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why do you pity me? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why fled you from the court? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why hast thou abused So many miles with a pretence? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why hast thou gone so far, To be unbent when thou hast ta''en thy stand, The elected deer before thee? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why should I write this down, that''s riveted, Screw''d to my memory? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why should his mistress, who was made by him that made the tailor, not be fit too? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why so sadly Greet you our victory? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why stands he so perplex''d? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why tender''st thou that paper to me, with A look untender? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Why tribute? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Will she not forth? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Will you rhyme upon''t, And vent it for a mockery? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Wilt take thy chance with me? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Wilt thou hear more, my lord? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | Wilt thou not speak to me? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | You do remember This stain upon her? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | You look on me: what wreck discern you in me Deserves your pity? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Aside] If I do lie and do No harm by it, though the gods hear, I hope They''ll pardon it.--Say you, sir? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ CYMBELINE and IMOGEN converse apart] BELARIUS Is not this boy revived from death? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Enter PISANIO, with a letter] PISANIO How? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Enter POSTHUMUS LEONATUS and a British Lord] Lord Camest thou from where they made the stand? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Enter POSTHUMUS LEONATUS] POSTHUMUS LEONATUS Is there no way for men to be but women Must be half- workers? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Enter QUEEN, Ladies, and CORNELIUS] QUEEN Whiles yet the dew''s on ground, gather those flowers; Make haste: who has the note of them? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Enter a Lady] Lady Who''s there that knocks? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Exeunt Ladies] Now, master doctor, have you brought those drugs? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Exeunt POSTHUMUS LEONATUS and IACHIMO] Frenchman Will this hold, think you? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Exeunt, fighting][ Re- enter BELARIUS and ARVIRAGUS] BELARIUS No companies abroad? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Exit] IMOGEN Continues well my lord? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Exit] QUEEN Weeps she still, say''st thou? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ IMOGEN in bed, reading; a Lady attending] IMOGEN Who''s there? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Re- enter Attendant] CYMBELINE Where is she, sir? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Re- enter First Gaoler] First Gaoler Come, sir, are you ready for death? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Re- enter GUIDERIUS] GUIDERIUS Where''s my brother? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | [ Re- enter PISANIO, with the clothes] Be those the garments? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | a heart as big? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | alas, Where is thy head? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | and can we not Partition make with spectacles so precious''Twixt fair and foul? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | and whither? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | another? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | distil? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | find The ooze, to show what coast thy sluggish crare Might easiliest harbour in? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | her blood? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | how first met them? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | how live? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | how lived You? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | if sleep charge nature, To break it with a fearful dream of him And cry myself awake? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | is there no derogation in''t? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | me? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | my good name? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | my woman Helen? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | obedience? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | of adultery? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | or is''t not Too dull for your good wearing? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | our horses''labour? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | preserve? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | some villain mountaineers? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | speak, Wilt have him live? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | that I should murder her? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | that''s false to''s bed, is it? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | the perturb''d court, For my being absent? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | this place? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | thy friend? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | thy lord? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | to thee? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | what of her? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | what trunk is here Without his top? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | when we shall hear The rain and wind beat dark December, how, In this our pinching cave, shall we discourse The freezing hours away? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | where bide? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | where''s that? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | where''s that? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | who''s here? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | who''s there? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | why should we pay tribute? |
shakespeare-cymbeline-2052 | yea, so That our great king himself doth woo me oft For my confections? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And does your religion not say so? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it? pascal-pensees-1319 Do we not see,"say they,"that the brutes live and die like men, and Turks like Christians? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Dost thou wish that it always cost Me the blood of My humanity, without thy shedding tears? pascal-pensees-1319 He is near that justifieth me; who will contend with me? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Make their heart fat,and how? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Thou hast seen all this; and will not ye declare it? pascal-pensees-1319 Thus saith the Lord: What is the bill of this divorcement, wherewith I have put away the synagogue? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Were this so clear,say they,"why did the Jews not believe?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What is a man advantaged if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? pascal-pensees-1319 Why do you kill me?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Would God have made the world to damn it? pascal-pensees-1319 ( Is this all they have to say? pascal-pensees-1319 ( Is this contrary to Scripture? pascal-pensees-1319 --And why? pascal-pensees-1319 ... Shall he alone who knows his nature know it only to be miserable? pascal-pensees-1319 115_ Variety._--Theology is a science, but at the same time how many sciences? pascal-pensees-1319 142_ Diversion._--Is not the royal dignity sufficiently great in itself to make its possessor happy by the mere contemplation of what he is? pascal-pensees-1319 188 In every dialogue and discourse, we must be able to say to those who take offence,Of what do you complain?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 190 To pity atheists who seek, for are they not unhappy enough? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 191 And will this one scoff at the other? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 208 Why is my knowledge limited? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 209 Art thou less a slave by being loved and favoured by thy master? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 20_ Order._--Why should I undertake to divide my virtues into four rather than into six? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 222_ Atheists._--What reason have they for saying that we can not rise from the dead? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 223 What have they to say against the resurrection, and against the child- bearing of the Virgin? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 227_ Order by dialogues._--What ought I to do? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 293"Why do you kill me? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 294 On what shall man found the order of the world which he would govern? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 301 Why do we follow the majority? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 323 What is the Ego? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 438 If man is not made for God, why is he only happy in God? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 44 Do you wish people to believe good of you? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 478 When we want to think of God, is there nothing which turns us away, and tempts us to think of something else? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 514 The elect will be ignorant of their virtues, and the outcast of the greatness of their sins:"Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered, thirsty?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 538 What difference in point of obedience is there between a soldier and a Carthusian monk? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 557 What shall we conclude from all our darkness, but our unworthiness? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 623 Why should Moses make the lives of men so long, and their generations so few? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 742_ Proofs of Jesus Christ._ Why was the book of Ruth preserved? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 748"If this was clearly foretold to the Jews, how did they not believe it, or why were they not destroyed for resisting a fact so clear?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 750 What do the prophets say of Jesus Christ? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 761 What could the Jews, His enemies, do? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 791 What man ever had more renown? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 793 Why did Jesus Christ not come in a visible manner, instead of obtaining testimony of Himself from preceding prophecies? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 799 Who has taught the evangelists the qualities of a perfectly heroic soul, that they paint it so perfectly in Jesus Christ? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 80 How comes it that a cripple does not offend us, but that a fool does? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 848 Will_ Est et non est_ be received in faith itself as well as in miracles? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 874 Would the Pope be dishonoured by having his knowledge from God and tradition; and is it not dishonouring him to separate him from this holy union? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 907 But is it_ probable_ that_ probability_ gives assurance? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 909 Can it be anything but compliance with the world which makes you find things probable? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 910 Must we kill to prevent there being any wicked? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | 92 What are our natural principles but principles of custom? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Alii: Quomodo potest homo peccator hæc signa facere?_ Which is the most clear? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Alii: Quomodo potest homo peccator hæc signa facere?_ Which is the most clear? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Am I not about to die? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And by what chance does each man ordinarily choose what he has heard praised? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And he will reply,"But what is the use of seeking? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And how can it happen that the following argument occurs to a reasonable man? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And how could the nations be converted to the Messiah, if they did not see this final effect of the prophecies which prove Him? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And how love the body or the soul, except for these qualities which do not constitute_ me_, since they are perishable? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And if they had never seen any species of animals, could they have conjectured whether they were produced without connection with each other? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And if you do not fear that men do justice, do you not fear that God does justice? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And if, knowing this, we do not desire deliverance, what can we say of a man...? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And indeed to what use in life could one put him? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And is it not equally true that we experience every hour the results of our deplorable condition? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And is there a greater tyrant than the evil leaven? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And others said,"Can a devil open the eyes of the blind?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And they ask,"What have you to make you believed rather than others? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And under the Babylonians, when no persecution had been made, and when there were so many prophets, would they have let them be burnt? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And what is more believed? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And what more satisfactory object could be presented to his mind? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And who has told us that the hen may not form the germ as well as the cock? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And who is not unhappy at having only one eye? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And who shall then direct him to it? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | And yet what man enjoys this renown less? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Are they so worthy of belief on account of the virtue of their authors? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Behold, I was left alone; these, where had they been? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But does he who loves someone on account of beauty really love that person? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But has this prophet, who was to be the last hope of the world, been foretold? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But have any of the rulers or of the Pharisees believed on him? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But how shall one who is so weak in his childhood become really strong when he grows older? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But how will he set about it? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But if natural things are beyond it, what will be said of supernatural? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But to which side shall we incline? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But what are the books which assure us of this? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But what is nature? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But what is this thought? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But what will man do? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But what will you say is good? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But who shall determine it in truth and morality? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But whom wilt thou compare? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But will it be the same with a king, and will he be happier in the pursuit of these idle amusements than in the contemplation of his greatness? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But will you say what object has he in all this? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But your happiness? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But, after that, if He did not appear to them, who inspired them to act? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | But, still, is there no means of seeing the faces of the cards?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | By what law? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | By whose order and direction have this place and time been allotted to me? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Can a woman forget her child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Can we imagine anything more charitable and pleasant? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Can we think seriously on the importance of this subject without being horrified at conduct so extravagant? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Certainly you will not have those poisonous pleasures, glory and luxury; but will you not have others? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Chastity? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Christ._) 900_ Humilibus dat gratiam; an ideo non dedit humilitatem? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Could so many contradictions be found in a simple subject? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Do all these passages indicate what is real? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Do they not know how to paint a resolute death? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Do they then indicate what is typical? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Do you censure all? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Do you not say yourself that the heavens and birds prove God?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Do you think that the prophecies cited in the Gospel are related to make you believe? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Does God speak against miracles, against the foundations of the faith which we have in Him? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Does He speak of the evidence of the prophecies? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Does a hen not lay eggs without a cock? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Does he continually speak of the evidence of the prophecies? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Does it not say all this?) |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Does it therefore follow that they would have the right to exclude all the prophets who came to them? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Et ingemiscens ait: Quid generatio ista signum quærit?_( Mark viii, 12.) |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Fear ye not: have I not told you all these things? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For in fact what is man in nature? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For is custom not natural? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For is it not clearer than day that we perceive within ourselves ineffaceable marks of excellence? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For is it right that we should deceive men? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For what good is it to us? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For what will the heretics say? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For who doubts that geometry, for instance, has an infinite infinity of problems to solve? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For who is unhappy at not being a king, except a deposed king? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For whom will men choose, as the most virtuous and able? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | For without this, what can we say that man is? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Has a vine ever produced two bunches exactly the same, and has a bunch two grapes alike? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Have not I, the Lord?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Have the men of old given absolution before penance? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Have they arms, legs, muscles, nerves? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Have they been more fortunate in locating her? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Have they been preserved with such care that we can be sure that they have not been meddled with?] |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Have they found the remedy for our ills? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Hosea, the last chapter, the last verse, after many temporal blessings, says:"Who is wise, and he shall understand these things, etc.?") |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Hosea,_ ult._, says excellently,"Where is the wise? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How can a part know the whole? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How can he think of his own affairs, pray, when he has this other matter in hand? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How can people hold these opinions? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How can they be sure they would do a thing of the nature of which they are ignorant? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How could they have given remedies for your ills, when they did not even know them? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How could this prophecy be fulfilled without the conversion of the nations? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How far, then? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How few things are demonstrated? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How long is necessary? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How many natures exist in man? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | How many vocations? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | If I pass by, can I say that he placed himself there to see me? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | If general consent, if men had perished? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | If man is made for God, why is he so opposed to God? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | If the Gospel be true, if Jesus Christ be God, what difficulty is there? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | If the miracles are true, shall we be able to persuade men of all doctrine? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Indeed who do not see it but youths who are absorbed in fame, diversion, and the thought of the future? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is it because they are more sound? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is it by reason that you love yourself? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is it more difficult to come into existence than to return to it? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is it not for your iniquities and for your transgressions that I have put it away? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is it not, on the contrary, a thing to say sadly, as the saddest thing in the world? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is man''s pride cured by placing him on an equality with God? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is my arm shortened, that I can not redeem? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is pleasure only the ballet of our spirits? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is that lawful? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is then the soul too noble a subject for their feeble lights? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is there a greater distance between infidelity and faith than between faith and virtue? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is there no rule whereby to judge men? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is there not one substantial truth, seeing there are so many things which are not the truth itself? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is this a thing to say gaily? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is this all they have to say? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is this all? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Is this the true good? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | It is because they have more reason? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | It is not certain that it is; but who will venture to say that it is certainly possible that it is not? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Marriage? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Must he be diverted from this thought like ordinary folk? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Nicodemus answered:"Doth our law judge any man before it hear him,[ and specially, such a man who works such miracles]?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Not to kill? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Now, of what does the world think? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Of works? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall I believe I am God? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall I believe I am nothing? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall he alone who knows it be alone unhappy? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall he doubt everything? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall he doubt whether he doubts? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall he doubt whether he exists? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall he doubt whether he is awake, whether he is being pinched, or whether he is being burned? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall it be on justice? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall it be on the caprice of each individual? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall it be that of the philosophers, who put forward as the chief good, the good which is in ourselves? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall the prey be taken from the mighty? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall we profit by it? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall we then have no rule? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Shall we yield to this weight because it is natural? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | That He will be clearly God? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | The Jewish exorcists beaten by the devils, saying,"Jesus I know, and Paul I know; but who are ye?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | The harbour decides for those who are in a ship; but where shall we find a harbour in morality? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Then I said, Lord, have I laboured in vain? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Then shalt thou say in thy heart: Who hath begotten me these, seeing I have lost my children, and am desolate, a captive, and removing to and fro? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | This being so, who will dare to undertake the decision of the question? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | This is absurd; for since, though having faith, we can not have virtues, how should we have faith? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Thyself, or Me in thee? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Timore et tremore.--Quid ergo? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | To Judas:_ Amice, ad quid venisti?_ To him that had not on the wedding garment, the same. |
pascal-pensees-1319 | To kill? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Was Paulus Æmilius unhappy at being no longer consul? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | We must pardon Him this saying: Quid debui? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | We should therefore act as if we were alone, and in that case should we build fine houses, etc.? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What but this faculty of imagination dispenses reputation, awards respect and veneration to persons, works, laws, and the great? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What can be clearer than that this was not concerted? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What distinguishes these outwardly from others? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What does he say then, that we must believe him? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What have they found out about her origin, duration, and departure? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What have they thought of her substance? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What have those great dogmatists, who are ignorant of nothing, known of this matter? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What have you to lose? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What is a man in the Infinite? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What is less reasonable than to choose the eldest son of a queen to rule a State? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What is more difficult, to be born or to rise again; that what has never been should be, or that what has been should be again? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What is there in the void that could make them afraid? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What joy can we find in the expectation of nothing but hopeless misery? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What kind of nature is that which is subject to decay? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What matter could do that? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What miracles does he himself say that he has done? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What must we say then of our own heart, when we see in it a wholly different disposition? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What mysteries has he taught, even according to his own tradition? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What other people had such a zeal? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What part, then, has He in this renown? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What reason for boasting that we are in impenetrable darkness? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What religion but the Christian has known this? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What religion, then, will teach us to cure pride and lust? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What said they to those who opposed this? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What say they then? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What says Jesus Christ? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What says Saint Paul? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What sign do you give? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What sign has he that every other man has not, who chooses to call himself a prophet? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What then actually happened? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What then shall man do in this state? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What then was done? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What then? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What was the morality, what the happiness held out by him? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What will you wager? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What, then, shall we be? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What, then, will man become? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | What, then, would you have me do?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | When Jesus Christ foretold the miracles of Antichrist, did He think of destroying faith in His own miracles? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | When they say that it will be eternal, do they mean to speak of that covenant which they say will be changed; and so of the sacrifices, etc.? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Whence came this influence? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Whence comes it, then, that reason thinks it honourable to succumb under stress of pain, and disgraceful to yield to the attack of pleasure? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Whence comes this? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Where is God? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Where, then, is this Ego, if it be neither in the body nor in the soul? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Which has deceived you, your senses or your education? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Which is the more difficult, to produce a man or an animal, or to reproduce it? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Which is the most clear? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Which of us two shall have precedence? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Which will you choose then? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who among them can declare this, and shew us former things, and things to come? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who does not see from all this that man has gone astray, that he has fallen from his place, that he anxiously seeks it, that he can not find it again? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who does not see that there is nothing so opposed to justice and truth? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who does not see the Christian law in all this? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who doubts then that our soul, being accustomed to see number, space, motion, believes that and nothing else? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who else is known of all? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who has demonstrated that there will be a to- morrow, and that we shall die? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who has put me here? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who hath declared this from ancient time? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who hath told it from that time? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who is unhappy at having only one mouth? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who keeps the due mean? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who ought to scoff? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who renders testimony to Mahomet? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who then can refuse to believe and adore this heavenly light? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who will follow these marvellous processes? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who will give place to the other? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who will then be surprised to see that religion only makes us know profoundly what we already know in proportion to our light? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who will unravel this tangle? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who would choose him out from others to tell him of his affairs? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who would desire to have for a friend a man who talks in this fashion? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who would have recourse to him in affliction? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who would not think, seeing us compose all things of mind and body, but that this mixture would be quite intelligible to us? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Who,"( among contemporary writers),"hath declared from the beginning that we may know of the things done from the beginning and origin? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why can not a virgin bear a child? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why did He cause Himself to be foretold in types? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why do they make Him weak in His agony? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why do we follow the ancient laws and opinions? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why do you not accuse them of Arianism? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why into_ Abstine et sustine_ rather than into"Follow Nature,"or,"Conduct your private affairs without injustice,"as Plato, or anything else? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why my life to one hundred years rather than to a thousand? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why my stature? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why should I rather establish virtue in four, in two, in one? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why the story of Tamar? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why, then, do any complain, if it be such as can be found by seeking? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Why? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Will he be equal to God or the brutes? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Will he say,"Perhaps they are forged?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | Would He ask so much from persons so weak?" |
pascal-pensees-1319 | [ Which is the more credible of the two, Moses or China?] |
pascal-pensees-1319 | _ Pravum est cor omnium et incrustabile; quis cognoscet illud?_ that is to say, Who can know all its evil? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | _ Pravum est cor omnium et incrustabile; quis cognoscet illud?_ that is to say, Who can know all its evil? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | _ Quis mihi det ut omnes prophetent?_ He was weary of the multitude. |
pascal-pensees-1319 | _ Quod ergo tu facis signum ut videamus et credamus tibi?--Non dicunt: Quam doctrinam prædicas? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | _ The end of this discourse._--Now, what harm will befall you in taking this side? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | _ Tu quid dicis? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | _ Ubi est Deus tuus?_ Miracles show Him, and are a light. |
pascal-pensees-1319 | _ Vide si via iniquitatis in me est._ What happens thereupon? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | and neglect to examine them? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | and who brought up these? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | and why have I delivered it into the hands of your enemies? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | do you not live on the other side of the water? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | even my respect? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | have I spent my strength for nought? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | vii, 22:"What avails it you to add sacrifice to sacrifice? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | what could be done? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | who try to find out by your natural reason what is your true condition? |
pascal-pensees-1319 | who will be mine adversary, and accuse me of sin, God himself being my protector? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | AUFIDIUS Ay, Marcius, Caius Marcius: dost thou think I''ll grace thee with that robbery, thy stol''n name Coriolanus in Corioli? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | AUFIDIUS I know thee not: thy name? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | AUFIDIUS Is it not yours? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | AUFIDIUS Say, what''s thy name? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | AUFIDIUS What is thy name? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | AUFIDIUS Why, noble lords, Will you be put in mind of his blind fortune, Which was your shame, by this unholy braggart,''Fore your own eyes and ears? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | And is Aufidius with him? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS But is this true, sir? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS But since he hath Served well for Rome,-- CORIOLANUS What do you prate of service? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS Good or bad? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS How accompanied? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS If it were so,-- SICINIUS What do ye talk? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS Mark you that? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS What then, sir? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS Why, shall the people give One that speaks thus their voice? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | BRUTUS Why? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Both Why, how are we censured? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | But as a discontented friend, grief- shot With his unkindness? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | But, I beseech you, What says the other troop? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | But, worthy lords, have you with heed perused What I have written to you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | COMINIUS But how prevail''d you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | COMINIUS Flower of warriors, How is it with Titus Lartius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | COMINIUS Hath he not pass''d the noble and the common? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | COMINIUS O, ay, what else? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | COMINIUS Where is that slave Which told me they had beat you to your trenches? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | COMINIUS Who shall ask it? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | COMINIUS Who''s yonder, That does appear as he were flay''d? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | COMINIUS''Tis not a mile; briefly we heard their drums: How couldst thou in a mile confound an hour, And bring thy news so late? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS And live you yet? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Are these your herd? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS At Antium lives he? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Direct me, if it be your will, Where great Aufidius lies: is he in Antium? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Have I had children''s voices? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Have you inform''d them sithence? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Hear''st thou, Mars? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS How? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Is this done? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS May I change these garments? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Must I go show them my unbarbed sconce? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Prepare thy brow to frown: know''st thou me yet? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Saw you Aufidius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Shall I be charged no further than this present? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Spoke he of me? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Well then, I pray, your price o''the consulship? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Well, what then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS What is the matter That being pass''d for consul with full voice, I am so dishonour''d that the very hour You take it off again? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS What makes this change? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS What must I do? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS What must I say? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Where? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Which is his house, beseech you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Why force you this? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Why then should I be consul? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS You? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | CORIOLANUS Your enigma? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Can you think to blow out the intended fire your city is ready to flame in, with such weak breath as this? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Could he not speak''em fair? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Do you know this lady? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Enter CORIOLANUS, MENENIUS, all the Gentry, COMINIUS, TITUS LARTIUS, and other Senators] CORIOLANUS Tullus Aufidius then had made new head? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Enter two Senators with others on the walls] Tutus Aufidius, is he within your walls? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Exeunt all but SICINIUS and BRUTUS] SICINIUS Was ever man so proud as is this Marcius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Exit third Servingman][ Enter AUFIDIUS with the second Servingman] AUFIDIUS Where is this fellow? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Citizen It was an answer: how apply you this? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Citizen Should by the cormorant belly be restrain''d, Who is the sink o''the body,-- MENENIUS Well, what then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Citizen The former agents, if they did complain, What could the belly answer? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Citizen You are all resolved rather to die than to famish? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Citizen Your belly''s answer? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Conspirator How is it with our general? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Senator Do you hear how we are shent for keeping your greatness back? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Senator From whence? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Senator You are a Roman, are you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Servingman But when goes this forward? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Servingman But, more of thy news? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Servingman Why do you say''thwack our general''? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Servingman|| What, what, what? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Servingman|| Wherefore? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | First Soldier Will not you go? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Hadst thou foxship To banish him that struck more blows for Rome Than thou hast spoken words? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Has the porter his eyes in his head; that he gives entrance to such companions? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Have we no wine here? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Have we not had a taste of his obedience? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Have you an army ready, say you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Have you not set them on? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | He call''d me father: But what o''that? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Hear you this Triton of the minnows? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | How does your little son? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | How long is''t since? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | How many stand for consulships? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | How shall this bisson multitude digest The senate''s courtesy? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | I can not do it to the gods; Must I then do''t to them? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | If not, why cease you till you are so? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | If these shows be not outward, which of you But is four Volsces? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | If you see this in the map of my microcosm, follows it that I am known well enough too? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Is he not wounded? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Is the senate possessed of this? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Is''t a verdict? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | LARTIUS Marcius, his name? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Lieutenant Sir, I beseech you, think you he''ll carry Rome? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MARCIUS Here: what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MARCIUS How far off lie these armies? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MARCIUS How lies their battle? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MARCIUS Say, has our general met the enemy? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MARCIUS Will the time serve to tell? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MARCIUS[ Within] Come I too late? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Because you talk of pride now,--will you not be angry? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Do you hear? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Has he dined, canst thou tell? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Has he disciplined Aufidius soundly? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS In what enormity is Marcius poor in, that you two have not in abundance? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Is this the promise that you made your mother? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Nay, but, fellow, fellow,--[ Enter CORIOLANUS and AUFIDIUS] CORIOLANUS What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Pray now, your news? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Pray you, who does the wolf love? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Sham it be put to that? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS So do I too, if it be not too much: brings a''victory in his pocket? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS The matter? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS This is strange now: do you two know how you are censured here in the city, I mean of us o''the right- hand file? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Very well: Could he say less? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Well said, noble woman? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Well, and say that Marcius Return me, as Cominius is return''d, Unheard; what then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS What is about to be? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS What is granted them? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS What news? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS What should I do? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS What work''s, my countrymen, in hand? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS What, what? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | MENENIUS Why, masters, my good friends, mine honest neighbours, Will you undo yourselves? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Must I with base tongue give my noble heart A lie that it must bear? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Must all determine here? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Must these have voices, that can yield them now And straight disclaim their tongues? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Nay, mother, Where is your ancient courage? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Now, good Aufidius, Were you in my stead, would you have heard A mother less? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Our aediles smote? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Please you To hear Cominius speak? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Roman I am a Roman; and my services are, as you are, against''em: know you me yet? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Are you mankind? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Come, what talk you Of Marcius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Friend, Art thou certain this is true? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Have you Ere now denied the asker? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Have you a catalogue Of all the voices that we have procured Set down by the poll? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Have you collected them by tribes? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Mark you this, people? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Not? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Sir, how comes''t that you Have holp to make this rescue? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS They are near the city? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS This a consul? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS What is the city but the people? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS What more fearful? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS What then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS When we were chosen tribunes for the people,-- BRUTUS Mark''d you his lip and eyes? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Where is he, hear you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Why either were you ignorant to see''t, Or, seeing it, of such childish friendliness To yield your voices? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Why stay we to be baited With one that wants her wits? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | SICINIUS Why, what of that? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Second Citizen Consider you what services he has done for his country? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Second Citizen Think you so? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Second Citizen Why that way? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Second Citizen Would you proceed especially against Caius Marcius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Second Messenger As certain as I know the sun is fire: Where have you lurk''d, that you make doubt of it? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Second Senator What cause, do you think, I have to swoon? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Second Servingman Are you so brave? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Second Servingman Who, my master? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Shall''s to the Capitol? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | The belly answer''d-- First Citizen Well, sir, what answer made the belly? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | The first meets him] Third Servingman What fellow''s this? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | The matter? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | The other side o''the city is risen: why stay we prating here? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Then thou dwellest with daws too? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Think''st thou it honourable for a noble man Still to remember wrongs? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Third Citizen Are you all resolved to give your voices? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Third Citizen How not your own desire? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Third Servingman What are you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Third Servingman Where''s that? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Thou show''st a noble vessel: what''s thy name? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Trust Ye? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | VALERIA How do you both? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | VIRGILIA But had he died in the business, madam; how then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | VIRGILIA Indeed, madam? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | VOLUMNIA Ay, fool; is that a shame? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | VOLUMNIA Why, I pray you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Volsce Nicanor? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Was it we? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Was not a man my father? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Was not this mockery? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Well, what then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What are you sewing here? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What are your offices? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What do you think, You, the great toe of this assembly? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What ever have been thought on in this state, That could be brought to bodily act ere Rome Had circumvention? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What good condition can a treaty find I''the part that is at mercy? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What has he done to Rome that''s worthy death? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What have you done? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What is that curt''sy worth? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What is''t? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What say you to''t? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What should the people do with these bald tribunes? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What would you have, you curs, That like nor peace nor war? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What''s the matter, you dissentious rogues, That, rubbing the poor itch of your opinion, Make yourselves scabs? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What''s the news in Rome? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What''s their seeking? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | What, art thou stiff? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Where is he wounded? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Where is he wounded? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Where is he? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Where is the enemy? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Whereto we are bound, together with thy victory, Whereto we are bound? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Which way do you judge my wit would fly? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Whither wilt thou go? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Who is''t can blame him? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Why dost not speak? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Why in this woolvish toge should I stand here, To beg of Hob and Dick, that do appear, Their needless vouches? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Why speak''st not? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Why, had your bodies No heart among you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Will you along? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Will you hence, Before the tag return? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | With other muniments and petty helps In this our fabric, if that they-- MENENIUS What then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Wouldst thou have laugh''d had I come coffin''d home, That weep''st to see me triumph? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | You being their mouths, why rule you not their teeth? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | You blame Marcius for being proud? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | You''ll sup with me? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Your good voice, sir; what say you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Your knees to me? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | Your request? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Alarum continues][ Re- enter TITUS LARTIUS] LARTIUS What is become of Marcius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter AUFIDIUS and his Lieutenant] AUFIDIUS Do they still fly to the Roman? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter MARCIUS] MARCIUS Come I too late? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter MENENIUS and SICINIUS] MENENIUS See you yond coign o''the Capitol, yond corner- stone? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter MENENIUS] Is this Menenius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter VOLUMNIA] I talk of you: Why did you wish me milder? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter a Messenger, hastily] Messenger Where''s Caius Marcius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter a Messenger] BRUTUS What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter a Messenger] Thy news? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter a second Messenger] SICINIUS What''s the news? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter an AEdile] What, will he come? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Enter to them, MENENIUS] First Senator Stay: whence are you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Exeunt CORIOLANUS and AUFIDIUS] First Senator Now, sir, is your name Menenius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Exeunt Citizens] MENENIUS O sir, you are not right: have you not known The worthiest men have done''t? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Exit] Third Servingman Where dwellest thou? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Exit][ Enter a second Servingman] Second Servingman Where''s Cotus? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Kneels] CORIOLANUS What is this? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Pushes him away] Third Servingman What, you will not? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Re- enter BRUTUS and SICINIUS, with the rabble] SICINIUS Where is this viper That would depopulate the city and Be every man himself? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Re- enter second Servingman] Second Servingman Whence are you, sir? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Re- enter the first Servingman] First Servingman What would you have, friend? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Retires] AUFIDIUS Whence comest thou? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Retires] Third Servingman What have you to do here, fellow? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Shout within] Shall I be tempted to infringe my vow In the same time''tis made? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ Shouts within] What shouts are these? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | [ To BRUTUS] Will you be gone? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | and now again Of him that did not ask, but mock, bestow Your sued- for tongues? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | are you lords o''the field? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | at the senate- house? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | do you meddle with my master? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | do you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | have you chose this man? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | his choler? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | is it ended, then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | is it most certain? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | know you on which side They have placed their men of trust? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | make you a sword of me? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | mark you His absolute''shall''? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | or granted less, Aufidius? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | or had you tongues to cry Against the rectorship of judgment? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | or those doves''eyes, Which can make gods forsworn? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | ourselves resisted? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | say''t be so? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | speak, man: what''s thy name? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | stand''st out? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | thy name? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | to your corrected son? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what barm can your bisson conspectuities glean out of this character, if I be known well enough too? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what consul? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what is that? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what news? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what shout is this? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what then? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what wouldst thou? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what''s that? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what''s the news? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | what? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | whence are you? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | where go you With bats and clubs? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | wherefore? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | who comes here? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | why the great toe? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | will you dismiss the people? |
shakespeare-coriolanus-2187 | would you have me False to my nature? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | ''O my sweet Harry,''says she,''how many hast thou killed to- day?'' |
shakespeare-first-4160 | ''Zounds, I am afraid of this gunpowder Percy, though he be dead: how, if he should counterfeit too and rise? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | A borrow''d title hast thou bought too dear: Why didst thou tell me that thou wert a king? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | A gallant prize? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | And is not a buff jerkin a most sweet robe of durance? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | And is not my hostess of the tavern a most sweet wench? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | And shall it in more shame be further spoken, That you are fool''d, discarded and shook off By him for whom these shames ye underwent? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | And tell me now, thou naughty varlet, tell me, where hast thou been this month? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | And what say you to this? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | And wouldst thou turn our offers contrary? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Are the indentures drawn? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Art thou alive? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Art thou not ashamed? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Art thou not horribly afraid? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | BARDOLPH My lord, do you see these meteors? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | BARDOLPH My lord? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | BARDOLPH What think you they portend? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | BARDOLPH Will you give me money, captain? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Bardolph, what news? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | But hark ye; what cunning match have you made with this jest of the drawer? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | But tell me, Hal, art not thou horrible afeard? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | But tell me, Jack, whose fellows are these that come after? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | But wherefore do I tell these news to thee? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | But will it not live with the living? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | But, Francis, darest thou be so valiant as to play the coward with thy indenture and show it a fair pair of heels and run from it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Can honour set to a leg? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Chamberlain What, the commonwealth their boots? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Counterfeit? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Did you not tell me this fat man was dead? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Do you not love me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Doth he feel it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Doth he hear it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | EARL OF WORCESTER I can not blame him: was not he proclaim''d By Richard that dead is the next of blood? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | EARL OF WORCESTER I prithee, tell me, doth he keep his bed? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | EARL OF WORCESTER Who struck this heat up after I was gone? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Are not you a coward? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Depose me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Did I, Bardolph? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Didst thou? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Dost thou hear me, Hal? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Dost thou hear, Hal? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Dost thou hear, Hal? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Hal, wilt thou make one? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Hang ye, gorbellied knaves, are ye undone? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Have you any levers to lift me up again, being down? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF I would your grace would take me with you: whom means your grace? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF In buckram? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Shall I? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Shall I? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF The king is to be feared as the lion: dost thou think I''ll fear thee as I fear thy father? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF What doth gravity out of his bed at midnight? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF What manner of man is he? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF What, is the king encamped? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF What, upon compulsion? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Where''s Poins, Hal? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF Wilt thou believe me, Hal? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FALSTAFF''Zounds, will they not rob us? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FRANCIS My lord? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FRANCIS My lord? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | FRANCIS What, sir? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | For what offence have I this fortnight been A banish''d woman from my Harry''s bed? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Four rogues in buckram let drive at me-- PRINCE HENRY What, four? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | GADSHILL Sirrah carrier, what time do you mean to come to London? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | GADSHILL What talkest thou to me of the hangman? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | GLENDOWER Come, here''s the map: shall we divide our right According to our threefold order ta''en? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | GLENDOWER Not wind? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Go, you thing, go Hostess Say, what thing? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR But soft, I pray you; did King Richard then Proclaim my brother Edmund Mortimer Heir to the crown? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Come, wilt thou see me ride? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Did you beg any? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Hath Butler brought those horses from the sheriff? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Lord Mortimer, and cousin Glendower, Will you sit down? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR No harm: what more? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Of York, is it not? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR This, Douglas? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR What horse? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR What may the king''s whole battle reach unto? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR What say''st thou, my lady? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Where? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Who shall say me nay? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Why say you so? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Why, it can not choose but be a noble plot; And then the power of Scotland and of York, To join with Mortimer, ha? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | HOTSPUR Will not you? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | He could be contented: why is he not, then? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Honour hath no skill in surgery, then? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Hostess He? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Hostess Say, what beast, thou knave, thou? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Hostess Who, I? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Hostess Why, Sir John, what do you think, Sir John? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | How doth thy husband? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | How long is''t ago, Jack, since thou sawest thine own knee? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | How''scapes he agues, in the devil''s name? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | I a thief? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | If then thou be son to me, here lies the point; why, being son to me, art thou so pointed at? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Is there no virtue extant? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Is there not my father, my uncle and myself? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | LADY PERCY Do you not love me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | LADY PERCY O, my good lord, why are you thus alone? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | LADY PERCY What is it carries you away? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | LADY PERCY What''s that? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | LADY PERCY Wouldst thou have thy head broken? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Lend me thy lantern, quoth he? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Misuse the tenor of thy kinsman''s trust? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | NORTHUMBERLAND What, drunk with choler? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | O, if men were to be saved by merit, what hole in hell were hot enough for him? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | O, what portents are these? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Or is it fantasy that plays upon our eyesight? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PETO How many be there of them? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | POINS Come, let''s hear, Jack; what trick hast thou now? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | POINS Where hast been, Hal? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | POINS You will, chops? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY And why not as the lion? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Anon, Francis? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Did I ever call for thee to pay thy part? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Dost thou speak like a king? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY For obtaining of suits? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Give it to me: what, is it in the case? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY How long hast thou to serve, Francis? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY How old art thou, Francis? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY How shall we part with them in setting forth? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY I say''tis copper: darest thou be as good as thy word now? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY I think it is good morrow, is it not? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Lead me, my lord? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Nay, but hark you, Francis: for the sugar thou gavest me,''twas a pennyworth, wast''t not? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Ned, where are our disguises? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Now, Harry, whence come you? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Seven? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Sirrah, Falstaff and the rest of the thieves are at the door: shall we be merry? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Sirrah, do I owe you a thousand pound? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Speak, sirs; how was it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Swearest thou, ungracious boy? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Well, how then? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What didst thou lose, Jack? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What manner of man, an it like your majesty? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What men? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What sayest thou to a hare, or the melancholy of Moor- ditch? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What sayest thou, Jack? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What sayest thou, Mistress Quickly? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What, a coward, Sir John Paunch? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What, a hundred, man? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY What, fought you with them all? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Where is it, Jack? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Where shall we take a purse tomorrow, Jack? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Who, I rob? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Why, how couldst thou know these men in Kendal green, when it was so dark thou couldst not see thy hand? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Why, what a pox have I to do with my hostess of the tavern? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY Why, you whoreson round man, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | PRINCE HENRY''Faith, tell me now in earnest, how came Falstaff''s sword so hacked? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | SIR WALTER BLUNT Shall I return this answer to the king? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Say you so, say you so? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Second Carrier Ay, when? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Shall I give him his answer? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Shall I let them in? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Shall I tell you, cousin? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Shall our coffers, then, Be emptied to redeem a traitor home? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Shall the blessed sun of heaven prove a micher and eat blackberries? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Shall the sun of England prove a thief and take purses? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Shall we but treason? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Tell me, sweet lord, what is''t that takes from thee Thy stomach, pleasure and thy golden sleep? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Tell me, tell me, How show''d his tasking? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Then enter DOUGLAS and SIR WALTER BLUNT] SIR WALTER BLUNT What is thy name, that in the battle thus Thou crossest me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Thou hadst fire and sword on thy side, and yet thou rannest away: what instinct hadst thou for it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Uncle, what news? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Under whose government come they along? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What a devil hast thou to do with the time of the day? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What a plague mean ye to colt me thus? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What is honour? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What is in that word honour? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What need I be so forward with him that calls not on me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What say you to it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What say you to it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What say''st thou, Kate? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What says Monsieur Remorse? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What think you, coz, Of this young Percy''s pride? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What trick, what device, what starting- hole, canst thou now find out to hide thee from this open and apparent shame? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What''s o''clock? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What, shall we be merry? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | What, will you make a younker of me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Where is he living, clipp''d in with the sea That chides the banks of England, Scotland, Wales, Which calls me pupil, or hath read to me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Where is his son, The nimble- footed madcap Prince of Wales, And his comrades, that daff''d the world aside, And bid it pass? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Where shall I find one that can steal well? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Wherein is he good, but to taste sack and drink it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Who hath it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Who leads his power? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Why an otter? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Why dost thou bend thine eyes upon the earth, And start so often when thou sit''st alone? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Why hast thou lost the fresh blood in thy cheeks; And given my treasures and my rights of thee To thick- eyed musing and cursed melancholy? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Why may not he rise as well as I? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Why, Harry, do I tell thee of my foes, Which art my near''st and dearest enemy? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Why, hear you, my masters: was it for me to kill the heir- apparent? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Why, thou clay- brained guts, thou knotty- pated fool, thou whoreson, obscene, grease tallow- catch,-- FALSTAFF What, art thou mad? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Why? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Will this content you, Kate? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | Yea, but how if honour prick me off when I come on? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | You are Grand- jurors, are ye? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | You are straight enough in the shoulders, you care not who sees your back: call you that backing of your friends? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | You confess then, you picked my pocket? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Enter BLUNT] How now, good Blunt? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Enter FALSTAFF and BARDOLPH] FALSTAFF Bardolph, am I not fallen away vilely since this last action? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Enter FALSTAFF, GADSHILL, BARDOLPH, and PETO; FRANCIS following with wine] POINS Welcome, Jack: where hast thou been? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Enter PRINCE HENRY] PRINCE HENRY What, stand''st thou idle here? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Enter Servant] Is Gilliams with the packet gone? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Enter the PRINCE OF WALES and FALSTAFF] FALSTAFF Now, Hal, what time of day is it, lad? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Exeunt WORCESTER and VERNON, guarded] How goes the field? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Exeunt all except PRINCE HENRY and PETO][ Enter Sheriff and the Carrier] Now, master sheriff, what is your will with me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Exit Francis] My lord, old Sir John, with half- a- dozen more, are at the door: shall I let them in? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Exit Hostess] Now Hal, to the news at court: for the robbery, lad, how is that answered? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ He drinks] PRINCE HENRY Didst thou never see Titan kiss a dish of butter? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ He searcheth his pockets, and findeth certain papers] What hast thou found? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ PRINCE HENRY draws it out, and finds it to be a bottle of sack] PRINCE HENRY What, is it a time to jest and dally now? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ Re- enter FRANCIS] What''s o''clock, Francis? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | [ They fight: DOUGLAS flies] Cheerly, my lord how fares your grace? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | a roan, a crop- ear, is it not? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | and are they not some of them set forward already? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | and indent with fears, When they have lost and forfeited themselves? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | and resolution thus fobbed as it is with the rusty curb of old father antic the law? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | answer me to that: and Poins there? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | art thou mad? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | can''st tell? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | canst not hear? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | come, tell us your reason: what sayest thou to this? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | come, what''s the issue? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | could not all this flesh Keep in a little life? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | did not we send grace, Pardon and terms of love to all of you? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | do I not bate? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | do I not dwindle? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | do you behold these exhalations? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | do you not, indeed? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | do you think I keep thieves in my house? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | dost thou not hear them call? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | doth not thy blood thrill at it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | ha, cousin, is it not? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | hast thou never an eye in thy head? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | hast thou no faith in thee? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | have I not all their letters to meet me in arms by the ninth of the next month? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | have you inquired yet who picked my pocket? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | he did not? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | how agrees the devil and thee about thy soul, that thou soldest him on Good- Friday last for a cup of Madeira and a cold capon''s leg? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | how comes it, then? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | how has he the leisure to be sick In such a rustling time? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | how then? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | is not the truth the truth? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | is the wind in that door, i''faith? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | is there not besides the Douglas? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | look upon his face; what call you rich? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | looks he not for supply? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | lord Edmund Mortimer, My lord of York and Owen Glendower? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | must we all march? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | no: or an arm? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | no: or take away the grief of a wound? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | poor? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | seem''d it in contempt? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | shall I be your ostler? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | shall I not take mine case in mine inn but I shall have my pocket picked? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | shall we be gone? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | shall we have a play extempore? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | should I turn upon the true prince? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | so far? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | the devil rides upon a fiddlestick: what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | thou being heir- apparent, could the world pick thee out three such enemies again as that fiend Douglas, that spirit Percy, and that devil Glendower? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | thou knowest in the state of innocency Adam fell; and what should poor Jack Falstaff do in the days of villany? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | to set so rich a main On the nice hazard of one doubtful hour? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what a devil dost thou in Warwickshire? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what a plague have I to do with a buff jerkin? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what honour dost thou seek Upon my head? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what is that honour? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what mutter you? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what sayest thou to me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what says Sir John Sack and Sugar? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what thing? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what would''st thou have with me? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | what, in thy quips and thy quiddities? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | where is it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | wherein crafty, but in villany? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | wherein cunning, but in craft? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | wherein neat and cleanly, but to carve a capon and eat it? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | wherein villanous, but in all things? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | wherein worthy, but in nothing? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | who are you? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | whom have we here? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | why comes he not himself? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | will she hold out water in foul way? |
shakespeare-first-4160 | will you again unknit This curlish knot of all- abhorred war? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | After all, may not another ground be taken on which this article of the Constitution will admit of a still more ready defense? hamilton-federalist-2506 Why,"say they,"should we adopt an imperfect thing? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | ( 1) Are we even in a condition to remonstrate with dignity? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | And how could it have happened otherwise? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | And how far does this combination characterize the plan which has been reported by the convention? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | And it is asked by what authority this bold and radical innovation was undertaken? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | And what are the different classes of legislators but advocates and parties to the causes which they determine? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | And what is there in all this that can not as well be performed by the national legislature as by a State legislature? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | And who is there that will either take the trouble or incur the odium, of a strict scrutiny into the secret springs of the transaction? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | And will he not, from his own interest in that species of property, be sufficiently prone to resist every attempt to prejudice or encumber it? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are fleets and armies and revenues necessary to this purpose? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are not popular assemblies frequently subject to the impulses of rage, resentment, jealousy, avarice, and of other irregular and violent propensities? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are not the former administered by MEN as well as the latter? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are suppositions of this sort the sober admonitions of discerning patriots to a discerning people? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are the State governments to be stigmatized as tyrannies, because they possess this power? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are there engagements to the performance of which we are held by every tie respectable among men? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are there not aversions, predilections, rivalships, and desires of unjust acquisitions, that affect nations as well as kings? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are they agreed, are any two of them agreed, in their objections to the remedy proposed, or in the proper one to be substituted? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are they not the genuine and the characteristic means by which republican government provides for the liberty and happiness of the people? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are they not the identical means on which every State government in the Union relies for the attainment of these important ends? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are they only to be met with in the towns or cities? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are we afraid of foreign gold? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are we entitled by nature and compact to a free participation in the navigation of the Mississippi? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are we in a condition to resent or to repel the aggression? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Are"the wealthy and the well- born,"as they are called, confined to particular spots in the several States? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But SUSPICION may ask, Why then was it introduced? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But a right implies a remedy; and where else could the remedy be deposited, than where it is deposited by the Constitution? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But are they not all that government will admit, and that human prudence can devise? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But could an appeal be made to lie from the State courts to the subordinate federal judicatories? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But does it follow because there is a power to lay them that they will actually be laid? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But even in that case, may he have no object beyond his present station, to which he may sacrifice his independence? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But have they considered whether a better form could have been substituted? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But is it a just idea? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But is not the fact an alarming proof of the danger resulting from a government which does not possess regular powers commensurate to its objects? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But it may be again asked, Who is to judge of the NECESSITY and PROPRIETY of the laws to be passed for executing the powers of the Union? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But might not his nomination be overruled? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But ought not a more direct and explicit provision to have been made in favor of the State courts? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But the question again recurs, upon what pretense could he be put in possession of a force of that magnitude in time of peace? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But upon what principle is the discrimination of the places of election to be made, in order to answer the purpose of the meditated preference? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But was it necessary to give an INDEFINITE POWER of raising TROOPS, as well as providing fleets; and of maintaining both in PEACE, as well as in WAR? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But what inference can be drawn from this, or what would they amount to, if they were not to be supreme? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But what is government itself, but the greatest of all reflections on human nature? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But what is to be the object of this capricious partiality in the national councils? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But what would be the contest in the case we are supposing? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But where are the means to be found by the President, or the Senate, or both? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But whether made by one side or the other, would each side enjoy equal advantages on the trial? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But why is the experiment of an extended republic to be rejected, merely because it may comprise what is new? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But why, it is asked, might not the same purpose have been accomplished by the instrumentality of the State courts? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But will not this also be possessed in sufficient degree by a very few intelligent men, diffusively elected within the State? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | But would not her navigation be materially injured by the loss of the important advantage of being her own carrier in that trade? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | By way of answer to this, it has been triumphantly asked, Why not in the first instance omit that ambiguous power, and rely upon the latter resource? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | By what means is this object attainable? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Can it be said that the limits of the United States exceed this distance? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Can not the like knowledge be obtained in the national legislature from the representatives of each State? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Could the Supreme Court have been relied upon as answering this description? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Do the monitors deny the reality of her danger? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Do these fundamental principles require, particularly, that no tax should be levied without the intermediate agency of the States? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Do they begin by exciting the detestation of the very instruments of their intended usurpations? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Do they deny the necessity of some speedy and powerful remedy? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Do they require that the members of the government should derive their appointment from the legislatures, not from the people of the States? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Do they require that the powers of the government should act on the States, and not immediately on individuals? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Do they require that, in the establishment of the Constitution, the States should be regarded as distinct and independent sovereigns? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Do we owe debts to foreigners and to our own citizens contracted in a time of imminent peril for the preservation of our political existence? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Does the American impose on the Congress appropriations for two years? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Does the British Constitution restrain the parliamentary discretion to one year? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | For what inducement could the Senate have to concur in a preference in which itself would not be included? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | For why declare that things shall not be done which there is no power to do? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | From what quarter can the danger proceed? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Had not Congress repeatedly recommended this measure as not inconsistent with the fundamental principles of the Confederation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Had not every State but one; had not New York herself, so far complied with the plan of Congress as to recognize the PRINCIPLE of the innovation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Has commerce hitherto done anything more than change the objects of war? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Has it been found that bodies of men act with more rectitude or greater disinterestedness than individuals? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Has not the spirit of commerce, in many instances, administered new incentives to the appetite, both for the one and for the other? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Have republics in practice been less addicted to war than monarchies? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Have they, by some miraculous instinct or foresight, set apart in each of them a common place of residence? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Have we not had unequivocal experience of its effects in the course of the revolution which we have just accomplished? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Here another question occurs: What relation would subsist between the national and State courts in these instances of concurrent jurisdiction? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How can it ever possess either energy or stability, dignity or credit, confidence at home or respectability abroad? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How can it undertake or execute any liberal or enlarged plans of public good? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How can its administration be any thing else than a succession of expedients temporizing, impotent, disgraceful? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How can perfection spring from such materials? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How can the trade between the different States be duly regulated, without some knowledge of their relative situations in these and other respects? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How could recoveries be enforced? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How could the Senate confer a benefit upon the President by the manner of employing their right of negative upon his nominations? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How could they better gratify this, than by raising a creature of their own to the chief magistracy of the Union? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How far can they be combined with those other ingredients which constitute safety in the republican sense? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How shall we prevent a conflict between charity and conviction? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How will it be able to avoid a frequent sacrifice of its engagements to immediate necessity? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How would it be possible to agree upon a rule of apportionment satisfactory to all? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How, and when, and in what proportion shall aids of men and money be afforded? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | How, in fact, could a majority in the House of Representatives impeach themselves? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | I ask, What are these principles? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | If any question is depending in a State legislature respecting one of the counties, which demands a knowledge of local details, how is it acquired? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | If it should break forth into a storm, who can insure us that in its progress a part of its fury would not be spent upon us? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | If one was attacked, would the others fly to its succor, and spend their blood and money in its defense? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | If the latter, in what relation will they stand to the national tribunals? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | If there should be an army to be made use of as the engine of despotism, what need of the militia? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | If this be the design of it, who can so properly be the inquisitors for the nation as the representatives of the nation themselves? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | If this be their true interest, have they in fact pursued it? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | If, on the contrary, we ought to exceed this point, where can we stop, short of an indefinite power of providing for emergencies as they may arise? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | In relation to what objects? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | In what does our security consist against usurpation from that quarter? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | In what manner is this influence to be exerted? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is a bill of rights essential to liberty? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is a law proposed concerning private debts? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is a violent and unnatural decrease in the value of land a symptom of national distress? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is an indefinite power to raise money dangerous in the hands of the federal government? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is an indefinite power to raise troops dangerous? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is another object of a bill of rights to define certain immunities and modes of proceeding, which are relative to personal and private concerns? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is commerce of importance to national wealth? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it a fair comparison? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it here that suspicion rests her charge? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it improper and unsafe to intermix the different powers of government in the same body of men? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it not designed as a method of NATIONAL INQUEST into the conduct of public men? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it not( we may ask these projectors in politics) the true interest of all nations to cultivate the same benevolent and philosophic spirit? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it particularly dangerous to give the keys of the treasury, and the command of the army, into the same hands? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it possible that foreign nations can either respect or confide in such a government? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it possible that the people of America will longer consent to trust their honor, their happiness, their safety, on so precarious a foundation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it probable that such a combination would exist at all? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it supported by REASON? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it to be presumed that any other State, at the same or any other given period, will be exempt from them? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it to be presumed, that at any future septennial epoch the same State will be free from parties? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is it true that force and right are necessarily on the same side in republican governments? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is not a want of co- operation the infallible consequence of such a system? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is not the love of wealth as domineering and enterprising a passion as that of power or glory? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is not the power of the governor, in this article, on a calculation of political consequences, greater than that of the President? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is not this the true light in which it ought to be regarded? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is private credit the friend and patron of industry? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is public credit an indispensable resource in time of public danger? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is respectability in the eyes of foreign powers a safeguard against foreign encroachments? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is the CONSEQUENCE from this doctrine admissible? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is the administration of justice between the citizens of the same State the proper department of the local governments? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is the aggregate power of the general government greater than ought to have been vested in it? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is the danger apprehended from the other branches of the federal government? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is the doctrine warranted by FACTS? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is the importation of slaves permitted by the new Constitution for twenty years? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is the power of declaring war necessary? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is the power of raising armies and equipping fleets necessary? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is this the way in which usurpers stride to dominion over a numerous and enlightened nation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Is this to be exclusive, or are those courts to possess a concurrent jurisdiction? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | It has been asked, what is meant by"cases arising under the Constitution,"in contradiction from those"arising under the laws of the United States"? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | It may be asked, Why, then, could not a time have been fixed in the Constitution? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | It may be asked, perhaps, what has so long kept this disjointed machine from falling entirely to pieces? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Law is defined to be a rule of action; but how can that be a rule, which is little known, and less fixed? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | May he have no connections, no friends, for whom he may sacrifice it? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Must it of necessity be admitted that this power is infringed, so long as a part of the old articles remain? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Or are they the inflammatory ravings of incendiaries or distempered enthusiasts? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Or shall we say they may be continued as long as the danger which occasioned their being raised continues? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Or to what purpose would it be established, in reference to one branch of the legislature, if it could not be extended to the other? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Or why is it suggested that three or four confederacies would be better than one? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Or, if such a trial of firmness between the two branches were hazarded, would not the one be as likely first to yield as the other? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Shall domestic manufactures be encouraged, and in what degree, by restrictions on foreign manufactures? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Shall it be a week, a month, a year? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Shall the Union be constituted the guardian of the common safety? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Should the people of America divide themselves into three or four nations, would not the same thing happen? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | The remaining inquiry is: Does it also combine the requisites to safety, in a republican sense-- a due dependence on the people, a due responsibility? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | The same house will possess the sole right of instituting impeachments: is not this a complete counterbalance to that of determining them? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | The true question to be decided then is, whether the smallness of the number, as a temporary regulation, be dangerous to the public liberty? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | They must therefore depend on the information of intelligent men, in whom they confide; and how must these men obtain their information? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | This is the form in which the comparison is usually stated to the public: but is it a just form? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | To what purpose then require the co- operation of the Senate? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | To what purpose would it be to authorize suits against States for the debts they owe? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Upon what principle, then, ought they to be taken into the federal estimate of representation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What answer shall we give to those who would persuade us that things so unlike resemble each other? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What are the MEANS to execute a LEGISLATIVE power but LAWS? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What are the advantages promised to counterbalance these disadvantages? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What are the characters which practice has stamped upon it? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What are the chief sources of expense in every government? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What are the proper means of executing such a power, but NECESSARY and PROPER laws? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What are to be the objects of federal legislation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What colorable reason could be assigned, in a country so situated, for such vast augmentations of the military force? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What difference can it make in point of expense to pay officers of the customs appointed by the State or by the United States? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What equitable causes can grow out of the Constitution and laws of the United States? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What has occasioned that enormous accumulation of debts with which several of the European nations are oppressed? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What is a LEGISLATIVE power, but a power of making LAWS? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What is a power, but the ability or faculty of doing a thing? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What is the ability to do a thing, but the power of employing the MEANS necessary to its execution? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What is the liberty of the press? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What is the power of laying and collecting taxes, but a LEGISLATIVE POWER, or a power of MAKING LAWS, to lay and collect taxes? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What is the reason on which this proverbial observation is founded? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What is the spirit that has in general characterized the proceedings of Congress? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What more could be desired by an enlightened and reasonable people? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What more desirable or more essential than this quality in the governors of nations? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What more natural than that they should be disposed to exclude from the lists such dangerous competitors? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What relation is to subsist between the nine or more States ratifying the Constitution, and the remaining few who do not become parties to it? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What shall we think of the motives which could induce men of sense to reason in this manner? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What signifies a declaration, that"the liberty of the press shall be inviolably preserved"? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What then are we to understand by the objection which this paper has combated? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What then( it may be asked) is the use of such a provision, if it cease to operate the moment there is an inclination to disregard it? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What time shall be requisite to ascertain the violation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What will be the conclusion? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What will be the consequence, if we are not able to avail ourselves of the resource in question in its full extent? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What would be the probable conduct of the government in such an emergency? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What, but that he might be unequal to the task which the Constitution assigns him? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What, it may be asked, is the true spirit of the institution itself? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | What, then, are the distinctive characters of the republican form? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | When armies are once raised what shall be denominated"keeping them up,"contrary to the sense of the Constitution? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Whence is the dreaded augmentation of expense to spring? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Where else than in the Senate could have been found a tribunal sufficiently dignified, or sufficiently independent? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Where in the name of common- sense, are our fears to end if we may not trust our sons, our brothers, our neighbors, our fellow- citizens? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Where is the standard of perfection to be found? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Where more desirable or more essential than in the first magistrate of a nation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Whether any part of the powers transferred to the general government be unnecessary or improper? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Whether the entire mass of them be dangerous to the portion of jurisdiction left in the several States? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Which the end; which the means? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Which was the more important, which the less important part? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who are to be the electors of the federal representatives? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who are to be the objects of popular choice? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who can determine what might have been the issue of her late convulsions, if the malcontents had been headed by a Caesar or by a Cromwell? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who can give it any definition which would not leave the utmost latitude for evasion? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who can pretend that commercial imposts are, or would be, alone equal to the present and future exigencies of the Union? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who shall command the allied armies, and from which of them shall he receive his orders? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who shall judge of the continuance of the danger? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who shall settle the terms of peace, and in case of disputes what umpire shall decide between them and compel acquiescence? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who would be the parties? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who would be willing to stake his life and his estate upon the verdict of a jury acting under the auspices of judges who had predetermined his guilt? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Who would not prefer that possibility to the unceasing agitations and frequent revolutions which are the continual scourges of petty republics? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Why has government been instituted at all? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Why not amend it and make it perfect before it is irrevocably established?" |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Why should we consent to bear more than our proper share of the common burden? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Why should we do more in proportion than those who are embarked with us in the same political voyage? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Will it be said that the FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES of the Confederation were not within the purview of the convention, and ought not to have been varied? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Will it be said that the alterations ought not to have touched the substance of the Confederation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Will it lean in favor of the landed interest, or the moneyed interest, or the mercantile interest, or the manufacturing interest? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Will not the landholder know and feel whatever will promote or insure the interest of landed property? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | With what color of propriety could the force necessary for defense be limited by those who can not limit the force of offense? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would Connecticut and New Jersey long submit to be taxed by New York for her exclusive benefit? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would he on any occasion either have demanded or have received the like humiliation from Spain, or Britain, or any other POWERFUL nation? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would it have been an improvement of the plan, to have united the Supreme Court with the Senate, in the formation of the court of impeachments? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would not similar jealousies arise, and be in like manner cherished? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would not the mere circumstance of freight occasion a considerable deduction? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would not the principal part of its profits be intercepted by the Dutch, as a compensation for their agency and risk? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would she not have been compelled to raise and to maintain a more regular force for the execution of her design? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would the militia, in this supposition, be more ready or more able to support the federal authority than in the case of a general union? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would there not be the greatest reason to apprehend, that error, in the first sentence, would be the parent of error in the second sentence? |
hamilton-federalist-2506 | Would they not be likely to prefer a conduct better adapted to their own immediate aggrandizement? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | A boy or a child, I wonder? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | ARCHIDAMUS Would they else be content to die? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | AUTOLYCUS After I have done what I promised? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | AUTOLYCUS Are you in earnest, sir? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | AUTOLYCUS The fardel there? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | AUTOLYCUS What advocate hast thou to him? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Any silk, any thread, Any toys for your head, Of the new''st and finest, finest wear- a? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Are you a party in this business? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Art thou my calf? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | But once before I spoke to the purpose: when? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | But to the goal: My last good deed was to entreat his stay: What was my first? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | But what talk we of these traitorly rascals, whose miseries are to be smiled at, their offences being so capital? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | But, for me, What case stand I in? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | CAMILLO Have you thought on A place whereto you''ll go? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | CAMILLO Sir, I think You have heard of my poor services, i''the love That I have borne your father? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | CAMILLO Who does infect her? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | CAMILLO Who have we here? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | CAMILLO Yea, say you so? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Camillo with him? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Camillo, Preserver of my father, now of me, The medicine of our house, how shall we do? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Camillo? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown Dost lack any money? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown Have I not told thee how I was cozened by the way and lost all my money? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown How do you now? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown Is there no manners left among maids? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown Not swear it, now I am a gentleman? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown Shall I bring thee on the way? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown Think you so, sir? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown Thou wilt amend thy life? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown What hast here? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown What manner of fellow was he that robbed you? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Clown What, by a horseman, or a footman? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Come, I''ll question you Of my lord''s tricks and yours when you were boys: You were pretty lordings then? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Could man so blench? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | DORCAS Is it true too, think you? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | DORCAS What, neither? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | DORCAS Whither? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | DORCAS Whither? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Did you see the meeting of the two kings? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Do you know, and dare not? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Emilia? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | FLORIZEL How, Camillo, May this, almost a miracle, be done? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | FLORIZEL I have: but what of him? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | FLORIZEL What, like a corse? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | FLORIZEL Worthy Camillo, What colour for my visitation shall I Hold up before him? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | First Gentleman Are they returned to the court? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | First Gentleman What became of his bark and his followers? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | First Gentleman Who would be thence that has the benefit of access? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | First Lady Come, my gracious lord, Shall I be your playfellow? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | First Lady Why, my sweet lord? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | First Lord What fit is this, good lady? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | First Servant My lord? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | For thy conceit is soaking, will draw in More than the common blocks: not noted, is''t, But of the finer natures? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | HERMIONE If you would seek us, We are yours i''the garden: shall''s attend you there? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | HERMIONE Nay, but you will? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | HERMIONE Never? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | HERMIONE Was not my lord The verier wag o''the two? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | HERMIONE What is this? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | HERMIONE What wisdom stirs amongst you? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | HERMIONE Who is''t that goes with me? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | HERMIONE You look as if you held a brow of much distraction Are you moved, my lord? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Has he any unbraided wares? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Have I done well? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Have you done there? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Here a dance of Shepherds and Shepherdesses] POLIXENES Pray, good shepherd, what fair swain is this Which dances with your daughter? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Hours, minutes? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | How came the posterns So easily open? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | How came''t, Camillo, That he did stay? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | How goes it now, sir? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | How say you? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | How would he look, to see his work so noble Vilely bound up? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | I am ashamed: does not the stone rebuke me For being more stone than it? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | I am courted now with a double occasion, gold and a means to do the prince my master good; which who knows how that may turn back to my advancement? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | I have served Prince Florizel and in my time wore three- pile; but now I am out of service: But shall I go mourn for that, my dear? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | I think, Camillo? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | In leads or oils? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Is leaning cheek to cheek? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Is''t lawful, pray you, To see her women? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Kissing with inside lip? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Know man from man? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Ay, but why? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Didst note it? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Didst perceive it? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Hast thou read truth? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES His princess, say you, with him? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES How could that be? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES How does the boy? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES I am a feather for each wind that blows: Shall I live on to see this bastard kneel And call me father? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Is he won yet? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Is whispering nothing? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES My lord, Is this the daughter of a king? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Shall I be heard? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Tongue- tied, our queen? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES What is the business? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES What noise there, ho? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES What with him? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES What, canst not rule her? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Where the warlike Smalus, That noble honour''d lord, is fear''d and loved? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Where''s Bohemia? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Who? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES Why, what need we Commune with you of this, but rather follow Our forceful instigation? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | LEONTES You are married? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Let me see; what am I to buy for our sheep- shearing feast? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Lies he not bed- rid? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | MAMILLIUS Merry or sad shall''t be? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | MOPSA Is it true, think you? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | MOPSA O, whither? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | MOPSA Thou hast sworn it more to me: Then whither goest? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Mamillius, Art thou my boy? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Mine honest friend, Will you take eggs for money? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | My brother, Are you so fond of your young prince as we Do seem to be of ours? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | My child? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | My prisoner? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Nay, present your hand: When she was young you woo''d her; now in age Is she become the suitor? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Not speak? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Now, my liege, Tell me what blessings I have here alive, That I should fear to die? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Or how Should I, in these my borrow''d flaunts, behold The sternness of his presence? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | PAULINA A boy? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | PAULINA Nay, rather, good my lords, be second to me: Fear you his tyrannous passion more, alas, Than the queen''s life? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | PAULINA What studied torments, tyrant, hast for me? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | PAULINA Will you swear Never to marry but by my free leave? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES And this my neighbour too? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES By whom, Camillo? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES For what? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES How should this grow? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES Knows he of this? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES Soft, swain, awhile, beseech you; Have you a father? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES What follows this? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES What is the news i''the court? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES What means Sicilia? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | POLIXENES Wherefore, gentle maiden, Do you neglect them? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Pray now What colour are your eyebrows? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Pray you once more, Is not your father grown incapable Of reasonable affairs? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Say to me, when sawest thou the Prince Florizel, my son? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Second Gentleman What, pray you, became of Antigonus, that carried hence the child? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Second Lady And why so, my lord? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Second Lady Who taught you this? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | See you these clothes? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | See, my lord, Would you not deem it breathed? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Seest thou not the air of the court in these enfoldings? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shall I draw the curtain? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shall we thither and with our company piece the rejoicing? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shepherd Are you a courtier, an''t like you, sir? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shepherd But, my daughter, Say you the like to him? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shepherd How if it be false, son? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shepherd Name of mercy, when was this, boy? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shepherd What, art so near? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shepherd Why, boy, how is it? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Shepherd Why, sir? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Skulking in corners? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Still, methinks, There is an air comes from her: what fine chisel Could ever yet cut breath? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | The news, Rogero? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Thinkest thou, for that I insinuate, or toaze from thee thy business, I am therefore no courtier? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Three pound of sugar, five pound of currants, rice,--what will this sister of mine do with rice? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Was this taken By any understanding pate but thine? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Were I a tyrant, Where were her life? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What ailest thou, man? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What cheer? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What holier than, for royalty''s repair, For present comfort and for future good, To bless the bed of majesty again With a sweet fellow to''t? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What needs these hands? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What train? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What were more holy Than to rejoice the former queen is well? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What wheels? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What would he say? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What''s within, boy? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What, Camillo there? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | What, hast smutch''d thy nose? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Where hast thou been preserved? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Wherefore that box? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Why should I carry lies abroad? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Will you go yet? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Will you not push her out? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Will''t please you, sir, be gone? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Would I do this? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Would I were dead, but that, methinks, already-- What was he that did make it? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | Would any but these boiled brains of nineteen and two- and- twenty hunt this weather? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | You''ll stay? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ Enter ANTIGONUS with a Child, and a Mariner] ANTIGONUS Thou art perfect then, our ship hath touch''d upon The deserts of Bohemia? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ Enter AUTOLYCUS and a Gentleman] AUTOLYCUS Beseech you, sir, were you present at this relation? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ Enter LEONTES, with ANTIGONUS, Lords and others] LEONTES Was he met there? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ Exit Gentleman] Good lady, No court in Europe is too good for thee; What dost thou then in prison? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ Exit] FLORIZEL Why look you so upon me? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ Follows singing] Will you buy any tape, Or lace for your cape, My dainty duck, my dear- a? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ Re- enter Gaoler, with EMILIA] Dear gentlewoman, How fares our gracious lady? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ Re- enter Gentleman, with the Gaoler] Now, good sir, You know me, do you not? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | [ To CAMILLO] Is it not too far gone? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | an''t like you, sir? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | and again does nothing But what he did being childish? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | and all eyes Blind with the pin and web but theirs, theirs only, That would unseen be wicked? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | and that those veins Did verily bear blood? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | any of them? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | ballads? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | boiling? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | by some severals Of head- piece extraordinary? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | can he speak? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | canst stand? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | dispute his own estate? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | fires? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | hath not my gait in it the measure of the court? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | have I twice said well? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | hear? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | his train? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | how found Thy father''s court? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | how is''t with you, best brother? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | is he not stupid With age and altering rheums? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | is meeting noses? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | is this nothing? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | lack I credit? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | lower messes Perchance are to this business purblind? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | noon, midnight? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | not women? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | or my guest? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | racks? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | receives not thy nose court- odor from me? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | reflect I not on thy baseness court- contempt? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | say, whither? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | sport? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | stopping the career Of laughing with a sigh?--a note infallible Of breaking honesty-- horsing foot on foot? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | this news which is called true is so like an old tale, that the verity of it is in strong suspicion: has the king found his heir? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | what comes the wool to? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | what flaying? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | what old or newer torture Must I receive, whose every word deserves To taste of thy most worst? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | what''s i''the fardel? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | when was''t before? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | where lived? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | whither are you bound? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | why shakest thou so? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | will they wear their plackets where they should bear their faces? |
shakespeare-winters-2341 | wishing clocks more swift? |
locke-essay-4008 | But of what use is all this fine knowledge of men''s own imaginations, to a man that inquires after the reality of things? locke-essay-4008 Lead is a metal"to a man who knows the complex idea the name lead stands for? |
locke-essay-4008 | The whole is equal to all its parts: what real truth, I beseech you, does it teach us? |
locke-essay-4008 | What shall become of those who want proofs? |
locke-essay-4008 | the whole is equal to all its parts taken together? |
locke-essay-4008 | And are there not places where, at a certain age, they kill or expose their parents, without any remorse at all? |
locke-essay-4008 | And are they those which are the first in children, and antecedent to all acquired ones? |
locke-essay-4008 | And if they can thus make three distinct ideas of substance, what hinders why another may not make a fourth? |
locke-essay-4008 | And if they were asked what passage was, how would they better define it than by motion? |
locke-essay-4008 | And sensible qualities, as colours and smells,& c., what are they but the powers of different bodies, in relation to our perception,& c.? |
locke-essay-4008 | And shall not the want of reason and speech be a sign to us of different real constitutions and species between a changeling and a reasonable man? |
locke-essay-4008 | And to what purpose make them general, unless it were that they might have general names for the convenience of discourse and communication? |
locke-essay-4008 | And were not he that proposed it bound to make out the truth and reasonableness of it to him? |
locke-essay-4008 | And what can hinder him from thinking them sacred, when he finds them the earliest of all his own thoughts, and the most reverenced by others? |
locke-essay-4008 | And what doubt can there be made of it? |
locke-essay-4008 | And what is the will, but the faculty to do this? |
locke-essay-4008 | And when we find it there, how much more does it resemble the opinion and notion of the teacher, than represent the true God? |
locke-essay-4008 | And whether one of them might not be very happy, and the other very miserable? |
locke-essay-4008 | And whether, in the second case, there would not be one person in two distinct bodies, as much as one man is the same in two distinct clothings? |
locke-essay-4008 | And which then shall be true? |
locke-essay-4008 | And, if considered in the things themselves, do they not depend on the bulk, figure, texture, and motion of the parts? |
locke-essay-4008 | Are monsters really a distinct species? |
locke-essay-4008 | Are not they also, by the same reason that any of the others were, to be put into the complex idea signified by the name zahab? |
locke-essay-4008 | Are these general maxims of no use? |
locke-essay-4008 | Are they such as all mankind have, and bring into the world with them? |
locke-essay-4008 | Aut ea quae vix summa ingenii ratione comprehendat, nulla ratione moveri putet? |
locke-essay-4008 | But alas, amongst children, idiots, savages, and the grossly illiterate, what general maxims are to be found? |
locke-essay-4008 | But can any one think, or will any one say, that"impossibility"and"identity"are two innate ideas? |
locke-essay-4008 | But here let me ask: This seeing, is it the perception of the truth of the proposition, or of this, that it is a revelation from God? |
locke-essay-4008 | But how late is it before any such notion is discoverable in children? |
locke-essay-4008 | But if a Hobbist be asked why? |
locke-essay-4008 | But is not a man drunk and sober the same person? |
locke-essay-4008 | But my question is,- whether one can not have the idea of one body moved, whilst others are at rest? |
locke-essay-4008 | But of what use is all such truth to us? |
locke-essay-4008 | But perhaps it will be said,- without a regular motion, such as of the sun, or some other, how could it ever be known that such periods were equal? |
locke-essay-4008 | But that there are degrees of spiritual beings between us and the great God, who is there, that, by his own search and ability, can come to know? |
locke-essay-4008 | But the question being here,- Whether the idea of space or extension be the same with the idea of body? |
locke-essay-4008 | But then to what end such contest for certain innate maxims? |
locke-essay-4008 | But this seeming to comprehend only the actions of a man consecutive to volition, it is further inquired,- Whether he be at liberty to will or no? |
locke-essay-4008 | But this testimony I must know to be given, or else what ground have I of believing? |
locke-essay-4008 | But what advance do such propositions give in the knowledge of anything necessary or useful for their conduct? |
locke-essay-4008 | But what shall be here the criterion? |
locke-essay-4008 | But what shall be the criterion of this agreement? |
locke-essay-4008 | But who can help it, if truth will have it so? |
locke-essay-4008 | But will any one say, that those that live by fraud or rapine have innate principles of truth and justice which they allow and assent to? |
locke-essay-4008 | But you will say, Is it not impossible to admit of the making anything out of nothing, since we can not possibly conceive it? |
locke-essay-4008 | Can another man perceive that I am conscious of anything, when I perceive it not myself? |
locke-essay-4008 | Can he be concerned in either of their actions? |
locke-essay-4008 | Can the soul think, and not the man? |
locke-essay-4008 | Concerning a man''s liberty, there yet, therefore, is raised this further question, Whether a man be free to will? |
locke-essay-4008 | Do we not every moment experiment it in ourselves, and therefore can it be doubted? |
locke-essay-4008 | Do we not see( will they be ready to say) the parts of bodies stick firmly together? |
locke-essay-4008 | Does it not, then, stand them upon to examine upon what grounds they presume it to be a revelation from God? |
locke-essay-4008 | For by what right is it that fusibility comes to be a part of the essence signified by the word gold, and solubility but a property of it? |
locke-essay-4008 | For example, what is a watch? |
locke-essay-4008 | For example: my right hand writes, whilst my left hand is still: What causes rest in one, and motion in the other? |
locke-essay-4008 | For how almost can it be otherwise, but that he should be ready to impose on another''s belief, who has already imposed on his own? |
locke-essay-4008 | For how can we think any one freer, than to have the power to do what he will? |
locke-essay-4008 | For if they are not notions naturally imprinted, how can they be innate? |
locke-essay-4008 | For is it not at least as proper and significant to say, Passage is a motion from one place to another, as to say, Motion is a passage,& c.? |
locke-essay-4008 | For though a man would prefer flying to walking, yet who can say he ever wills it? |
locke-essay-4008 | For to what purpose should the memory charge itself with such compositions, unless it were by abstraction to make them general? |
locke-essay-4008 | For what is passage other than motion? |
locke-essay-4008 | For what is sufficient in the inward contrivance to make a new species? |
locke-essay-4008 | For what need of a sign, when the thing signified is present and in view? |
locke-essay-4008 | For when we know that white is not black, what do we else but perceive, that these two ideas do not agree? |
locke-essay-4008 | For, if the terms of one definition were still to be defined by another, where at last should we stop? |
locke-essay-4008 | For, it being asked, what it was that digested the meat in our stomachs? |
locke-essay-4008 | For, our ideas of extension, duration, and number, do they not all contain in them a secret relation of the parts? |
locke-essay-4008 | For, though it may be reasonable to ask, Whether obeying the magnet be essential to iron? |
locke-essay-4008 | For, who is it that sees not that powers belong only to agents, and are attributes only of substances, and not of powers themselves? |
locke-essay-4008 | Had the upper part to the middle been of human shape, and all below swine, had it been murder to destroy it? |
locke-essay-4008 | Hath a child an idea of impossibility and identity, before it has of white or black, sweet or bitter? |
locke-essay-4008 | Have the bulk of mankind no other guide but accident and blind chance to conduct them to their happiness or misery? |
locke-essay-4008 | He that uses words without any clear and steady meaning, what does he but lead himself and others into errors? |
locke-essay-4008 | Here everybody will be ready to ask, If changelings may be supposed something between man and beast, pray what are they? |
locke-essay-4008 | How come else the untractable zealots in different and opposite parties? |
locke-essay-4008 | How else could any one make it an inference of mine, that a thing is not, because we are not sensible of it in our sleep? |
locke-essay-4008 | How knows any one that the soul always thinks? |
locke-essay-4008 | How many men have no other ground for their tenets, than the supposed honesty, or learning, or number of those of the same profession? |
locke-essay-4008 | How shall the mind, when it perceives nothing but its own ideas, know that they agree with things themselves? |
locke-essay-4008 | How uncertain and imperfect would our ideas be of an ellipsis, if we had no other idea of it, but some few of its properties? |
locke-essay-4008 | I ask those who say they have a positive idea of eternity, whether their idea of duration includes in it succession, or not? |
locke-essay-4008 | I ask whether any one can say this man had then any ideas of colours in his mind, any more than one born blind? |
locke-essay-4008 | I ask, Whether these general maxims have not the same use in the study of divinity, and in theological questions, that they have in other sciences? |
locke-essay-4008 | I ask, is not this stay voluntary? |
locke-essay-4008 | I ask, whether the complex idea in Adam''s mind, which he called kinneah, were adequate or not? |
locke-essay-4008 | I think, I reason, I feel pleasure and pain: can any of these be more evident to me than my own existence? |
locke-essay-4008 | I. I would ask them, whether they imagine that all matter, every particle of matter, thinks? |
locke-essay-4008 | If all matter does not think, I next ask, Whether it be only one atom that does so? |
locke-essay-4008 | If it be asked whether these be all men or no, all of human species? |
locke-essay-4008 | If it be further asked,- What it is moves desire? |
locke-essay-4008 | If men should do so in their reckonings, I wonder who would have to do with them? |
locke-essay-4008 | If not, what reason will there be shown more for the one than the other? |
locke-essay-4008 | If they say that a man is always conscious to himself of thinking, I ask, How they know it? |
locke-essay-4008 | If this answer satisfies not, it is plain the meaning of the question, What determines the will? |
locke-essay-4008 | Is it possible to conceive it can add motion to itself, being purely matter, or produce anything? |
locke-essay-4008 | Is it true of the idea of a triangle, that its three angles are equal to two right ones? |
locke-essay-4008 | Is it worth the name of freedom to be at liberty to play the fool, and draw shame and misery upon a man''s self? |
locke-essay-4008 | Is not now ductility to be added to his former idea, and made part of the essence of the species that name Zahab stands for? |
locke-essay-4008 | Is there anything more common? |
locke-essay-4008 | Is there anything so extravagant as the imaginations of men''s brains? |
locke-essay-4008 | It will, no doubt, be presently objected, Is not this an universal proposition, All gold is malleable? |
locke-essay-4008 | Knowledge, say you, is only the perception of the agreement or disagreement of our own ideas: but who knows what those ideas may be? |
locke-essay-4008 | Let custom from the very childhood have joined figure and shape to the idea of God, and what absurdities will that mind be liable to about the Deity? |
locke-essay-4008 | Let them be so: what will your drivelling, unintelligent, intractable changeling be? |
locke-essay-4008 | Let us then suppose the mind to be, as we say, white paper, void of all characters, without any ideas:- How comes it to be furnished? |
locke-essay-4008 | Matter must be allowed eternal: Why? |
locke-essay-4008 | May he not, with more reason, assure him he was not asleep? |
locke-essay-4008 | May one not upon just ground inquire whether the form syllogism now has, is that which in reason it ought to have? |
locke-essay-4008 | Must it not be a most manifest wrong judgment that does not presently see to which side, in this case, the preference is to be given? |
locke-essay-4008 | Nay, whether the cock too, which had the same soul, were not the same with both of them? |
locke-essay-4008 | Of what use, then are syllogisms? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or a man think, and not be conscious of it? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or are there two different ideas of identity, both innate? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or can those be the certain and infallible oracles and standards of truth, which teach one thing in Christendom and another in Turkey? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or does the mind regulate itself and its assent by ideas that it never yet had? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or doth the proposing them print them clearer in the mind than nature did? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or is it true because any one has been witness to such an action? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or must the bishop have been consulted, whether it were man enough to be admitted to the font or no? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or rather, would he not have reason to think that my design was to make sport with him, rather than seriously to instruct him? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or that at least, if this will happen, it should not be thought learning or knowledge to do so? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or that the child has any notion or apprehension of that proposition at an age, wherein yet, it is plain, it knows a great many other truths? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or that those things, which with the utmost stretch of his reason he can scarce comprehend, should be moved and managed without any reason at all?" |
locke-essay-4008 | Or the understanding draw conclusions from principles which it never yet knew or understood? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or where is that universal consent that assures us there are such inbred rules? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or who shall be the judge to determine? |
locke-essay-4008 | Or why is its colour part of the essence, and its malleableness but a property? |
locke-essay-4008 | Other spirits, who see and know the nature and inward constitution of things, how much must they exceed us in knowledge? |
locke-essay-4008 | Quid est enim verius, quam neminem esse oportere tam stulte arrogantem, ut in se mentem et rationem putet inesse, in caelo mundoque non putet? |
locke-essay-4008 | Shall a defect in the body make a monster; a defect in the mind( the far more noble, and, in the common phrase, the far more essential part) not? |
locke-essay-4008 | Shall the want of a nose, or a neck, make a monster, and put such issue out of the rank of men; the want of reason and understanding, not? |
locke-essay-4008 | So that if it be asked, whether it be essential to me or any other particular corporeal being, to have reason? |
locke-essay-4008 | The Prince laughed, and said, Vous gardez les poulles? |
locke-essay-4008 | The Prince, A qui estes- vous? |
locke-essay-4008 | The Prince, Que fais- tu la? |
locke-essay-4008 | The atomists, who define motion to be"a passage from one place to another,"what do they more than put one synonymous word for another? |
locke-essay-4008 | The question then is, Which of these are real, and which barely imaginary combinations? |
locke-essay-4008 | The reason whereof is plain: for how can we be sure that this or that quality is in gold, when we know not what is or is not gold? |
locke-essay-4008 | There are some watches that are made with four wheels, others with five; is this a specific difference to the workman? |
locke-essay-4008 | This feeling, is it a perception of an inclination or fancy to do something, or of the Spirit of God moving that inclination? |
locke-essay-4008 | To know whether his idea of adultery or incest be right, will a man seek it anywhere amongst things existing? |
locke-essay-4008 | To return, then, to the inquiry, what is it that determines the will in regard to our actions? |
locke-essay-4008 | To this, perhaps will be said, Has not an opal, or the infusion of lignum nephriticum, two colours at the same time? |
locke-essay-4008 | Upon which, his friend demanding what scarlet was? |
locke-essay-4008 | What collections agree to the reality of things, and what not? |
locke-essay-4008 | What confusion of virtues and vice, if every one may make what ideas of them he pleases? |
locke-essay-4008 | What good would sight and hearing do to a creature that can not move itself to or from the objects wherein at a distance it perceives good or evil? |
locke-essay-4008 | What greater light can be hoped for in the moral sciences? |
locke-essay-4008 | What instruction can it carry with it, to tell one that which he hath been told already, or he is supposed to know before? |
locke-essay-4008 | What is it, then, that makes it be thought confused, since the want of symmetry does not? |
locke-essay-4008 | What is this more than trifling with words? |
locke-essay-4008 | What is truth? |
locke-essay-4008 | What makes lead and iron malleable, antimony and stones not? |
locke-essay-4008 | What makes the same man? |
locke-essay-4008 | What more is contained in that maxim, than what the signification of the word totum, or the whole, does of itself import? |
locke-essay-4008 | What moved? |
locke-essay-4008 | What must we do for the rest? |
locke-essay-4008 | What need it there of reason? |
locke-essay-4008 | What one of a thousand ever frames the abstract ideas of glory and ambition, before he has heard the names of them? |
locke-essay-4008 | What principle is requisite to prove that one and one are two, that two and two are four, that three times two are six? |
locke-essay-4008 | What probabilities, I say, are sufficient to prevail in such a case? |
locke-essay-4008 | What real alteration can the beating of the pestle make in any body, but an alteration of the texture of it? |
locke-essay-4008 | What shall we say, then? |
locke-essay-4008 | What shall we then say? |
locke-essay-4008 | What sort of outside is the certain sign that there is or is not such an inhabitant within? |
locke-essay-4008 | What true or tolerable notion of a Deity could they have, who acknowledged and worshipped hundreds? |
locke-essay-4008 | What universal principles of knowledge? |
locke-essay-4008 | What was it that made anything come out of the body? |
locke-essay-4008 | What will become of changelings in a future state? |
locke-essay-4008 | What, then, are we to do for the improvement of our knowledge in substantial beings? |
locke-essay-4008 | When they brought it close to him, he asked it, D''ou venez- vous? |
locke-essay-4008 | When, therefore, you say that this is an innate rule, what do you mean? |
locke-essay-4008 | Whence comes it by that vast store which the busy and boundless fancy of man has painted on it with an almost endless variety? |
locke-essay-4008 | Whence comes this, then? |
locke-essay-4008 | Whence has it all the materials of reason and knowledge? |
locke-essay-4008 | Where is that practical truth that is universally received, without doubt or question, as it must be if innate? |
locke-essay-4008 | Where is the head that has no chimeras in it? |
locke-essay-4008 | Where now( I ask) shall be the just measure; which the utmost bounds of that shape, that carries with it a rational soul? |
locke-essay-4008 | Where then are those innate principles of justice, piety, gratitude, equity, chastity? |
locke-essay-4008 | Wherein, then, would I gladly know, consist the precise and unmovable boundaries of that species? |
locke-essay-4008 | Whether Euphorbus and Pythagoras, having had the same soul, were the same men, though they lived several ages asunder? |
locke-essay-4008 | Whether man''s will be free or no? |
locke-essay-4008 | Which innate? |
locke-essay-4008 | Which is nothing else but to know what other simple ideas do, or do not co- exist with those that make up that complex idea? |
locke-essay-4008 | Who ever that had a mind to understand them mistook the ordinary meaning of seven, or a triangle? |
locke-essay-4008 | Who in his wits would choose to come within a possibility of infinite misery; which if he miss, there is yet nothing to be got by that hazard? |
locke-essay-4008 | Who knows not what odd notions many men''s heads are filled with, and what strange ideas all men''s brains are capable of? |
locke-essay-4008 | Who of all these has established the right signification of the word, gold? |
locke-essay-4008 | Why do we say this is a horse, and that a mule; this is an animal, that an herb? |
locke-essay-4008 | Will you deprive changelings of a future state?) |
locke-essay-4008 | Would he not be ridiculous, who should require to have it proved to him that the light shines, and that he sees it? |
locke-essay-4008 | Would he not think himself mocked, instead of taught, with such an account as this? |
locke-essay-4008 | Would he thereby be enabled to understand what a fibre was better than he did before? |
locke-essay-4008 | all that has the real essence of gold, is fixed, what serves this for, whilst we know not, in this sense, what is or is not gold? |
locke-essay-4008 | and if they are notions imprinted, how can they be unknown? |
locke-essay-4008 | attribute them to himself, or think them his own, more than the actions of any other men that ever existed? |
locke-essay-4008 | because you can not conceive how it can be made out of nothing: why do you not also think yourself eternal? |
locke-essay-4008 | bring it home upon himself, and consider it as present, and there take its true dimensions? |
locke-essay-4008 | extension consists of extended parts? |
locke-essay-4008 | i. c. 3), with a man''s head and hog''s body? |
locke-essay-4008 | is this,- What moves the mind, in every particular instance, to determine its general power of directing, to this or that particular motion or rest? |
locke-essay-4008 | number, whose stock is inexhaustible and truly infinite: and what a large and immense field doth extension alone afford the mathematicians? |
locke-essay-4008 | that imagine themselves to have judged right, only because they never questioned, never examined, their own opinions? |
locke-essay-4008 | the light, when it is plain it has no colour in the dark? |
locke-essay-4008 | why else is he punished for the fact he commits when drunk, though he be never afterwards conscious of it? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | And who, and who? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | And, I pray thee now, tell me for which of my bad parts didst thou first fall in love with me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Are you yet determined To- day to marry with my brother''s daughter? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Art thou sick, or angry? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BALTHASAR Which is one? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE And a good soldier to a lady: but what is he to a lord? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE And how long is that, think you? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Did he never make you laugh? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Do not you love me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE I pray you, is Signior Mountanto returned from the wars or no? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Is he not approved in the height a villain, that hath slandered, scorned, dishonoured my kinswoman? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Is it possible disdain should die while she hath such meet food to feed it as Signior Benedick? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Nor will you not tell me who you are? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Very ill. BENEDICK And how do you? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE What means the fool, trow? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE What pace is this that thy tongue keeps? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE What should I do with him? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Will you go hear this news, signior? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Will you not eat your word? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BEATRICE Will you not tell me who told you so? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Come, will you go with me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Do not you love me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK I do love nothing in the world so well as you: is not that strange? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK I pray you, what is he? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Is Claudio thine enemy? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Is there any way to show such friendship? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Is''t come to this? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK It is in my scabbard: shall I draw it? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Lady, were you her bedfellow last night? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK May a man do it? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Shall I speak a word in your ear? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Think you in your soul the Count Claudio hath wronged Hero? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Were you in doubt, sir, that you asked her? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK What offence, sweet Beatrice? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK What''s he? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK Would you buy her, that you inquire after her? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BENEDICK You take pleasure then in the message? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BORACHIO Didst thou not hear somebody? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | BORACHIO Seest thou not, I say, what a deformed thief this fashion is? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | But I hope you have no intent to turn husband, have you? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | But art not thou thyself giddy with the fashion too, that thou hast shifted out of thy tale into telling me of the fashion? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | But did you think the prince would have served you thus? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | But for which of my good parts did you first suffer love for me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | But how many hath he killed? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | But seest thou not what a deformed thief this fashion is? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | But speak you this with a sad brow? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | But, I pray you, who is his companion? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO And what have I to give you back, whose worth May counterpoise this rich and precious gift? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO And when was he wo nt to wash his face? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Can the world buy such a jewel? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Hath Leonato any son, my lord? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO How know you he loves her? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO If he be not in love with some woman, there is no believing old signs: a''brushes his hat o''mornings; what should that bode? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Is she not a modest young lady? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Know you any, Hero? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Leonato, stand I here? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO May this be so? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO My villany? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO To what end? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Whither? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Who wrongs him? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Who, Hero? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO Yea, and text underneath,''Here dwells Benedick the married man''? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CLAUDIO''Tis true, indeed; so your daughter says:''Shall I,''says she,''that have so oft encountered him with scorn, write to him that I love him?'' |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CONRADE And thought they Margaret was Hero? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CONRADE Can you make no use of your discontent? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | CONRADE Is it possible that any villany should be so dear? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Can this be true? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Chid I for that at frugal nature''s frame? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Come, in what key shall a man take you, to go in the song? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Comes not that blood as modest evidence To witness simple virtue? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Could she here deny The story that is printed in her blood? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DOGBERRY Dost thou not suspect my place? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DOGBERRY First, who think you the most desertless man to be constable? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DOGBERRY God''s my life, where''s the sexton? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON JOHN And when I have heard it, what blessing brings it? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON JOHN Are not you Signior Benedick? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON JOHN What life is in that, to be the death of this marriage? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON JOHN What proof shall I make of that? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON JOHN Who? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON JOHN Will it serve for any model to build mischief on? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON JOHN[ To CLAUDIO] Means your lordship to be married to- morrow? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO And when please you to say so? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO And you too, gentle Hero? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO But did my brother set thee on to this? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO But when shall we set the savage bull''s horns on the sensible Benedick''s head? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO County Claudio, when mean you to go to church? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Dost thou wear thy wit by thy side? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Even she; Leonato''s Hero, your Hero, every man''s Hero: CLAUDIO Disloyal? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Hath any man seen him at the barber''s? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Hath she made her affection known to Benedick? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO How now? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO How then? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO How, how, pray you? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO In private? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Nay, a''rubs himself with civet: can you smell him out by that? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Officers, what offence have these men done? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Runs not this speech like iron through your blood? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO See you where Benedick hath hid himself? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO What need the bridge much broader than the flood? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO What should I speak? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO What, a feast, a feast? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Who have you offended, masters, that you are thus bound to your answer? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Why, what effects of passion shows she? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Why, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Will you have me, lady? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Wilt thou make a trust a transgression? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO With me in your company? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Yea, marry, dost thou hear, Balthasar? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | DON PEDRO Yea, or to paint himself? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Did he not say, my brother was fled? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Dost thou affect her, Claudio? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Dost thou think I care for a satire or an epigram? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Doth not my wit become me rarely? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Doth not the gentleman Deserve as full as fortunate a bed As ever Beatrice shall couch upon? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | FRIAR FRANCIS Know you any, count? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | FRIAR FRANCIS Lady, what man is he you are accused of? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | FRIAR FRANCIS To do what, signior? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | FRIAR FRANCIS Yea, wherefore should she not? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Father, by your leave: Will you with free and unconstrained soul Give me this maid, your daughter? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Grieved I, I had but one? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | HERO And seem''d I ever otherwise to you? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | HERO Is it not Hero? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | HERO Is my lord well, that he doth speak so wide? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | HERO No, not to be so odd and from all fashions As Beatrice is, can not be commendable: But who dare tell her so? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | HERO Why how now? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Ha? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Hath your grace ne''er a brother like you? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Have you writ down, that they are none? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | How answer you for yourselves? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | How came you to this? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | How canst thou cross this marriage? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | I may chance have some odd quirks and remnants of wit broken on me, because I have railed so long against marriage: but doth not the appetite alter? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | I pray you, how many hath he killed and eaten in these wars? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | In faith, hath not the world one man but he will wear his cap with suspicion? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Is it not strange that sheeps''guts should hale souls out of men''s bodies? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Is not marriage honourable in a beggar? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Is not your lord honourable without marriage? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Is there no young squarer now that will make a voyage with him to the devil? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Is this face Hero''s? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Is this the prince? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO All this is so: but what of this, my lord? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO All thy tediousness on me, ah? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Are these things spoken, or do I but dream? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Are they good? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Art thou the slave that with thy breath hast kill''d Mine innocent child? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Canst thou so daff me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Did he break out into tears? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Dost thou look up? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Hath no man''s dagger here a point for me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Hath the fellow any wit that told you this? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO How many gentlemen have you lost in this action? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO My lord, will you walk? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Niece, will you look to those things I told you of? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO No? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO O, when she had writ it and was reading it over, she found Benedick and Beatrice between the sheet? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Please it your grace lead on? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Sweet prince, why speak not you? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO The sight whereof I think you had from me, From Claudio and the prince: but what''s your will? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Well, then, go you into hell? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO Were it good, think you? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO What do you mean, my lord? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO What effects, my lord? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO What is he that you ask for, niece? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO What is it, my good friends? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | LEONATO What shall become of this? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Look you for any other issue? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | MARGARET For a hawk, a horse, or a husband? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | MARGARET Of what, lady? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | MARGARET Will you then write me a sonnet in praise of my beauty? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Masters, do you serve God? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | May I be so converted and see with these eyes? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Messenger Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Second Watchman How if a''will not stand? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Sexton But which are the offenders that are to be examined? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Sexton What else, fellow? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Sexton What else? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Sexton What heard you him say else? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Sexton Which be the malefactors? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Shall I never see a bachelor of three- score again? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Shall I not find a woodcock too? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Shall quips and sentences and these paper bullets of the brain awe a man from the career of his humour? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Shall we go prove what''s to be done? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Shall we go seek Benedick, and tell him of her love? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Sits the wind in that corner? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | So much for praising myself, who, I myself will bear witness, is praiseworthy: and now tell me, how doth your cousin? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Stand I condemn''d for pride and scorn so much? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Then you do not love me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | URSULA And did they bid you tell her of it, madam? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | URSULA But are you sure That Benedick loves Beatrice so entirely? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | URSULA Come, come, do you think I do not know you by your excellent wit? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | URSULA Why did you so? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Was''t not to this end That thou began''st to twist so fine a story? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Watchman How if the nurse be asleep and will not hear us? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Watchman How if they will not? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Watchman If we know him to be a thief, shall we not lay hands on him? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What fashion will you wear the garland of? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What is he for a fool that betroths himself to unquietness? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What is your name, friend? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What is your will? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What kind of catechising call you this? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What man was he talk''d with you yesternight Out at your window betwixt twelve and one? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What thinkest thou? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What was it you told me of to- day, that your niece Beatrice was in love with Signior Benedick? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | What''s his fault? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | When are you married, madam? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Where is my cousin, your son? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Which is Beatrice? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Who can blot that name With any just reproach? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Who comes here? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Who is his companion now? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Why ever wast thou lovely in my eyes? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Why had I one? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Why, doth not every earthly thing Cry shame upon her? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Why, what''s the matter, That you have such a February face, So full of frost, of storm and cloudiness? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Will you come presently? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Wilt thou use thy wit? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | With who? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Would it not grieve a woman to be overmastered with a pierce of valiant dust? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Would the two princes lie, and Claudio lie, Who loved her so, that, speaking of her foulness, Wash''d it with tears? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Would you not swear, All you that see her, that she were a maid, By these exterior shows? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | You are both sure, and will assist me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | You have no employment for me? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | Yours, sirrah? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter BEATRICE] Sweet Beatrice, wouldst thou come when I called thee? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter BENEDICK] CLAUDIO Now, signior, what news? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter BORACHIO] What news, Borachio? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter Boy] Boy Signior? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter CLAUDIO, BEATRICE, HERO, and LEONATO] BENEDICK Will your grace command me any service to the world''s end? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter DOGBERRY and VERGES with the Watch] DOGBERRY Are you good men and true? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter DOGBERRY, VERGES, and Sexton, in gowns; and the Watch, with CONRADE and BORACHIO] DOGBERRY Is our whole dissembly appeared? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter DON PEDRO, CLAUDIO, and three or four with tapers] CLAUDIO Is this the monument of Leonato? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter LEONATO, ANTONIO, BENEDICK, BEATRICE, MARGARET, URSULA, FRIAR FRANCIS, and HERO] FRIAR FRANCIS Did I not tell you she was innocent? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter LEONATO, ANTONIO, HERO, BEATRICE, and others] LEONATO Was not Count John here at supper? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Enter LEONATO, with DOGBERRY and VERGES] LEONATO What would you with me, honest neighbour? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Exeunt DON PEDRO, DON JOHN, and CLAUDIO] BENEDICK How doth the lady? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Exeunt HERO and URSULA] BEATRICE[ Coming forward] What fire is in mine ears? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Exeunt all but BENEDICK and BEATRICE] BENEDICK Lady Beatrice, have you wept all this while? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Exeunt all except BENEDICK and CLAUDIO] CLAUDIO Benedick, didst thou note the daughter of Signior Leonato? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Kissing her] DON PEDRO How dost thou, Benedick, the married man? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Re- enter ANTONIO, with the Ladies masked] Which is the lady I must seize upon? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Re- enter BENEDICK] BENEDICK Count Claudio? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Re- enter DON PEDRO] DON PEDRO Now, signior, where''s the count? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Re- enter DON PEDRO] DON PEDRO What secret hath held you here, that you followed not to Leonato''s? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Re- enter LEONATO and ANTONIO, with the Sexton] LEONATO Which is the villain? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | [ Withdraws][ Enter DON PEDRO, CLAUDIO, and LEONATO] DON PEDRO Come, shall we hear this music? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | about your neck, like an usurer''s chain? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | are our eyes our own? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | are you yet living? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | art not ashamed? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | can virtue hide itself? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | did you see him? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | do you speak in the sick tune? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | dost thou not suspect my years? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | dress him in my apparel and make him my waiting- gentlewoman? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | hath he provided this music? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | how giddily a''turns about all the hot bloods between fourteen and five- and- thirty? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | how long have you professed apprehension? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | interjections? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | is this the prince''s brother? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | let me see his eyes, That, when I note another man like him, I may avoid him: which of these is he? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | of speaking honourably? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | or do you play the flouting Jack, to tell us Cupid is a good hare- finder and Vulcan a rare carpenter? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | or under your arm, like a lieutenant''s scarf? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | sick? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | sigh for the toothache? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | the most exquisite Claudio? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | this learned constable is too cunning to be understood: what''s your offence? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | to make an account of her life to a clod of wayward marl? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | well, fare you well, my lord: Are you so hasty now? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | what will this do? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | wherefore are you sad? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | wherefore sink you down? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | which way looks he? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | why Benedictus? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | why are you thus out of measure sad? |
shakespeare-much-3135 | why, shall I always keep below stairs? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | A true man or a thief that gallops so? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | A wife? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | An if one should be pierced, which is the one? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | And gentle Longaville, where lies thy pain? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | And how can that be true love which is falsely attempted? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | And stand between her back, sir, and the fire, Holding a trencher, jesting merrily? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | And where my liege''s? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | And where that you have vow''d to study, lords, In that each of you have forsworn his book, Can you still dream and pore and thereon look? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Are not you the chief woman? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Are we betray''d thus to thy over- view? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Amen, so I had mine: is not that a good word? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Art thou one of the Worthies? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Did not I dance with you in Brabant once? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Did they, quoth you? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON For the following, sir? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON How much is it? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON In what manner? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Is ebony like her? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Is she wedded or no? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Is this your perfectness? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Studies my lady? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Things hid and barr''d, you mean, from common sense? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON This, fellow: what wouldst? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON To hear? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON To move wild laughter in the throat of death? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Well, say I am; why should proud summer boast Before the birds have any cause to sing? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON What is a remuneration? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON What reason have you for''t? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON What time o''day? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON What, are there but three? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Where? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Why ask you? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Will you prick''t with your eye? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON Would that do it good? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON[ And what to me, my love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BIRON[ Reads]''Item, That no woman shall come within a mile of my court:''Hath this been proclaimed? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BOYET And wherefore not ships? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BOYET And who is your deer? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BOYET Belonging to whom? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BOYET But is this Hector? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BOYET But she herself is hit lower: have I hit her now? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BOYET Do you hear, my mad wenches? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BOYET What then, do you see? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | BOYET What would you with the princess? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Behavior, what wert thou Till this madman show''d thee? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But Rosaline, you have a favour too: Who sent it? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But are you not ashamed? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But have you forgot your love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But is there no quick recreation granted? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But to return to the verses: did they please you, Sir Nathaniel? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But will you hear? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But, damosella virgin, was this directed to you? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But, most esteemed greatness, will you hear the dialogue that the two learned men have compiled in praise of the owl and the cuckoo? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | But, sirrah, what say you to this? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | COSTARD Pray you, sir, how much carnation ribbon may a man buy for a remuneration? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | COSTARD When would you have it done, sir? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | COSTARD Which is the greatest lady, the highest? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Can any face of brass hold longer out? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Comfort, me, boy: what great men have been in love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO But tell me; how was there a costard broken in a shin? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Callest thou my love''hobby- horse''? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Dost thou infamonize me among potentates? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO How canst thou part sadness and melancholy, my tender juvenal? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO How hast thou purchased this experience? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO How meanest thou? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Is that one of the four complexions? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Is there not a ballad, boy, of the King and the Beggar? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Of what complexion? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Shall I tell you a thing? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO The meaning, pretty ingenious? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO What meanest thou? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO What wilt thou prove? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO What, that an eel is ingenious? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Why tough senior? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO[ To HOLOFERNES] Monsieur, are you not lettered? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DULL What is Dictynna? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DULL You two are book- men: can you tell me by your wit What was a month old at Cain''s birth, that''s not five weeks old as yet? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DUMAIN Fair lady,-- MARIA Say you so? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DUMAIN How follows that? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | DUMAIN O, shall I say, I thank you, gentle wife? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Do not you know my lady''s foot by the squier, And laugh upon the apple of her eye? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Do you not educate youth at the charge- house on the top of the mountain? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Do you not see Pompey is uncasing for the combat? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Dost thou not wish in heart The chain were longer and the letter short? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Doth the inconsiderate take salve for l''envoy, and the word l''envoy for a salve? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND But what of this? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND Did you hear the proclamation? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND Prize you yourselves: what buys your company? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND What makes treason here? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND What mean you, madam? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND What present hast thou there? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND What say you, lords? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND What zeal, what fury hath inspired thee now? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND What, did these rent lines show some love of thine? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND What? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND Where hadst thou it? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND Why take we hands, then? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND Will you hear this letter with attention? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND Will you not dance? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND[ Reads]''that shallow vassal,''-- COSTARD Still me? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | FERDINAND[ Reads]''that unlettered small- knowing soul,''-- COSTARD Me? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | For when would you, my lord, or you, or you, Have found the ground of study''s excellence Without the beauty of a woman''s face? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Good heart, what grace hast thou, thus to reprove These worms for loving, that art most in love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | HOLOFERNES Quis, quis, thou consonant? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | HOLOFERNES Shall I have audience? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | HOLOFERNES Sir Nathaniel, will you hear an extemporal epitaph on the death of the deer? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | HOLOFERNES What is the figure? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | HOLOFERNES What is this? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | HOLOFERNES What mean you, sir? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | How art thou proved Judas? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | How come you thus estranged? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | How did this argument begin? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | How shall she know my griefs? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | I could: shall I entreat thy love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | I may: shall I enforce thy love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | I pretty, and my saying apt? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Is not lead a metal heavy, dull, and slow? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Is not''veal''a calf? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | It is religion to be thus forsworn, For charity itself fulfills the law, And who can sever love from charity? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | JAQUENETTA Man? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | JAQUENETTA With that face? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | KATHARINE But in this changing what is your intent? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | KATHARINE Lord Longaville said, I came o''er his heart; And trow you what he called me? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | KATHARINE You weigh me not? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | LONGAVILLE Am I the first that have been perjured so? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | LONGAVILLE Marry, that did I. BIRON Sweet lord, and why? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | LONGAVILLE Now to plain- dealing; lay these glozes by: Shall we resolve to woo these girls of France? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | LONGAVILLE Pray you, sir, whose daughter? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | LONGAVILLE What says Maria? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MARIA You sheep, and I pasture: shall that finish the jest? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH A good l''envoy, ending in the goose: would you desire more? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH Do the wise think them other? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH How many is one thrice told? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH How mean you, sir? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH Master, will you win your love with a French brawl? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH Speak you this in my praise, master? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH What shall some see? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH Why tender juvenal? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH Why, sir, is this such a piece of study? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | MOTH You are too swift, sir, to say so: Is that lead slow which is fired from a gun? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Much upon this it is: and might not you[ To BOYET] Forestall our sport, to make us thus untrue? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Not fair? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | O, that''s the Latin word for three farthings: three farthings-- remuneration.--''What''s the price of this inkle?'' |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | O, who can give an oath? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Or ever, but in vizards, show their faces? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Or groan for love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Ovidius Naso was the man: and why, indeed, Naso, but for smelling out the odouriferous flowers of fancy, the jerks of invention? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Amazed, my lord? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS And were you well advised? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS And will they so? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Any thing like? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS But what, but what, come they to visit us? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS But, Katharine, what was sent to you from fair Dumain? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Did he not send you twain? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS From which lord to which lady? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS How blow? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Know you the man? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Some merry mocking lord, belike; is''t so? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Thou fellow, a word: Who gave thee this letter? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Thy news Boyet? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS To whom shouldst thou give it? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS What plume of feathers is he that indited this letter? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS What''s your will, sir? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS What, what? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS When you then were here, What did you whisper in your lady''s ear? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Will they return? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS With what? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | PRINCESS Your reason? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Please it your majesty Command me any service to her thither? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Pray you, which is the head lady? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE All the fool mine? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE But shall we dance, if they desire to''t? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE Did not I dance with you in Brabant once? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE How many weary steps, Of many weary miles you have o''ergone, Are number''d in the travel of one mile? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE Is the fool sick? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE It is not so; for how can this be true, That you stand forfeit, being those that sue? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE Madame, came nothing else along with that? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE Shall I come upon thee with an old saying, that was a man when King Pepin of France was a little boy, as touching the hit it? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE Shall I teach you to know? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE What would they, say they? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE What''s your dark meaning, mouse, of this light word? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | ROSALINE Which of the vizards was it that you wore? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Rosaline, What did the Russian whisper in your ear? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | SIR NATHANIEL Videsne quis venit? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | SIR NATHANIEL Where will you find men worthy enough to present them? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | SIR NATHANIEL[ Reads] If love make me forsworn, how shall I swear to love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Say, can you fast? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Shall I command thy love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Submissive fall his princely feet before, And he from forage will incline to play: But if thou strive, poor soul, what art thou then? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | The captive is enriched: on whose side? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | The catastrophe is a nuptial: on whose side? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | The conclusion is victory: on whose side? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Then, forester, my friend, where is the bush That we must stand and play the murderer in? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | This is abhominable,--which he would call abbominable: it insinuateth me of insanie: anne intelligis, domine? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Under pardon, sir, what are the contents? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Were not you here but even now disguised? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What are they That charge their breath against us? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What is a, b, spelt backward, with the horn on his head? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What is the end of study? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What mean you? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What peremptory eagle- sighted eye Dares look upon the heaven of her brow, That is not blinded by her majesty? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What shall we do, If they return in their own shapes to woo? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What shalt thou exchange for rags? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What vane? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What will Biron say when that he shall hear Faith so infringed, which such zeal did swear? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | What, will you have me, or your pearl again? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | When shall you hear that I Will praise a hand, a foot, a face, an eye, A gait, a state, a brow, a breast, a waist, A leg, a limb? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | When shall you see me write a thing in rhyme? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Where lies thy grief, O, tell me, good Dumain? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Where''s her grace? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Where''s the princess? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Wherefore apt? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Who are the rest? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Who came? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Who devised this penalty? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Who is he comes here? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Who was Samson''s love, my dear Moth? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Why look you pale? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Why should I joy in any abortive birth? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Will these turtles be gone? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Will they not, think you, hang themselves tonight? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | Will you give horns, chaste lady? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | You leer upon me, do you? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Converses apart with FERDINAND, and delivers him a paper] PRINCESS Doth this man serve God? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Enter DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO and MOTH] DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Boy, what sign is it when a man of great spirit grows melancholy? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Enter DULL with a letter, and COSTARD] DULL Which is the duke''s own person? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Exeunt FERDINAND, Lords, and Blackamoors] Are these the breed of wits so wonder''d at? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Exeunt PRINCESS and train] BOYET Who is the suitor? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Exeunt Worthies] FERDINAND How fares your majesty? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Exit BOYET] Who are the votaries, my loving lords, That are vow- fellows with this virtuous duke? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Exit LONGAVILLE] BIRON What''s her name in the cap? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Exit MOTH] ROSALINE What would these strangers? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Exit] LONGAVILLE I beseech you a word: what is she in the white? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Giving him the paper] Where hadst thou it? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Re- enter BOYET] PRINCESS Now, what admittance, lord? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Re- enter DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO] DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO Sweet majesty, vouchsafe me,-- PRINCESS Was not that Hector? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Reads] Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye,''Gainst whom the world can not hold argument, Persuade my heart to this false perjury? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ Retiring] DUMAIN Sir, I pray you, a word: what lady is that same? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ They converse apart] DUMAIN Will you vouchsafe with me to change a word? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ They converse apart] KATHARINE What, was your vizard made without a tongue? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | [ To MOTH] HOLOFERNES Quare chirrah, not sirrah? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | and what art thou now? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | and what is it? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | and what to me? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | are they all in love, That every one her own hath garnished With such bedecking ornaments of praise? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | are we not all in love? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | brawling in French? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | but what to me? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | did you ever hear better? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | first praise me and again say no? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | how blow? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | is not l''envoy a salve? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | nay, are you not, All three of you, to be thus much o''ershot? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | nay, why dost thou stay? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | or I apt, and my saying pretty? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | or forbear laughing? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | or rather, as Horace says in his-- What, my soul, verses? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | or spend a minute''s time In pruning me? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | robes; for tittles? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | the beggar: who overcame he? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | the king: why did he come? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | titles; for thyself? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | to overcome: to whom came he? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | to see: why did he see? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | to the beggar: what saw he? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | what is in you? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | what is the figure? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | what sayest thou? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | what vizard? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | what weathercock? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | what''s your will? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | when? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | where is a book? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | whither away so fast? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | who is the suitor? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | why demand you this? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | why dost thou tear it? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | why looks your highness sad? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | why tender juvenal? |
shakespeare-loves-2941 | why tough senior? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ABHORSON A bawd, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ABHORSON Is the axe upon the block, sirrah? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ABHORSON Look you, sir; here comes your ghostly father: do we jest now, think you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Benefactors? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Charges she more than me? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Condemn the fault and not the actor of it? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Did not I tell thee yea? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Go to: what quality are they of? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Hath he a sister? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Say you so? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Well; the matter? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Well; what''s your suit? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Were not you then as cruel as the sentence That you have slander''d so? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO What are you, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO What can you vouch against him, Signior Lucio? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO What, resists he? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Where is the provost? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Who will believe thee, Isabel? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ANGELO Why do you put these sayings upon me? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | And do you remember what you said of the duke? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | And was the duke a fleshmonger, a fool, and a coward, as you then reported him to be? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Art going to prison, Pompey? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Art thou sure of this? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | But Barnardine must die this afternoon: And how shall we continue Claudio, To save me from the danger that might come If he were known alive? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | But how out of this can she avail? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | But, O, poor souls, Come you to seek the lamb here of the fox? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | CLAUDIO But in what nature? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | CLAUDIO But is there any? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | CLAUDIO If it were damnable, he being so wise, Why would he for the momentary trick Be perdurably fined? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | CLAUDIO Is there no remedy? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | CLAUDIO Perpetual durance? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | CLAUDIO Why give you me this shame? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Can it be That modesty may more betray our sense Than woman''s lightness? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Can you cut off a man''s head? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Can you so stead me As bring me to the sight of Isabella, A novice of this place and the fair sister To her unhappy brother Claudio? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Can you tell me of any? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Canst thou believe thy living is a life, So stinkingly depending? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Canst thou tell if Claudio die to- morrow or no? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Come hither, goodman baldpate: do you know me? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Constable, what say you to it? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO A widow, then? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Are there no other tokens Between you''greed concerning her observance? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Are you a maid? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO But shall you on your knowledge find this way? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Did you such a thing? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Do you persuade yourself that I respect you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Had you a special warrant for the deed? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Hath he born himself penitently in prison? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Have you no countermand for Claudio yet, But he must die to- morrow? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO How came it that the absent duke had not either delivered him to his liberty or executed him? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO How should he be made, then? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO It is now apparent? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Know you this woman? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Love you the man that wrong''d you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO No? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Not Isabel? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Relate your wrongs; in what? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Repent you, fair one, of the sin you carry? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO So then it seems your most offenceful act Was mutually committed? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Were you sworn to the duke, or to the deputy? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO What is that Barnardine who is to be executed in the afternoon? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO What pleasure was he given to? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO What''s he? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO What, I prithee, might be the cause? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO What, are you married? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO When must he die? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Why should he die, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Why, you are nothing then: neither maid, widow, nor wife? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO Words against me? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | DUKE VINCENTIO You will think you have made no offence, if the duke avouch the justice of your dealing? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Darest thou die? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Did I tell this, Who would believe me? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Did not I pluck thee by the nose for thy speeches? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Do I speak feelingly now? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Dost thou desire her foully for those things That make her good? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Dost thou think, Claudio? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Doth your honour mark his face? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ELBOW Ay, sir; whom, I thank heaven, is an honest woman,-- ESCALUS Dost thou detest her therefore? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ELBOW If it? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ELBOW My wife, sir, whom I detest before heaven and your honour,-- ESCALUS How? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ELBOW To your worship''s house, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Are you of fourscore pounds a year? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS By the woman''s means? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Come, sir: did you set these women on to slander Lord Angelo? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Do you hear how he misplaces? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Hath she had any more than one husband? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS How dost thou know that, constable? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS How know you that? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS How would you live, Pompey? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Of whence are you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Say you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Well, sir; what did this gentleman to her? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS What else? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS What news abroad i''the world? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Where were you born, friend? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Which is the wiser here? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ESCALUS Your mistress''name? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Elbow is your name? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Even for our kitchens We kill the fowl of season: shall we serve heaven With less respect than we do minister To our gross selves? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | FRANCISCA Are not these large enough? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | FRIAR THOMAS May your grace speak of it? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | First Gentleman Claudio to prison? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | First Gentleman I think I have done myself wrong, have I not? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | First Gentleman What, in metre? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | For debt, Pompey? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Friar, where''s the provost? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Good, good my lord, bethink you; Who is it that hath died for this offence? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Good, then; if his face be the worst thing about him, how could Master Froth do the constable''s wife any harm? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Has he affections in him, That thus can make him bite the law by the nose, When he would force it? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Hast thou or word, or wit, or impudence, That yet can do thee office? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Hath yet the deputy sent my brother''s pardon? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Have you not heard speak of Mariana, the sister of Frederick the great soldier who miscarried at sea? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Having waste ground enough, Shall we desire to raze the sanctuary And pitch our evils there? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | He, sir, sitting, as I say, in a lower chair, sir;''twas in the Bunch of Grapes, where indeed you have a delight to sit, have you not? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | How long have you been in this place of constable? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | How will you do to content this substitute, and to save your brother? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | How would you be, If He, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | I have purchased as many diseases under her roof as come to-- Second Gentleman To what, I pray? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | I pray you, sir, of what disposition was the duke? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | I pray, you, tell me, hath any body inquired for me here to- day? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA And is this all? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA At what hour to- morrow Shall I attend your lordship? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA But can you, if you would? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA But might you do''t, and do the world no wrong, If so your heart were touch''d with that remorse As mine is to him? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Can this be so? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Doth he so seek his life? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA How say you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Most strange, but yet most truly, will I speak: That Angelo''s forsworn; is it not strange? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Must he needs die? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA My power? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Some one with child by him? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Too late? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Under your sentence? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA What is your will? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA What says my brother? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA When, I beseech you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Which is the least? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Who''s that which calls? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | ISABELLA Why''her unhappy brother''? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | If it be honest you have spoke, you have courage to maintain it: I am bound to call upon you; and, I pray you, your name? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is it sad, and few words? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is lechery so look''d after? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is the duke gone? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is the world as it was, man? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is this her fault or mine? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is this the man that you did tell us of? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is this the witness, friar? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is this true? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is''t not a kind of incest, to take life From thine own sister''s shame? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Is''t not drowned i''the last rain, ha? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Justice or Iniquity? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Know you that Friar Lodowick that she speaks of? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO Ay, why not? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO Do you so, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO Does Bridget paint still, Pompey, ha? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO How doth my dear morsel, thy mistress? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO Is she your cousin? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO Lechery? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO O, did you so? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO Some say he is with the Emperor of Russia; other some, he is in Rome: but where is he, think you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO What, is''t murder? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO Who, not the duke? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO Why? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO With child, perhaps? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | LUCIO[ Aside to ISABELLA] Art avised o''that? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | MARIANA Will''t please you walk aside? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | MISTRESS OVERDONE And what shall become of those in the city? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | MISTRESS OVERDONE But shall all our houses of resort in the suburbs be pulled down? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | MISTRESS OVERDONE But what''s his offence? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | MISTRESS OVERDONE Well; what has he done? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | MISTRESS OVERDONE What proclamation, man? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | MISTRESS OVERDONE What''s to do here, Thomas tapster? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | MISTRESS OVERDONE What, is there a maid with child by him? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | My cousin Juliet? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Now, pious sir, You will demand of me why I do this? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Now, sir, what news? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | O Isabel, will you not lend a knee? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | POMPEY Does your worship mean to geld and splay all the youth of the city? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | POMPEY Doth your honour see any harm in his face? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | POMPEY Once, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | POMPEY Proof? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | POMPEY You will not bail me, then, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Pompey, you are partly a bawd, Pompey, howsoever you colour it in being a tapster, are you not? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Procures she still, ha? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost A lack, how may I do it, having the hour limited, and an express command, under penalty, to deliver his head in the view of Angelo? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost But what likelihood is in that? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost Is it your will Claudio shall die tomorrow? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost Pray, sir, in what? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost What comfort is for Claudio? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost Who can do good on him? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost Who''s there? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost, how came it Claudio was beheaded At an unusual hour? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Provost? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Say, wast thou e''er contracted to this woman? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Second Gentleman No? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Second Gentleman Who''s that, I pray thee? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Second Gentleman''Thou shalt not steal''? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Shall we thus permit A blasting and a scandalous breath to fall On him so near us? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | That Angelo is an adulterous thief, An hypocrite, a virgin- violator; Is it not strange and strange? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | That Angelo''s a murderer; is''t not strange? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | The tempter or the tempted, who sins most? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | The trick of it? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | They do you wrong to put you so oft upon''t: are there not men in your ward sufficient to serve it? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | They say this Angelo was not made by man and woman after this downright way of creation: is it true, think you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Think you I can a resolution fetch From flowery tenderness? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Well; what benefactors are they? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What are you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What do you think of the trade, Pompey? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What dost thou, or what art thou, Angelo? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What if we do omit This reprobate till he were well inclined; And satisfy the deputy with the visage Of Ragozine, more like to Claudio? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What is the news from this good deputy? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What is''t I dream on? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What is''t your worship''s pleasure I shall do with this wicked caitiff? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What king so strong Can tie the gall up in the slanderous tongue? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What muffled fellow''s that? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What news abroad, friar? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What offence hath this man made you, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What reply, ha? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What say you to this, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What sayest thou to this tune, matter and method? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What sayest thou, Trot? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What shall be done, sir, with the groaning Juliet? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What shall become of me? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What should I think? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What think you of it? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What trade are you of, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What was done to Elbow''s wife, that he hath cause to complain of? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What would you say? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What''s open made to justice, That justice seizes: what know the laws That thieves do pass on thieves? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What''s this, what''s this? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What''s thy offence, Claudio? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What''s yet in this That bears the name of life? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What''s your name, Master tapster? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What''s your name? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What''s your will, good friar? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What, at the wheels of Caesar? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What, do I love her, That I desire to hear her speak again, And feast upon her eyes? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | What, is there none of Pygmalion''s images, newly made woman, to be had now, for putting the hand in the pocket and extracting it clutch''d? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Where is the duke? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Where is the provost? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Where''s Abhorson, there? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Where''s Barnardine? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Which is the way? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Whip me? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Who call''d here of late? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Who knew of Your intent and coming hither? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Who knows that Lodowick? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Who makes that noise there? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Who''s here? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Why does my blood thus muster to my heart, Making both it unable for itself, And dispossessing all my other parts Of necessary fitness? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Why dost thou ask again? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Why, you bald- pated, lying rascal, you must be hooded, must you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Will''t not off? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Wilt thou be made a man out of my vice? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | Would the duke that is absent have done this? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | You have not heard of the proclamation, have you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | You say, seven years together? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Enter ABHORSON] ABHORSON Do you call, sir? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Enter BARNARDINE] BARNARDINE How now, Abhorson? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Enter DUKE VINCENTIO disguised as before, CLAUDIO, and Provost] DUKE VINCENTIO So then you hope of pardon from Lord Angelo? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Enter ISABELLA and FRANCISCA] ISABELLA And have you nuns no farther privileges? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Enter ISABELLA] How now, fair maid? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exeunt ABHORSON and POMPEY][ Re- enter Provost] Provost Now, sir, how do you find the prisoner? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exeunt DUKE VINCENTIO and Provost] CLAUDIO Now, sister, what''s the comfort? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exeunt ELBOW, POMPEY and Officers] What news, friar, of the duke? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exeunt][ Enter Provost, CLAUDIO, JULIET, and Officers] CLAUDIO Fellow, why dost thou show me thus to the world? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exit ANGELO] Now, sir, come on: what was done to Elbow''s wife, once more? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exit DUKE] Signior Lucio, did not you say you knew that Friar Lodowick to be a dishonest person? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exit ELBOW] What''s o''clock, think you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exit an Attendant] What figure of us think you he will bear? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Exit] ISABELLA To whom should I complain? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ ISABELLA is carried off guarded; and MARIANA comes forward] Do you not smile at this, Lord Angelo? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Knocking within] But, hark, what noise? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Re- enter MARIANA and ISABELLA] Welcome, how agreed? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Re- enter Provost, with BARNARDINE, CLAUDIO muffled, and JULIET] DUKE VINCENTIO Which is that Barnardine? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ Re- enter Provost] Provost Are you agreed? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | [ To ISABELLA] You''re welcome: what''s your will? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | and then to glance from him To the duke himself, to tax him with injustice? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | and what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | are they not malefactors? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | art thou led in triumph? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | bribe me? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | by being a bawd? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | by whom? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | did Angelo so leave her? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | for what? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | hadst thou not order? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | how seems he to be touched? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | is it a lawful trade? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | know you where you are? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | or how? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | or how? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | should it then be thus? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | thy wife? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | what news? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | what noise? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | what poor ability''s in me To do him good? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | what''s the news with you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | what''s the news with you? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | whence comes this restraint? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | which of your hips has the most profound sciatica? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | who''s there? |
shakespeare-measure-2935 | why dost thou not speak, Elbow? |
boswell-life-2092 | And did not you tell him he was a rascal? |
boswell-life-2092 | But you think, Sir, that Warburton is a superiour critick to Theobald? |
boswell-life-2092 | But, Sir,( said Mr. Burney,) you''ll have Warburton upon your bones, wo n''t you? |
boswell-life-2092 | Certainly,( said the Doctor;) but,( turning to me,) how old is your pig? |
boswell-life-2092 | Did he indeed speak for half an hour? |
boswell-life-2092 | Pray, Sir,( said I,) how many opera girls may there be? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why so? boswell-life-2092 Why, Sir, do you stare? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''A flagelet, Sir!--so small an instrument? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''And do you think that absolutely essential, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''And how was it, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''And if Jack Wilkes SHOULD be there, what is that to ME, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''And pray, Sir, what do you do with them? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''And what next?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''And who is the worse for that?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Are you serious, Sir, in advising me to buy St. Kilda? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Are you? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But has he not brought Shakspeare into notice?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But have they a moral right to do this?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But have you not the THING?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But how is a man to act, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But if I have a gardener at any rate?--''JOHNSON. |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But if they should be good, why not give them hearty praise?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But if we could have pleasure always, should not we be happy? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But if you see a friend going to tumble over a precipice?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But is not the fear of death natural to man?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But may not a man attain to such a degree of hope as not to be uneasy from the fear of death?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But may we not fortify our minds for the approach of death?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But of what use will it be, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But stay,( said he, with his usual intelligence, and accuracy of enquiry,) does it take much wine to make him drunk?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But then, Sir, their masses for the dead?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But why did you not take your revenge directly?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But why nations? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But why smite his bosom, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But would you take the trouble of rearing it?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But you would not have me to bind myself by a solemn obligation?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, does not Rousseau talk such nonsense?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, does not heat relax?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, if a bookseller should bring you a manuscript to look at?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, is it not a sad thing to be at a distance from all our literary friends?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, is it not very hard that I should not be allowed to teach my children what I really believe to be the truth?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, may there not be very good conversation without a contest for superiority?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, ought not Christians to have liberty of conscience?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, why do n''t you give us something in some other way?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, Sir, would not you wish to know old age? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''But, was it not hard, Sir, to expel them, for I am told they were good beings?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Colman, in a note on his translation of Terence, talking of Shakspeare''s learning, asks,"What says Farmer to this? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Confession?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''DEAR SIR,--What can be the reason that I hear nothing from you? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Did not he think of exhibiting you, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Did you find, Sir, his conversation to be of a superiour style?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Did you hear?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Do n''t you eat supper, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Do you think, Sir, it is always culpable to laugh at a man to his face?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Do you think, Sir, that all who commit suicide are mad?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Do you think, Sir, that there are any perfect synonimes in any language?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Do you think, Sir, you could make your Ramblers better?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Does not Gray''s poetry, Sir, tower above the common mark?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Does the dog talk of me?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Early, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Foote has a great deal of humour?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''For why( he urged,) should not Judges get riches, as well as those who deserve them less?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''HE''LL BE OF US,( said Johnson) how does he know we will PERMIT him? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Has Langton no orchard?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Have not they vexed yourself a little, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Have you seen them, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''He for subscribers bates his hook, And takes your cash; but where''s the book? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Hold, Sir, do you believe that some will be punished at all?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How can it be possible to spend that money in Scotland?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How comes it that you tell me nothing of your lady? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How do you live, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How does poor Smart do, Sir; is he likely to recover?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How is this to be known? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How is this, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How so, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How so, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''How so, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''I suppose, Sir, you could not make them better?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Is getting a hundred thousand pounds a proof of excellence? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Is it wrong then, Sir, to affect singularity, in order to make people stare?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Is not a good garden a very common thing in England, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Is not modesty natural?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Is not the Giant''s- Causeway worth seeing?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Is there not less religion in the nation now, Sir, than there was formerly?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''It is for fear of something that he has resolved to kill himself; and will not that timid disposition restrain him?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Langton is a good Cumae, but who must be Sibylla? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''May not he think them down, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''May we not take it as amusing fiction?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Might not Mrs. Montagu have been a fourth?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Must we then go by implicit faith?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Nay, Madam, what right have you to talk thus? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Nay, Sir, how can you talk so? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Nay, Sir, how can you talk so?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Nay, Sir, what talk is this?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Nay, but my dear Sir, why should not you see what every one else sees?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Nay,( said I, meaning to laugh with him at one of his prejudices,) ca n''t you say, it is not WORTH mapping?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''No, Sir; there will always be some truth mixed with the falsehood, and how can it be ascertained how much is true and how much is false? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Nor for being a Scotchman?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Once he asked Tom Davies, whom he saw drest in a fine suit of clothes,"And what art thou to- night?" |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Boswell, how much may be got in a year by an Advocate at the Scotch bar?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Mr. Dilly, how does Dr. Leland''s History of Ireland sell?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Sir, can you trace the cause of your antipathy to the Scotch?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Sir, did you ever play on any musical instrument?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Sir, have you been much plagued with authours sending you their works to revise?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Sir, is not Foote an infidel?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Sir, is the Turkish Spy a genuine book?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Sir, what did he say was the appearance?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Sir, what has he made of his story of a ghost?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Pray, Sir,( said he,) whether do you reckon Derrick or Smart the best poet?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Richardson?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Shall I ask him?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Should it not be, Sir, lashed the ocean and chained the winds?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Should not he provide amusements for himself? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Should you not like to see Dublin, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Sir, do you think him as bad a man as Voltaire?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''So then, Sir, you do not think ill of a man who wins perhaps forty thousand pounds in a winter?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''So then, Sir, you would allow of no irregular intercourse whatever between the sexes?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''So, Sir, though he sees an enemy to the state charging a blunderbuss, he is not to interfere till it is fired off?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Such as Carte''s History?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''The idolatry of the Mass?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''The worship of Saints?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Then, Sir, a poor Turk must be a Mahometan, just as a poor Englishman must be a Christian?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Then, Sir, what is poetry?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Then, Sir, you would not shoot him?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Was he a scoundrel, Sir, in any other way than that of being a political scoundrel? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Was not Dr. John Campbell a very inaccurate man in his narrative, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Was there not a story of his ghost having appeared?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Well, Sir, and what then? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Well, Sir: do we not know that a maid can in one afternoon make pickles sufficient to serve a whole family for a year? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Well, my boy, how do you go on?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Were there not six horses to each coach?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What did you say, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What do they make me say, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What do you mean by damned?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What do you mean, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What do you think of Dr. Young''s Night Thoughts, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What is that to the purpose, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What say you to Lord------?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What then is the reason for applying to a particular person to do that which any one may do as well?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What would you have me retract? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What''s the matter?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What, Sir, a fellow who claps a hump on his back, and a lump on his leg, and cries"I am Richard the Third"? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What, Sir, a good book?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What, Sir, is nothing gained by decoration and action? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What, Sir, will you allow no value to beauty in architecture or in statuary? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What, Sir, would you know what it is to feel the evils of old age? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What, Sir,( cried the gentleman,) do you say to"The busy day, the peaceful night, Unfelt, uncounted, glided by?"'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What, Sir,( said I,) are you going to turn Captain Macheath?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What, by way of a companion, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What,( said Elphinston,) have you not read it through?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''What? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why do you wish that, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why should you write down MY sayings?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why then meet at table?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why then, Sir, did he talk so?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why then, Sir, did you go?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why then,( I asked,) is it thought disgraceful for a man not to fight, and not disgraceful not to speak in publick?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why was you glad? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why yes, Sir; but what is that to the merit of the composition? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why, Sir, did you go to Mrs. Abington''s benefit? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why, Sir, do people play this trick which I observe now, when I look at your grate, putting the shovel against it to make the fire burn?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why, Sir, what does this prove? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why, then, Sir, did you leave it off?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why, who are before him?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Why, yes, Sir; and what then? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Will you not admit the superiority of Robertson, in whose History we find such penetration-- such painting?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Will you not allow, Sir, that he draws very natural pictures of human life?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Worth seeing? |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Would not you have a pleasure in teaching it?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Would you eat your dinner that day, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Would you restrain private conversation, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Would you teach this child that I have furnished you with, any thing?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''Yet Cibber was a man of observation?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''You have read his apology, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ''You would not like to make the same journey again?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ( said Dodsley) do you think a letter from Johnson could hurt Lord Chesterfield? |
boswell-life-2092 | ( said Johnson, smiling,) what would you give to be forty years from Scotland?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ( to Harris,)''Pray, Sir, have you read Potter''s Aeschylus?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ( to Johnson,)''And what think you, Sir, of it?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | ( turning to me,)''I ask you first, Sir, what would you do if you were affronted?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | --''But, Sir, you will allow that some players are better than others?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | --''Have you, Sir? |
boswell-life-2092 | --''Is not HARMLESS PLEASURE very tame?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | --''What with Mr. Wilkes? |
boswell-life-2092 | A book may be good for nothing; or there may be only one thing in it worth knowing; are we to read it all through? |
boswell-life-2092 | Am I to be HUNTED in this manner?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | And as for the good worthy man; how do you know he is good and worthy? |
boswell-life-2092 | And as to meanness,( rising into warmth,) how is it mean in a player,--a showman,--a fellow who exhibits himself for a shilling, to flatter his Queen? |
boswell-life-2092 | And do n''t you think the magistrate would have a right to prevent you? |
boswell-life-2092 | And have you ever seen Chatsworth? |
boswell-life-2092 | And is it thus, Sir, that you presume to controvert what I have related?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | And was Sheridan to assume to himself the right of giving that stamp? |
boswell-life-2092 | And what do you think of his definition of Excise? |
boswell-life-2092 | And what merit is there in that? |
boswell-life-2092 | And who would feed with the poor that can help it? |
boswell-life-2092 | As we were moving slowly along in the crowd from church, Johnson jogged my elbow, and said,''Did you attend to the sermon?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Beauclerk, how came you to talk so petulantly to me, as"This is what you do n''t know, but what I know"? |
boswell-life-2092 | Because a man can not be right in all things, is he to be right in nothing? |
boswell-life-2092 | Because a man sometimes gets drunk, is he therefore to steal? |
boswell-life-2092 | Besides, Sir, what damages would a jury give me for having been represented as swearing?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Both Mr.***** and I have reason to take it ill. You may talk so of Mr.*****; but why do you make me do it? |
boswell-life-2092 | But WHERE, I might with great propriety have added, can I find such? |
boswell-life-2092 | But does not imagination make it much more important than it is in reality? |
boswell-life-2092 | But how can you shew civilities to a nonentity? |
boswell-life-2092 | But the question was, who should have the courage to propose them to him? |
boswell-life-2092 | But was not Lord Coke a mere lawyer?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | But what a man is he, who is to be driven from the stage by a line? |
boswell-life-2092 | But when will you get the value of two hundred pounds of walls, in fruit, in your climate? |
boswell-life-2092 | But who is without it?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | But, Sir, how can you do this in three years? |
boswell-life-2092 | Did he cheat at draughts?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Did he mean tardiness of locomotion? |
boswell-life-2092 | Did his gaiety extend farther than his own nation?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Did you never observe that dogs have not the power of comparing? |
boswell-life-2092 | Did you see?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Dilly''s?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Do I know history? |
boswell-life-2092 | Do I know law?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Do I know mathematicks? |
boswell-life-2092 | Do n''t you consider, Sir, that these are not the manners of a gentleman? |
boswell-life-2092 | Do n''t you know that it is very uncivil to PIT two people against one another?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Do we not judge of the drunken wit, of the dialogue between Iago and Cassio, the most excellent in its kind, when we are quite sober? |
boswell-life-2092 | Do you know the history of his aversion to the word transpire?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Do you really think HIM a bad man?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Do you remember our drinking together at an alehouse near Pembroke gate? |
boswell-life-2092 | Do you respect a rope- dancer, or a ballad- singer?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Do you think I am so ignorant of the world as to imagine that I am to prescribe to a gentleman what company he is to have at his table?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Does not Lord Chesterfield give precepts for uniting wickedness and the graces? |
boswell-life-2092 | For why should not Dr. Johnson add to his other powers a little corporeal agility? |
boswell-life-2092 | Garrick overhearing him, exclaimed,''eh? |
boswell-life-2092 | Has he a right to do so? |
boswell-life-2092 | Have I said anything against Mr.*****? |
boswell-life-2092 | Have you no better manners? |
boswell-life-2092 | He asked me, I suppose, by way of trying my disposition,''Is not this very fine?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | He is quite unsocial; his conversation is quite monosyllabical: and when, at my last visit, I asked him what a clock it was? |
boswell-life-2092 | He made two or three peculiar observations; as when shewn the botanical garden,''Is not EVERY garden a botanical garden?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | He may tell you, he holds his finger in the flame of a candle, without feeling pain; would you believe him? |
boswell-life-2092 | He might answer,"Where is all the wonder? |
boswell-life-2092 | He then addressed himself to Davies:''What do you think of Garrick? |
boswell-life-2092 | He then began to descant upon the force of testimony, and the little we could know of final causes; so that the objections of, why was it so? |
boswell-life-2092 | He then called to the boy,''What would you give, my lad, to know about the Argonauts?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | He then repeated some ludicrous lines, which have escaped my memory, and said,''Is not that GREAT, like his Odes?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | He was of a club in Old- street, with me and George Psalmanazar, and some others: but pray, Sir, was he a good taylor?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | His Lordship however asked,''Will he write the Lives of the Poets impartially? |
boswell-life-2092 | How are you to get all the etymologies? |
boswell-life-2092 | How can a man write poetically of serges and druggets? |
boswell-life-2092 | How many friendships have you known formed upon principles of virtue? |
boswell-life-2092 | How shall we determine the proportion of intrinsick merit? |
boswell-life-2092 | I am very ill even when you are near me; what should I be were you at a distance?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | I could now tell why I should not write; for who would write to men who publish the letters of their friends, without their leave? |
boswell-life-2092 | I here brought myself into a scrape, for I heedlessly said,''Would not YOU, Sir, be the better for velvet and embroidery?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | I proceeded:''What do you think, Sir, of Purgatory, as believed by the Roman Catholicks?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | I took down Thomson, and read aloud a large portion of him, and then asked,--Is not this fine? |
boswell-life-2092 | I was once present when a gentleman asked so many as,''What did you do, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | I was persuaded that if I had come upon him with a direct proposal,''Sir, will you dine in company with Jack Wilkes?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | I will appeal to the world; and how will your judgement appear?" |
boswell-life-2092 | I will not be baited with WHAT, and WHY; what is this? |
boswell-life-2092 | I, however, would not have it thought, that Dr. Taylor, though he could not write like Johnson,( as, indeed, who could?) |
boswell-life-2092 | If a bull could speak, he might as well exclaim,--Here am I with this cow and this grass; what being can enjoy greater felicity?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | If one man in Scotland gets possession of two thousand pounds, what remains for all the rest of the nation?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | In such a state as ours, who would not wish to please the Chief Magistrate?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | In your Preface you say,"What would it avail me in this gloom of solitude?" |
boswell-life-2092 | Is it not, as it were, committing voluntary suicide?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Is it not, to a certain degree, a delusion in us as well as in women?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Is not he rather an OBTUSE man, eh?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Is not that trim? |
boswell-life-2092 | Is not this enough for you? |
boswell-life-2092 | Is not this the state of life? |
boswell-life-2092 | Johnson was at first startled, and in some heat answered,''How can your Lordship ask so simple a question?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Johnson, in a tone of displeasure, asked him,''Why do you praise Anson?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Johnson, offended at being thus pressed, and so obliged to own his cursory mode of reading, answered tartly,''No, Sir, do YOU read books THROUGH?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Johnson, upon this, seemed much agitated; and, in an angry tone, exclaimed,''Why will you vex me by suggesting this, when it is too late?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Johnson?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Madam; who is the worse for being talked of uncharitably? |
boswell-life-2092 | May I enquire after her? |
boswell-life-2092 | Miss Adams mentioned a gentleman of licentious character, and said,''Suppose I had a mind to marry that gentleman, would my parents consent?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Miss---- was an instance of early cultivation, but in what did it terminate? |
boswell-life-2092 | Mr. Burney asked him then if he had seen Warburton''s book against Bolingbroke''s Philosophy? |
boswell-life-2092 | My dear Sir, you surely will not rank his compilation of the Roman History with the works of other historians of this age?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | No matter where; wise fear, you know, Forbids the robbing of a foe; But what, to serve our private ends, Forbids the cheating of our friends?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Now what harm does it do to any man to be contradicted?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Now, what is the concoction of a play?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Oldfield?" |
boswell-life-2092 | Or what more than to hold your tongue about it? |
boswell-life-2092 | Perfect obligations, which are generally not to do something, are clear and positive; as,"thou shalt not kill?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Peyton,--Mr. Peyton, will you be so good as to take a walk to Temple- Bar? |
boswell-life-2092 | Place me in the heart of Asia, should I not be exiled? |
boswell-life-2092 | Pray now( throwing himself back in his chair, and laughing,) are you ever able to bring the SLOE to perfection?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Pray what do you mean by the question?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Pray what have you heard?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Pray, Sir, had you ever thought of it?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Priestley?" |
boswell-life-2092 | Robertson?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Shall the Presbyterian KIRK of Scotland have its General Assembly, and the Church of England be denied its Convocation?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | She and I are good friends now; are we not?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Sir William Forbes said,''Might not a man warmed with wine be like a bottle of beer, which is made brisker by being set before the fire?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Sir, you may analyse this, and say what is there in it? |
boswell-life-2092 | Sir,( said I,) In caelum jusseris ibit?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Smile with the simple;--What folly is that? |
boswell-life-2092 | Suppose they have more knowledge at five or six years old than other children, what use can be made of it? |
boswell-life-2092 | Suppose you and I and two hundred more were restrained from printing our thoughts: what then? |
boswell-life-2092 | Suppose you teach your children to be thieves?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | TO DR. BROCKLESBY, he writes, Ashbourne, Sept. 9:--''Do you know the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire? |
boswell-life-2092 | The attempt, indeed, was dangerous; for if it had missed, what became of Garrick, and what became of the Queen? |
boswell-life-2092 | These Voyages,( pointing to the three large volumes of Voyages to the South Sea, which were just come out) WHO will read them through? |
boswell-life-2092 | They would all have some people under them; why not then have some people above them?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Though firmly convinced of the truth of his doctrine, may he not think it wrong to expose himself to persecution? |
boswell-life-2092 | Towards the conclusion of his Taxation no Tyranny, he says,''how is it that we hear the loudest YELPS for liberty among the drivers of negroes?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Upon which his Lordship very gravely, and with a courteous air said,''Pray, Sir, is it true that you are taking lessons of Vestris?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | WHO can repeat Hamlet''s soliloquy,"To be, or not to be,"as Garrick does it?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | WHO is ruined by gaming? |
boswell-life-2092 | Was Charles the Twelfth, think you, less respected for his coarse blue coat and black stock? |
boswell-life-2092 | We have physicians now with bag- wigs; may we not have airy divines, at least somewhat less solemn in their appearance than they used to be?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | What Frenchman is prevented from passing his life as he pleases?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | What can you tell of countries so well known as those upon the continent of Europe, which you have visited?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | What care I for his PATRIOTICK FRIENDS? |
boswell-life-2092 | What do you take me for? |
boswell-life-2092 | What has the Duke of Bedford? |
boswell-life-2092 | What has the Duke of Devonshire? |
boswell-life-2092 | What have they to do at an University who are not willing to be taught, but will presume to teach? |
boswell-life-2092 | What have you to do with Liberty and Necessity? |
boswell-life-2092 | What is CLIMATE to happiness? |
boswell-life-2092 | What is a friend? |
boswell-life-2092 | What proportion does climate bear to the complex system of human life? |
boswell-life-2092 | What proportion would that restraint upon us bear to the private happiness of the nation?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | What says Johnson?" |
boswell-life-2092 | When Johnson had done reading, the authour asked him bluntly,''If upon the whole it was a good translation?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | When asked,''What is it, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | When we had left Mr. Scott''s, he said''Will you go home with me?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Where is religion to be learnt but at an University? |
boswell-life-2092 | While he was talking loudly in praise of those lines, one of the company* ventured to say,''Too fine for such a poem:--a poem on what?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Who will read a five- shilling book against me? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why all this childish jealousy of the power of the crown? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why do you speak here? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why do you take the trouble to give us so many fine allusions, and bright images, and elegant phrases? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why had he not some considerable office? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why is all this to be swept away?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Why should he complain? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why should she flatter ME? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why should we allow it then in writing? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why should we walk there? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why was he not in such circumstances as to keep his coach? |
boswell-life-2092 | Why, now, there is stealing; why should it be thought a crime? |
boswell-life-2092 | Will you allow me to send for him?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Will you be so good as to carry a fifty pound note from me to him?" |
boswell-life-2092 | Will you give me work?" |
boswell-life-2092 | Will you not add,--or when driving rapidly in a post- chaise?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Will you remember the name?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Would he have selected certain topicks, and considered them in every view so as to be in readiness to argue them at all points? |
boswell-life-2092 | Would it not, for instance, be right for him to take a course of chymistry?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Would not a gentleman be disgraced by having his wife singing publickly for hire? |
boswell-life-2092 | Would not you allow a man to drink for that reason?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Would you have decrepitude?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | Would you have the gout? |
boswell-life-2092 | Would you refuse any slight gratifications to a man under sentence of death? |
boswell-life-2092 | You scrape them, it seems, very neatly, and what next?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | a Prig, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | about a ghost?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | and what may we suppose those topicks to have been? |
boswell-life-2092 | and which the way?"'' |
boswell-life-2092 | at a time too when you were not FISHING for a compliment?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | do n''t you love to have hope realized? |
boswell-life-2092 | had you them all to yourself, Sir?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | have not all insects gay colours?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | have they given HIM a pension? |
boswell-life-2092 | have you that weakness?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | is Strahan a good judge of an Epigram? |
boswell-life-2092 | nay, that five pickle- shops can serve all the kingdom? |
boswell-life-2092 | or why was it not so? |
boswell-life-2092 | what do you say? |
boswell-life-2092 | what is that? |
boswell-life-2092 | what merit? |
boswell-life-2092 | why does he not write of the bear, which we had formerly? |
boswell-life-2092 | why is a cow''s tail long? |
boswell-life-2092 | why is a fox''s tail bushy?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | why the wolf? |
boswell-life-2092 | will sense make the head ache?'' |
boswell-life-2092 | with two- pence half- penny in your pocket?'' |
marcus-meditations-2646 | ''( 1) My turn now: And what of our little Gratia,(2) the sparrowkin? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | ( 2)''What words can I find to fit my had luck, or how shall I upbraid as it deserves the hard constraint which is laid upon me? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | A pretty bold idea, is it not, and rash judgment, to pass censure on a man of such reputation? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Add not presently speaking unto thyself, What serve these things for in the world? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Again, how many truly good things have certainly by thee been discerned? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Alexander, Caius, Pompeius; what are these to Diogenes, Heraclitus, and Socrates? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Am I then yet unwilling to go about that, for which I myself was born and brought forth into this world? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And again those other things that are so much prized and admired, as marble stones, what are they, but as it were the kernels of the earth? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And as for the Gods, who hath told thee, that they may not help us up even in those things that they have put in our own power? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And can death be terrible to him, to whom that only seems good, which in the ordinary course of nature is seasonable? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And generally, is it not in thy power to instruct him better, that is in an error? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And if the whole be not, why should I make it my private grievance? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And is not that their age quite over, and ended? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And mightest thou not be so too? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And then among so many deities, could no divine power be found all this while, that could rectify the things of the world? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And these once dead, what would become of these former? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And they when they are changed, they murmur not; why shouldest thou? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And those austere ones; those that foretold other men''s deaths; those that were so proud and stately, where are they now? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And those things that have souls, are better than those that have none? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And thou then, how long shalt thou endure? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And was it then for this that thou wert born, that thou mightest enjoy pleasure? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what a matter of either grief or wonder is this, if he that is unlearned, do the deeds of one that is unlearned? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what do I care for more, if that for which I was born and brought forth into the world( to rule all my desires with reason and discretion) may be? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what is a ball the better, if the motion of it be upwards; or the worse if it be downwards; or if it chance to fall upon the ground? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what is it that hinders thee from casting of it away? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what is it then that shall always be remembered? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what is it, that is more pleasing and more familiar to the nature of the universe? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what is that but an empty sound, and a rebounding echo? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what more proper and natural, yea what more kind and pleasing, than that which is according to nature? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And what should hinder, but that thou mayest do well with all these things? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And when all is done, what is all this for, but for a mere bag of blood and corruption? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And when shalt thou attain to the happiness of true simplicity, and unaffected gravity? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And where are they now? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And wherein can the public be hurt? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And which is that that is so? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And who can hinder thee, but that thou mayest perform what is fitting? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And why should I trouble myself any more whilst I seek to please the Gods? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And why then should I be angry? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And wilt not thou do that, which belongs unto a man to do? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | And yet the whole earth itself, what is it but as one point, in regard of the whole world? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Are not they themselves dead at the last? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | As for dissolution, if it be no grievous thing to the chest or trunk, to be joined together; why should it be more grievous to be put asunder? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | As for that which is truly good, what can it stand in need of more than either justice or truth; or more than either kindness and modesty? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | At the cause, or the matter? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | At thy first encounter with any one, say presently to thyself: This man, what are his opinions concerning that which is good or evil? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Behold either by itself, is either of that weight and moment indeed? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Brambles are in the way? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | But how should I remove it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | But if it be, what do I know but that he himself hath already condemned himself for it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | But is it so, that thou canst not but respect other things also? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | But still that time come, what will content thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | But suppose that both they that shall remember thee, and thy memory with them should be immortal, what is that to thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | But the care of thine honour and reputation will perchance distract thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | But what? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | But why have I said, offer my counsel? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | By one action judge of the rest: this bathing which usually takes up so much of our time, what is it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Can anything else almost( that is useful and profitable) be brought to pass without change? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Can it be at the wickedness of men, when thou dost call to mind this conclusion, that all reasonable creatures are made one for another? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Could he say of Athens, Thou lovely city of Cecrops; and shalt not thou say of the world, Thou lovely city of God? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Do either pain or pleasure seize on thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Dost thou desire to be commended of that man, who thrice in one hour perchance, doth himself curse himself? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Dost thou desire to please him, who pleaseth not himself? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Dost thou grieve that thou dost weigh but so many pounds, and not three hundred rather? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth any man offend? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth any new thing happen unto thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth anything by way of cross or adversity happen unto me? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth either the sun take upon him to do that which belongs to the rain? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth gold, or ivory, or purple? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth he bear all adverse chances with more equanimity: or with his neighbour''s offences with more meekness and gentleness than I? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth it like either oxen, or sheep, graze or feed; that it also should be mortal, as well as the body? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth it then also void excrements? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth that then which hath happened unto thee, hinder thee from being just? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth the emerald become worse in itself, or more vile if it be not commended? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Doth then any of them forsake their former false opinions that I should think they profit? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Feeling grieved as I do when one of your joints gives you pain, what do you think I feel, dear master, when you have pain of mind?'' |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For as for the body itself,( the subject of death) wouldest thou know the vileness of it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For as for the body, why should I make the grief of my body, to be the grief of my mind? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For how should a man part with that which he hath not? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For if thy reason do her part, what more canst thou require? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For indeed what is all this pleading and public bawling for at the courts? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For is it possible that in thee there should be any beauty at all, and that in the whole world there should be nothing but disorder and confusion? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For that a God should be an imprudent God, is a thing hard even to conceive: and why should they resolve to do me hurt? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For what can be more reasonable? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For what hurt can it be unto thee whatsoever any man else doth, as long as thou mayest do that which is proper and suitable to thine own nature? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For what if they did, would their masters be sensible of It? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For what is it else to live again? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For what is it that thou art offended at? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For what shall he do that hath such an habit? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For what wouldst thou have more? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For which other commonweal is it, that all men can be said to be members of? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For who is it that should hinder thee from being either truly simple or good? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | For whosoever sinneth, doth in that decline from his purposed end, and is certainly deceived, And again, what art thou the worse for his sin? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | From this common city it is, that understanding, reason, and law is derived unto us, for from whence else? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Hast thou met with Some obstacle or other in thy purpose and intention? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Hast thou reason? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Hath anything happened unto thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Hath death dwelt with them otherwise, though so many and so stately whilst they lived, than it doth use to deal with any one particular man? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Hath not yet experience taught thee to fly from the plague? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Have I done anything charitably? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How couldst thou receive any nourishment from those things that thou hast eaten, if they should not be changed? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How couldst thou thyself use thy ordinary hot baths, should not the wood that heateth them first be changed? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How hast thou carried thyself hitherto towards the Gods? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How is it with every one of the stars in particular? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How is the earth( say I) ever from that time able to Contain the bodies of them that are buried? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How know we whether Socrates were so eminent indeed, and of so extraordinary a disposition? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How many of them who came into the world at the same time when I did, are already gone out of it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How many such as Chrysippus, how many such as Socrates, how many such as Epictetus, hath the age of the world long since swallowed up and devoured? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How much less when by the help of reason she is able to judge of things with discretion? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How then shall he do those things? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How then stands the case? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | How? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | I will not say to thee after thou art dead; but even to thee living, what is thy praise? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | I write this in the utmost haste; for whenas I am sending you so kindly a letter from my Lord, what needs a longer letter of mine? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If an absolute and unavoidable necessity, why doest thou resist? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If it be, why then am I troubled? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If it were not, whom dost tin accuse? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If it were thine act and in thine own power, wouldest thou do it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If so be that the souls remain after death( say they that will not believe it); how is the air from all eternity able to contain them? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If the first, why should I desire to continue any longer in this fortuit confusion and commixtion? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If then neither applause, what is there remaining that should be dear unto thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If therefore nothing can happen unto anything, which is not both usual and natural; why art thou displeased? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | If they can do nothing, why doest thou pray? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | In that which is so infinite, what difference can there be between that which liveth but three days, and that which liveth three ages? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is any man so foolish as to fear change, to which all things that once were not owe their being? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is he more bountiful? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is it now void of reason ir no? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is it one that was virtuous and wise indeed? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is it so with thee, that hitherto thou hast neither by word or deed wronged any of them? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is not this according to nature? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is the cucumber bitter? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is there anything that doth though never so common, as a knife, a flower, or a tree? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Is this then a thing of that worth, that for it my soul should suffer, and become worse than it was? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | It is against himself that he doth offend: why should it trouble thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | L. Will either passengers, or patients, find fault and complain, either the one if they be well carried, or the others if well cured? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | May not thy mind for all this continue pure, prudent, temperate, just? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Most justly have these things happened unto thee: why dost not thou amend? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Must thou be rewarded for it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | My conversation was: What do you think my friend Fronto is doing just now? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Nay they that have not so much as a name remaining, what are they the worse for it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Now for yourself, when you left that place, did you go to Aurelia or to Campania? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Now if it be no wonder that a man should have such and such opinions, how can it be a wonder that he should do such and such things? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Nowhere or anywhere? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Of those whose reason is sound and perfect? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Oh, but the play is not yet at an end, there are but three acts yet acted of it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Or can any man make any question of this, that whatsoever is naturally worse and inferior, is ordinarily subordinated to that which is better? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Or is the world, to incessant woes and miseries, for ever condemned? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Or was I made for this, to lay me down, and make much of myself in a warm bed? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Or what doest thou suffer through any of these? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Or wouldest thou rather say, that all things in the world have gone ill from the beginning for so many ages, and shall ever go ill? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Sayest thou unto that rational part, Thou art dead; corruption hath taken hold on thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Seest thou not how it hath sub- ordinated, and co- ordinated? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Shall I do it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Shall I ever see you again?'' |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Shall I have no occasion to repent of it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | She said: And what do you think of my friend Gratia? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | So for the bubble; if it continue, what it the better? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Socrates said,''What will you have? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Then canst not thou truly be free? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Then let this come to thy mind at the same time; and where now are they all? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Then neither will such a one account death a grievous thing? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | This, what is it in itself, and by itself, according to its proper constitution? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Thou must therefore blame nobody, but if it be in thy power, redress what is amiss; if it be not, to what end is it to complain? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Thou thyself? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | To enjoy the operations of a sensitive soul; or of the appetitive faculty? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | To them that ask thee, Where hast thou seen the Gods, or how knowest thou certainly that there be Gods, that thou art so devout in their worship? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Unto him that is a man, thou hast done a good turn: doth not that suffice thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Upon every action that thou art about, put this question to thyself; How will this when it is done agree with me? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Upon what then? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | V. Is my reason, and understanding sufficient for this, or no? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Was it not in very truth for this, that thou mightest always be busy and in action? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Was not it appointed unto them also( both men and women,) to become old in time, and then to die? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Well, what did they? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What are their minds and understandings; and what the things that they apply themselves unto: what do they love, and what do they hate for? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What art thou, that better and divine part excepted, but as Epictetus said well, a wretched soul, appointed to carry a carcass up and down? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What can he do? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What can there be, that thou shouldest so much esteem? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What do you think I had to eat? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What doest thou desire? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What doest thou so wonder at? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What else doth the education of children, and all learned professions tend unto? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What have I said? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What have they got more, than they whose deaths have been untimely? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What in these things is the speculation of truth? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is it for in this world, and how long will it abide? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is it that thou dost stay for? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is it that we must bestow our care and diligence upon? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is it then that doth keep thee here, if things sensible be so mutable and unsettled? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is it then that should be dear unto us? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is it then that will adhere and follow? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is now the object of my mind, is it fear, or suspicion, or lust, or any such thing? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is now the present estate of it, as I use it; and what is it, that I employ it about? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is rv&nfLovia, or happiness: but a7~o~& d~ wv, or, a good da~ rnon, or spirit? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is that that is slow, and yet quick? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is the form or efficient cause? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is the matter, or proper use? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is the present estate of my understanding? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is the substance of it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is the use that now at this present I make of my soul? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is this, that now my fancy is set upon? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is thy profession? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What is wickedness? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What now is to be done, if thou mayest search and inquiry into that, what needs thou care for more? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then do ye so strive and contend between you?'' |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then dost thou do here, O opinion? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then hast thou learned is the will of man''s nature? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then is it that may upon this present occasion according to best reason and discretion, either be said or done? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then is it, that passeth verdict on them? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then is it, that troubleth thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then must I do, that I may have within myself an overflowing fountain, and not a well? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then should any man desire to continue here any longer? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then were then made for? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What then? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What use is there of suspicion at all? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | What? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Whatsoever it is that thou goest about, consider of it by thyself, and ask thyself, What? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | When at any time thou art offended with any one''s impudency, put presently this question to thyself:''What? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | When then will there be an end? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Wherein then is it to be found? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Wherein then, but in that part of thee, wherein the conceit, and apprehension of any misery can subsist? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Whether just for so many years, or no, what is it unto thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Which be those dogmata? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Which of all these seems unto thee a worthy object of thy desire? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Which of all those, either becomes good or fair, because commended; or dispraised suffers any damage? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Who can choose but wonder at them? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Whose soul do I now properly possess? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why do I want you? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why should any of these things that happen externally, so much distract thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why should imprudent unlearned souls trouble that which is both learned, and prudent? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why should it trouble thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why so? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why then labour ye not for such? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why then makest thou not use of it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why then should that rather be an unhappiness, than this a happiness? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why then shouldest thou so earnestly either seek after these things, or fly from them, as though they should endure for ever? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Why wonderest thou? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Will any contemn me? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Will any hate me? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Will this querulousness, this murmuring, this complaining and dissembling never be at an end? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Wilt not thou run to do that, which thy nature doth require? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Wilt thou also be like one of them? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Wilt thou therefore be a fool too? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | Wouldst thou long be able to talk, to think and reason with thyself? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | a child''s? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | a woman''s? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and how it hath distributed unto everything according to its worth? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and of those that have, those best that have rational souls? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and our souls nothing but an exhalation of blood? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and that it is against their wills that they offend? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and that it is part of justice to bear with them? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and that those things that are best, are made one for another? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and the senses so obscure, and so fallible? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and to be in credit among such, be but vanity? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and what is the true nature of this universe, to which it is useful? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | and who is that? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | are either Panthea or Pergamus abiding to this day by their masters''tombs? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | as concerning pain, pleasure, and the causes of both; concerning honour, and dishonour, concerning life and death? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | as either basely dejected, or disordinately affected, or confounded within itself, or terrified? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | as whether meekness, fortitude, truth, faith, sincerity, contentation, or any of the rest? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | because I shall do this no more when I am dead, should therefore death seem grievous unto me? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | for what profit either unto them or the universe( which they specially take care for) could arise from it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | for which of these sayest thou; that which is according to nature or against it, is of itself more kind and pleasing? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | gold and silver, what are they, but as the more gross faeces of the earth? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | how long can it last? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | how many pleasures, how many pains hast thou passed over with contempt? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | how many things eternally glorious hast thou despised? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | how much in regard of man, a citizen of the supreme city, of which all other cities in the world are as it were but houses and families? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | how much in regard of the universe may it be esteemed? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | is he more modest? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | may not this that now I go about, be of the number of unnecessary actions? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | merry, and yet grave? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | of what things doth it consist? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or a tyrant''s? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or a youth''s? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or angry, and ill affected towards him, who by nature is so near unto me? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or circumspect? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or dost thou think that he pleaseth himself, who doth use to repent himself almost of everything that he doth? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or either Chabrias or Diotimus by that of Adrianus? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or free? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or his son Aesculapius that, which unto the earth doth properly belong? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or if glad, were these immortal? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or if sensible, would they be glad of it? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or magnanimous? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or modest? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or of those whose reason is vitiated and corrupted? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or temperate? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or true? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or why should I take care for anything else, but that as soon as may be I may be earth again? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or wise? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or wouldst thou grow, and then decrease again? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or, tell me, what doth hinder thee? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | or, why should thoughts of mistrust, and suspicion concerning that which is future, trouble thy mind at all? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | some brute, or some wild beast''s soul? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | than a covetous man his silver, and vainglorious man applause? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | the atoms, or the Gods? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | the souls of reasonable, or unreasonable creatures? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | thy domestics? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | thy foster- fathers? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | thy friends? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | thy servants? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | to disport and delight thyself? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | to hear a clattering noise? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | towards how many perverse unreasonable men hast thou carried thyself kindly, and discreetly? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | towards thy brethren? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | towards thy children? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | towards thy masters? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | towards thy parents? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | towards thy wife? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | what ado doest thou keep? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | what needs this profession of thine? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | when in the act of lust, and fornication? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | when sick and pained? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | which of all the virtues is the proper virtue for this present use? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | yea thou that art one of those sinners thyself? |
marcus-meditations-2646 | you will say if I am attackt, shall I not pay tit for tat? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * shade Saide this yeoman;wilt thou far to- day?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** burstIs this,"quoth she,"the cause of your unrest?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** cause me to die* She gan to look upon Aurelius;Is this your will,"quoth she,"and say ye thus? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** displeased*Well,"quoth this January,"and hast thou said? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** gone The friar answer''d,O Thomas, dost thou so? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** ignorantly Almach answer''d to that similitude,Of whence comes thine answering so rude?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** look on graciously The proudest of these riotoures three Answer''d again;What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** shall I be silent? chaucer-canterbury-3692 ** truth"Yet,"quoth our Hoste,"let me talke to thee; Why art thou so discolour''d of thy face?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** what means all Constance answered;Sir, it is Christ''s might, this ado? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | *** grows furious** thought To whom Almachius said,Unsely* wretch,* unhappy Knowest thou not how far my might may stretch? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Ah, Saint Mary, ben''dicite, What aileth thilke* love at me* this To binde me so sore? chaucer-canterbury-3692 Alein, welcome,"quoth Simkin,"by my life, And John also: how now, what do ye here?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And is this song y- made in reverence Of Christe''s mother? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Brother,quoth he,"wilt thou that I thee tell? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | By God,quoth he,"I am a little wroth With you, my wife, although it be me loth; And wot ye why? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Griseld'',quoth he, as it were in his play,"How liketh thee my wife, and her beauty?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Hast thou not had thy lady as thee liked? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Have not our mighty princes to me given Yea bothe power and eke authority To make folk to dien or to liven? chaucer-canterbury-3692 Hey master, welcome be ye by Saint John,"Saide this wife;"how fare ye heartily?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | How thinketh me? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Lo, brother,quoth the fiend,"what told I thee? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Madame,quoth he,"how thinketh you thereby?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | My love? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Now, master,quoth the wife,"ere that I go, What will ye dine? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Of whence? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Quid est mulier? chaucer-canterbury-3692 Shall it be counsel? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Sir olde kaynard,<10> is this thine array? chaucer-canterbury-3692 Then will I,"quoth the marquis softely,"That in thy chamber I, and thou, and she, Have a collation;* and know''st thou why? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | To Urban? chaucer-canterbury-3692 To whom?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Welcome,quoth he,"and every good fellaw; Whither ridest thou under this green shaw? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What maketh you to have all this labour? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What saith Homer of good Penelope? chaucer-canterbury-3692 What, who art thou?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What,quoth this canon,"should I be untrue? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What? chaucer-canterbury-3692 What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What? chaucer-canterbury-3692 What?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Which is that? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who clappeth? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who, Sir? chaucer-canterbury-3692 Why so?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why wouldest thou be dead? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Wilt thou then go thy way therewith? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Ye have begun your question foolishly,Quoth she,"that wouldest two answers conclude In one demand? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Yea, Sir, and is it thus? chaucer-canterbury-3692 Yea, Sir,"quoth Proserpine,"and will ye so? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Yea,quoth the priest;"yea, Sir, and will ye so? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Yet tell me,quoth this Sompnour,"faithfully, Make ye you newe bodies thus alway Of th''elements?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ''*** sure** not Quoth he;''Is all my might and mind agone? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ''Now whether have I a sicker* hand or non? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ( What is Poverty? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ("Prolong the drunkard''s condition to several days; will you doubt his madness? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ("Who can give law to lovers? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * Lord< 21> Why should I all day of his woe indite? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * Quoth she;"What, Sir, how longe all will ye fast? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * That giveth them full oft in many a guise Well better than they can themselves devise? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * The keyes of thy chest away from me? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * afraid"Thou false harlot,"quoth the miller,"hast? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * among A wilde fire upon their bodies fall, Who hearken''d ever such a ferly* thing? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * apparel, fine clothes Sir olde fool, what helpeth thee to spyen? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * before< 40> This Alison answered;"Who is there That knocketh so? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * better Of voyage is there none election, Namely* to folk of high condition,* especially Not* when a root is of a birth y- know? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * both< 13> Why n''had thou put the capel* in the lathe**? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * braggart How durste ye for shame say to your love That anything might make you afear''d? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * careful watch over"What, which way is he gone?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * closely wrapt up Why livest thou so long in so great age?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * complain Is it for ye would have my[ love]< 14> alone? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * died Lo, who may trust on Fortune* any throw? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * distrust<3> Where was thy wit and thy discretion? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * divided But natheless, if I could shape* it so* contrive That it departed were among us two, Had I not done a friende''s turn to thee?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * divided What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * end, aim O January, what might it thee avail, Though thou might see as far as shippes sail? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * foolish** curse Lo, Sires,"quoth the lord,"with harde grace, Who ever heard of such a thing ere now? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * for the first time* How know''st thou this,"quoth Tiburce;"in what wise?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * forcibly bereft Why should I then to dien be in dread? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * foresight Now since she was not at the feast y- slaw,** slain Who kepte her from drowning in the sea? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * forthwith This carpenter answer''d;"What sayest thou? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * hinderesst"Yea, wilt thou so, Sir Sompnour?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * ignorant, confounded What recketh me of your authorities? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * in spite of What helpeth it of me t''inquire and spyen? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * lest"Yea, Godde''s armes,"quoth this riotour,"Is it such peril with him for to meet? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * mistresses Now since ye have so holy and meek a wife, What needeth you, Thomas, to make strife? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * no matter* But wit* ye what? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * obedient Who is so true, and eke so attentive To keep* him, sick and whole, as is his make? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * pined, wasted away Who feeleth double sorrow and heaviness But Palamon? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * pleasure Alas,* why plainen men so in commune* why do men so often complain Of purveyance of God*, or of Fortune, of God''s providence? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * property What, think''st to make an idiot of our dame? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * quickly Now, goode Sirs, what will ye bet* than well? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * raging, furious Quoth Canace unto this hawk above;"Is this for sorrow of of death; or loss of love? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * requite, be even with Who rubbeth now, who frotteth* now his lips* rubs With dust, with sand, with straw, with cloth, with chips, But Absolon? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * rod< 8>"O deare cousin mine, Dan John,"she said,"What aileth you so rath* for to arise?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * see note< 10> What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * seize"What folk be ye that at mine homecoming Perturben so my feaste with crying?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * shaped, purposed"O deare master,"quoth this sicke man,"How have ye fared since that March began? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * skill, cunning"Why,"quoth the Sompnour,"ride ye then or gon In sundry shapes and not always in one?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * slovenly Why is thy lord so sluttish, I thee pray, And is of power better clothes to bey,** buy If that his deed accordeth with thy speech? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * surpassing, extraordinary Well,"quoth our Host,"I pray thee tell me than, Is he a clerk,* or no? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * the bargain Who sorroweth now but woful Palamon That must no more go again to fight? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * thought Ye have a manne''s shape as well as I Have ye then a figure determinate In helle, where ye be in your estate? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * victuals Who fed the Egyptian Mary in the cave Or in desert? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * where Men mighten aske, why she was not slain? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * why n''ere** I dead? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | * wronged Do telle me, if it may be amended; And why that ye be clad thus all in black?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | *"No force,"* quoth he;"now, Sir, for Godde''s sake,* no matter What shall I pay? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | *"Qui est la? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** burn What recketh* me though folk say villainy*** care** evil Of shrewed* Lamech, and his bigamy? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** delight Who coulde tell, but* he had wedded be,* unless The joy, the ease, and the prosperity, That is betwixt a husband and his wife? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** denied Mahomet our belief* But, lordes, will ye maken assurance, As I shall say, assenting to my lore*? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** die And yet some clerkes say it is not so; Of which he, Theophrast, is one of tho:** those* What force* though Theophrast list for to lie? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** good clothes* What dost thou at my neigheboure''s house? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** gowns These wormes, nor these mothes, nor these mites On my apparel frett* them never a deal*** fed** whit And know''st thou why? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** great and small* Why hast thou January thus deceiv''d, That haddest him for thy full friend receiv''d? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** image Then seemed it ye had a great cherte** love, affection Toward mankind; but how then may it be That ye such meanes make it to destroy? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** in the day time* Hast thou had fleas all night, or art drunk? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** jest And weet ye what? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** low tone"What do ye, honeycomb, sweet Alisoun? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** man nor woman* Hey, for the very God that is but one, Why make ye so much of Solomon? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** overthrown So young, and of armour so desolate,** devoid How durst he look upon thy dreadful face? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** par Dieu; by God Why will thine harde* father have thee spilt? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** preamble What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** rake- handle Pardie, we women canne nothing hele,** hide< 9> Witness on Midas; will ye hear the tale? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** relate"Is there aught elles, Dorigen, but this?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** see note< 31> And therefore know''st thou what is best to be done? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** seek What needeth him that hath a perfect leech,** healer To seeken other leeches in the town? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** sighed"What was the cause? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** stand Ne be ye not ashamed, that Dan John Shall fasting all this day elenge* gon? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** vicar Or art thou a Parson? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** vindicated What shall I say of Niceratus''wife, That for such case bereft herself her life? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** wise Where dwelle ye, if it to telle be?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ** works mischief*< 7> See ye not, Lord, how mankind it destroyeth? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | -- What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | < 22> What is Magnesia, good Sir, I pray?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | < 25> But now, sir, let me see, what shall I sayn? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | < 25> What should I say? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | < 32> what doest thou?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | < 35> This Palamon answered hastily, And saide:"Sir, what needeth wordes mo''? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | < 7> When that our Host had heard this sermoning, He gan to speak as lordly as a king, And said;"To what amounteth all this wit? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | A wife? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Absolon, what? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Alein answered,"John, and wilt thou so? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Alein the clerk, that heard this melody, He poked John, and saide:"Sleepest thou? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Almachius saide;"Takest thou no heed Of my power?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And busy me to telle you the names, As orpiment, burnt bones, iron squames,** scales<3> That into powder grounden be full small? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And of much other thing which that there was? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And of the easy* fire, and smart** also,* slow** quick Which that was made? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And of the pots and glasses engluting,** sealing up That of the air might passen out no thing? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And saide;"Saint Mary, how may this be, That Damian attendeth not to me? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And shall she drench? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And she answered:"Sir, what aileth you? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And there I saw our dame; where is she?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | And with that cry Arcite anon up start, And saide,"Cousin mine, what aileth thee, That art so pale and deadly for to see? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Answer to this demand, as in this case, How shalt thou to thy lady, freshe May, Telle thy woe? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | At Rome, when that she oppressed* was* ravished Of Tarquin? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Aurelius full often sore siketh;** sigheth Is there none other grace in you?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Awake, thou Cook,"quoth he;"God give thee sorrow What aileth thee to sleepe* by the morrow? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Be there* none other manner resemblances** no other kind of That ye may liken your parables unto, comparison* But if a silly wife be one of tho? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Be ye afraid of me that am your friend? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Benedicite,* early What aileth you? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | But by my troth I can not tell your name; Whether shall I call you my lord Dan John, Or Dan Thomas, or elles Dan Albon? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | But now of women would I aske fain, If these assayes mighte not suffice? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | But of my tale how shall I do this day? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | But that I aske, why the fifthe man Was not husband to the Samaritan? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | But what availeth him as in this case? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | But who was woeful, if I shall not lie, Of this wedding but Donegild, and no mo'', The kinge''s mother, full of tyranny? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | By this proverb thou shalt well understand, Have thou enough, what thar* thee reck or care* needs, behoves How merrily that other folkes fare? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Can I not speak* in term? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Can he them thank? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Christe''s foot, what will ye do therewith?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Christe''s sweete tree*,* cross Why rise so rath*? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Dun is in the mire.<2> Is there no man, for prayer nor for hire, That will awaken our fellow behind? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Eke at the feast who might her body save? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | For how should they love together in the pains of hell, when they hated each other in the prosperity of this life? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | For sorrow of this he fell almost adown, And said;"Is there no remedy in this case?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | For who can be so buxom* as a wife? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Friar John, what manner world is this? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Hast thou not heard how saved was Noe, When that our Lord had warned him beforn, That all the world with water* should be lorn*?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Hath wine bereaved me mine eyen sight?'' |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Have ye no manne''s heart, and have a beard? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Heardest thou ever such a song ere now? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | His youngest son, that three years was of age, Unto him said,"Father, why do ye weep? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Hold ye then me, or elles our convent, To praye for you insufficient? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | How longe time will ye reckon and cast Your summes, and your bookes, and your things? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | How longe, Juno, through thy cruelty Wilt thou warrayen* Thebes the city? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | How many might she have in marriage? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | How may this weake woman have the strength Her to defend against this renegate? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | How may ye sleepen all the longe day?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | How true was eke to Alcibiades His love, that for to dien rather chese,** chose Than for to suffer his body unburied be? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | How, John? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | I pray you tell it me; Or where commanded he virginity? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | I said"And for my land thus hast thou murder''d me? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | I say, as far as man may ride or go, The world was his, why should I more devise? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is any copper here within?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is every knight of his thus dangerous? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is he aye sick? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is no time bet* than other in such case? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is she so fair? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is that a Cook of London, with mischance? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is there no grace? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is there no morsel bread that ye do keep? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Is this the law of king Arthoures house? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | LXXXIII.,''Extende in plures dies illum ebrii habitum; nunquid de furore dubitabis? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Lo Croesus, which that was of Lydia king, Mette he not that he sat upon a tree, Which signified he shoulde hanged be? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Lo, what a wife was Alceste?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Lord Christ,"quoth he,"how may this world endure? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Lordings, this question would I aske now, Which was the moste free,* as thinketh you? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | May I not ask a libel, Sir Sompnour, And answer there by my procuratour To such thing as men would appose* me?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Meliboeus answered anon and said:"What man,"quoth he,"should of his weeping stint, that hath so great a cause to weep? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Ne see ye not this honourable knight? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Now is not that of God a full fair grace That such a lewed* mannes wit shall pace*** unlearned** surpass The wisdom of an heap of learned men? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Now look ye, is not this an high folly? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Now singe, Sir, for sainte charity, Let see, can ye your father counterfeit?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Now wherewith should he make his payement, If he us''d not his silly instrument? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Now will ye vouchesafe, my lady dear?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | O Goliath, unmeasurable of length, How mighte David make thee so mate? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | O deare cousin Palamon,"quoth he,"Thine is the vict''ry of this aventure, Full blissfully in prison to endure: In prison? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | O noble Ovid, sooth say''st thou, God wot, What sleight is it, if love be long and hot, That he''ll not find it out in some mannere? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Of Milan greate BARNABO VISCOUNT,<30> God of delight, and scourge of Lombardy, Why should I not thine clomben* wert so high? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Of what house be ye, by your father''s kin? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Or had thou with some quean* all night y- swunk,*** whore** laboured So that thou mayest not hold up thine head?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Or who hath you misboden*, or offended? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Our Host answer''d,"O Jankin, be ye there? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Out of the gospel he the wordes caught, And this figure he added yet thereto, That if gold ruste, what should iron do? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Pygmalion? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Quoth Theseus;"Have ye so great envy Of mine honour, that thus complain and cry? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Rather than with her body do trespass? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Saint Mary, ben''dicite, How might a man have any adversity That hath a wife? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | See ye that oak? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Servage? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Shall all time world be lost eftsoones* now?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Sir Priest,"quoth he,"art thou a vicary? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | So made he eke a temple of false goddes; How might he do a thing that more forbode* is? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | So may I the'',* thou art a proper man,* thrive And like a prelate, by Saint Ronian; Said I not well? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Tell me also, to what conclusion** end, purpose Were members made of generation, And of so perfect wise a wight* y- wrought? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | The lady of the house aye stiller sat, Till she had hearde what the friar said,"Hey, Godde''s mother;"quoth she,"blissful maid, Is there ought elles? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | The lines which follow are a close translation of the original Latin, which reads:"Quis matrem, nisi mentis inops, in funere nati Flere vetet? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | The people cried and rumbled up and down, That with his eares heard he how they said;"Where is this false tyrant, this Neroun?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | The thoughtful marquis spake unto the maid Full soberly, and said in this mannere:"Where is your father, Griseldis?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | The words are"Quis legem det amantibus? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Then shalt thou swim as merry, I undertake, As doth the white duck after her drake: Then will I clepe,*''How, Alison? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Then was he both in lordship and servage? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | There gan our Hoste for to jape and play, And saide,"Sirs, what? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Thereto he was the seemlieste man That is, or was since that the world began; What needeth it his features to descrive? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | These olde women, that be gladly wise As are her mistresses answer''d anon, And said;"Madame, whither will ye gon Thus early? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This Alla king had of this child great wonder, And to the senator he said anon,"Whose is that faire child that standeth yonder?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This January, who is glad but he? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This Palamon, when he these wordes heard, Dispiteously* he looked, and answer''d:* angrily"Whether say''st thou this in earnest or in play?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This Soudaness, whom I thus blame and warray*,* oppose, censure Let privily her council go their way: Why should I in this tale longer tarry? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This knave went him up full sturdily, And, at the chamber door while that he stood, He cried and knocked as that he were wood:** mad"What how? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This olde wife lay smiling evermo'', And said,"Dear husband, benedicite, Fares every knight thus with his wife as ye? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This passeth forth; what will ye bet* than well? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This philosopher soberly* answer''d,* gravely And saide thus, when he these wordes heard;"Have I not holden covenant to thee?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | This sotted* priest, who gladder was than he? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Three year and more how lasted her vitaille*? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Tiburce answer''d, and saide,"Brother dear, First tell me whither I shall, and to what man?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Tiburce answered,"Say''st thou this to me In soothness, or in dreame hear I this?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | To every man alike? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | To him this master called his squier, And said him thus,"May we go to supper? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Unto the angel spake the friar tho;** then''Now, Sir,''quoth he,''have friars such a grace, That none of them shall come into this place?'' |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | WEET* ye not where there stands a little town,* know Which that y- called is Bob- up- and- down,< 1> Under the Blee, in Canterbury way? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Was there no philosopher in all thy town? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Wert thou not wo nt so merrily to sing, That to my heart it was a rejoicing To hear thy voice? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What aileth you to grudge* thus and groan? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What ails the man, so sinfully to swear?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What can now faire Venus do above? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What could a sturdy* husband more devise* stern To prove her wifehood and her steadfastness, And he continuing ev''r in sturdiness? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What dainty* should a man have in his life* value, pleasure For to go love another manne''s wife, That hath her body when that ever him liketh?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What gift* of God had he for all his wives? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What he answer''d, it needs not to rehearse; Who can say bet* than he, who can do worse? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What helpeth it to tarry forth the day, To telle how she wept both eve and morrow? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What is a farthing worth parted on twelve? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What is my guilt? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What is this world? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What maketh this but Jupiter the king? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What may your evil intente you avail? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What needed it? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What needest thou diverse friars to seech? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What needeth greater dilatation? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What needeth it of king ANTIOCHUS< 20> To tell his high and royal majesty, His great pride, and his workes venomous? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What needeth it thereof to sermon* more? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What rown''st* thou with our maid? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What saith she now? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What shall I say of Hasdrubale''s wife, That at Carthage bereft herself of life? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What shall we do? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What should I more unto this tale sayn? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What should I tellen of the royalty Of this marriage, or which course goes beforn, Who bloweth in a trump or in an horn? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What speak''st thou of perambulation? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What though he made a temple, Godde''s house? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What though he were rich and glorious? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What though thine horse be bothe foul and lean? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What will ye do while that it is in hand?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What will ye more? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What wilt thou say? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What wiste this priest with whom that he dealt? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | What? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | When this was read, then said this olde man,"Believ''st thou this or no? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | When will the jailor bringen our pottage? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Where be then the gay robes, and the soft sheets, and the fine shirts? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Where can ye see,* in any manner age,** in any period* That highe God defended* marriage* forbade< 5> By word express? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Where might this woman meat and drinke have? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who can the piteous joye tellen all, Betwixt them three, since they be thus y- met? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who could it tell, or who could it indite, The joye that is maked in the place When Theseus hath done so fair a grace? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who coulde rhyme in English properly His martyrdom? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who coulde ween,* or who coulde suppose* think The woe that in mine heart was, and the pine? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who gave Judith courage or hardiness To slay him, Holofernes, in his tent, And to deliver out of wretchedness The people of God? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who kepte Jonas in the fish''s maw, Till he was spouted up at Nineveh? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who looketh lightly now but Palamon? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who may not be a fool, if but he love? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who painted the lion, tell it me, who? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who shoulde make a demonstration, That every man should have alike his part As of the sound and savour of a fart? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who springeth up for joye but Arcite? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who studieth* now but faire freshe May? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Who was so welcome as my lord Dan John, Our deare cousin, full of courtesy? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why art thou angry with my tale now? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why cried''st thou? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why fare ye thus with me this firste night? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why grudge here his cousin and his wife Of his welfare, that loved him so well? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why is my neigheboure''s wife so gay? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why is she so? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I longer of this case indite? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I make a longer tale of this? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I more examples hereof sayn? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I not as well eke tell you all The portraiture, that was upon the wall Within the temple of mighty Mars the Red? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I sowe draff* out of my fist,* chaff, refuse When I may sowe wheat, if that me list? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I tarry all the longe day? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I tell the answer of the knight? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I telle them, since they he told? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I tellen each proportion Of thinges, whiche that we work upon, As on five or six ounces, may well be, Of silver, or some other quantity? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why should I you rehearse in special Her high malice? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why speak ye thus? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why speakest thou so proudly then to me?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Why will he thus himself and us beguile?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Will he not we d? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Woe was the knight, and sorrowfully siked;** sighed But what? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | Wost* thou whereof a rakel** tongue serveth? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | You lovers ask I now this question,<18> Who lieth the worse, Arcite or Palamon? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | and can ye be aghast of swevenes? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | and of the care and woe That we had in our matters subliming, And in amalgaming, and calcining Of quicksilver, called mercury crude? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | art thou so amorous? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | art thou then a bailiff?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | be they not well array''d? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | ben''dicite, What aileth such an old man for to chide? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | bird,"quoth Phoebus,"what song sing''st thou now? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | brother mine Valerian,"Quoth then Tiburce;"wilt thou me thither lead? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | can they not flee the fire''s heat? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | churl, with sorry grace, Why art thou all forwrapped* save thy face? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | for pleasure* Why should men elles in their bookes set, That man shall yield unto his wife her debt? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | hominis confusio,"& c.("What is Woman? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | how shall I do? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | how shall the world be served? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | is there no remedy?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | it am I,"* who is there? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | my lord,"quoth she,"why make ye yourself for to be like a fool? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | my lord? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | or how may this betide?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | quoth I;"why wilt thou lette* me* prevent More of my tale than any other man, Since that it is the best rhyme that I can? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | quoth she;"so God me speed, I say, a churl hath done a churlish deed, What should I say? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | quoth this Yeoman,"whereto ask ye me? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | said she, Is there no ship, of so many as I see, Will bringe home my lord? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | said this wife;"benedicite, God save you, Sir, what is your sweete will?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | say ye no? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | shall we speak all day of holy writ? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | should I bie* it on my flesh so dear? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | should it elles be? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | trowe ye, that whiles I may preach And winne gold and silver for* I teach,* because That I will live in povert''wilfully? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what aske men to have? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what do ye, Master Nicholay? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what doth this queen of love? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what have I do?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what how, man? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what is thy guilt, That never wroughtest sin as yet, pardie? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what might she say? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what say y''? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what shall we to him say?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what song is this?" |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | what, spare ye for the stones? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | when shall my bones be at rest? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | who hath thee done offence? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | who shall me helpe to indite False Fortune, and poison to despise? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | who wend** weened, thought Today that we should have so fair a grace? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | why wearest thou so wide a cope? |
chaucer-canterbury-3692 | why will ye gon? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | ANTONIO And how stand you affected to his wish? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | ANTONIO Why, what of him? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | But did you perceive her earnest? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | But tell me, wench, how will the world repute me For undertaking so unstaid a journey? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | But were you banish''d for so small a fault? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | But wherefore waste I time to counsel thee, That art a votary to fond desire? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | But, Launce, how sayest thou, that my master is become a notable lover? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | But, host, doth this Sir Proteus that we talk on Often resort unto this gentlewoman? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | But, sirrah, how did thy master part with Madam Julia? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | DUKE A cloak as long as thine will serve the turn? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | DUKE Be they of much import? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | DUKE But, hark thee; I will go to her alone: How shall I best convey the ladder thither? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | DUKE Hath he not a son? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | DUKE How shall I fashion me to wear a cloak? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | DUKE Know ye Don Antonio, your countryman? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | DUKE What mean you by that saying? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | DUKE You know him well? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Dare you presume to harbour wanton lines? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Doth Silvia know that I am banished? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | EGLAMOUR Where shall I meet you? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | First Outlaw What, were you banish''d thence? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | First Outlaw Whence came you? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | First Outlaw Where is the gentleman that was with her? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Hath she forsworn me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Host How? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Host Why, my pretty youth? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Host You would have them always play but one thing? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | How do you, man? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | How many masters would do this for his servant? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Is it mine, or Valentine''s praise, Her true perfection, or my false transgression, That makes me reasonless to reason thus? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Is she kind as she is fair? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Is your countryman According to our proclamation gone? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA And is that paper nothing? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA And why not you? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA And wouldst thou have me cast my love on him? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA But shall I hear him speak? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Come, come; will''t please you go? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Is he among these? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Is''t near dinner- time? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA O, know''st thou not his looks are my soul''s food? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Of all the fair resort of gentlemen That every day with parle encounter me, In thy opinion which is worthiest love? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Pray you, where lies Sir Proteus? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Say, say, who gave it thee? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA That fits as well as''Tell me, good my lord, What compass will you wear your farthingale?'' |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA What is''t that you took up so gingerly? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA What think''st thou of the fair Sir Eglamour? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA What think''st thou of the gentle Proteus? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA What think''st thou of the rich Mercatio? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Where is Launce? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Why didst thou stoop, then? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Why not on Proteus, as of all the rest? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Will ye be gone? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA You do not? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | JULIA Your reason? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | LAUNCE Can nothing speak? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | LAUNCE That''s as much as to say, Can she so? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | LAUNCE What need a man care for a stock with a wench, when she can knit him a stock? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | LAUNCE With my master''s ship? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | LUCETTA But in what habit will you go along? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | LUCETTA What fashion, madam shall I make your breeches? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | LUCETTA What, shall these papers lie like tell- tales here? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Master, shall I strike? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Nay, I remember the trick you served me when I took my leave of Madam Silvia: did not I bid thee still mark me and do as I do? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PANTHINO What''s the unkindest tide? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PANTHINO Where should I lose my tongue? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PANTHINO Wilt thou go? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS And what says she to my little jewel? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS But how camest thou by this ring? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS But she loves you? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS But she received my dog? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS But what said she? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS But, dost thou hear? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Come come, open the matter in brief: what said she? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Have I not reason to prefer mine own? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS In love Who respects friend? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Over the boots? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Valentine? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS What said she? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS What seest thou? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS What then? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS What, didst thou offer her this from me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS What? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Where is that ring, boy? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Wherefore shouldst thou pity her? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Who then? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Who wouldst thou strike? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Why dost thou cry''alas''? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Why sir, how do you bear with me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Why, Valentine, what braggardism is this? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Why, couldst thou perceive so much from her? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | PROTEUS Wilt thou be gone? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA Dost thou know her? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA From whom? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA Is she not passing fair? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA Nay, then he should be blind; and, being blind How could he see his way to seek out you? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA Perchance you think too much of so much pains? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA That you are welcome? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA What say''st thou? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA What would you with her, if that I be she? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA What''s your will? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SILVIA Who is that, servant? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED And have you? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED And must I go to him? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED Are they not lamely writ? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED But shall she marry him? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED But tell me true, will''t be a match? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED For me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED From a pound to a pin? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED How then? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED Is she not hard- favoured, sir? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED She that you gaze on so as she sits at supper? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED She that your worship loves? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED Than how? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED What need she, when she hath made you write to yourself? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED What thou sayest? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED What, are they broken? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED Why didst not tell me sooner? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED Why, man, how black? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED Why, then, how stands the matter with them? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED Why? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED Without you? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED You conclude that my master is a shepherd, then, and I a sheep? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | SPEED''Item: She hath more hair than wit,''-- LAUNCE More hair than wit? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Saw you my master? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Say, from whom? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Second Outlaw For what offence? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Second Outlaw Have you the tongues? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Second Outlaw Tell us this: have you any thing to take to? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Second Outlaw Whither travel you? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | She is dead, belike? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Silvia? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Sir Valentine, your father''s in good health: What say you to a letter from your friends Of much good news? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO And how quote you my folly? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO But well, when I discourse of love and peace? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO Considers she my possessions? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO How likes she my discourse? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO How? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO Not I. PROTEUS Nor I. DUKE Saw you my daughter? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO Seem you that you are not? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO What instance of the contrary? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO What says she to my birth? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO What says she to my face? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO What says she to my valour? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO What seem I that I am not? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO What, that my leg is too long? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO Where meet we? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO Wherefore? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | THURIO Who? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Tell me this: who begot thee? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Then tell me, whither were I best to send him? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Think''st thou I am so shallow, so conceitless, To be seduced by thy flattery, That hast deceived so many with thy vows? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Third Outlaw Have you long sojourned there? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Third Outlaw What say''st thou? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | To make a virtue of necessity And live, as we do, in this wilderness? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | To whisper and conspire against my youth? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE And how do yours? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE And on a love- book pray for my success? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Are all these things perceived in me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE But tell me, dost thou know my lady Silvia? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Dost thou know her by my gazing on her, and yet knowest her not? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Even she; and is she not a heavenly saint? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Go to, sir: tell me, do you know Madam Silvia? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Hast thou observed that? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE How does your lady? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE How esteemest thou me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE How long hath she been deformed? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE How now, sir? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE How now, sirrah? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE How painted? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE If it please me, madam, what then? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Is Silvia dead? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Mistress? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE To do what? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE To whom? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE What dost thou know? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE What figure? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE What lets but one may enter at her window? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE What means your ladyship? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE What should I see then? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE What would your Grace have me to do in this? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE When would you use it? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Why, how know you that I am in love? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Why, she hath not writ to me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Why, sir, who bade you call her? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Why? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Will you make haste? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | VALENTINE Without me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Was this the idol that you worship so? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Well, I''ll have her; and if it be a match, as nothing is impossible,-- SPEED What then? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What halloing and what stir is this to- day? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What is in Silvia''s face, but I may spy More fresh in Julia''s with a constant eye? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What is your news? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What joy is joy, if Silvia be not by? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What letter is this same? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What light is light, if Silvia be not seen? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What might we do to make the girl forget The love of Valentine and love Sir Thurio? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What news, then, in your paper? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What said she? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What should it be that he respects in her But I can make respective in myself, If this fond Love were not a blinded god? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What think you of this page, my lord? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What''s here? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What''s here? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What''s next? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | When will you go? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Where have you been these two days loitering? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Which of you saw Sir Eglamour of late? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Who is Silvia? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Who is that that spake? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Who should be trusted, when one''s own right hand Is perjured to the bosom? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Why muse you, sir? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Why, Phaeton,--for thou art Merops''son,-- Wilt thou aspire to guide the heavenly car And with thy daring folly burn the world? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Why, do you not perceive the jest? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Wilt thou go? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Wilt thou reach stars, because they shine on thee? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | Withdraw thee, Valentine: who''s this comes here? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Enter ANTONIO and PANTHINO] ANTONIO Tell me, Panthino, what sad talk was that Wherewith my brother held you in the cloister? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Enter JULlA and LUCETTA] JULIA But say, Lucetta, now we are alone, Wouldst thou then counsel me to fall in love? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Enter PROTEUS and JULIA] PROTEUS Sebastian is thy name? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Enter SILVIA above] SILVIA Who calls? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Enter THURIO and Musicians] THURIO How now, Sir Proteus, are you crept before us? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Enter THURIO, PROTEUS, and JULIA] THURIO Sir Proteus, what says Silvia to my suit? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Enter, at a distance, Host, and JULIA in boy''s clothes] Host Now, my young guest, methinks you''re allycholly: I pray you, why is it? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Exeunt PROTEUS and SILVIA severally] JULIA Host, will you go? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Exeunt SILVIA and THURIO] VALENTINE Now, tell me, how do all from whence you came? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Exit JULIA] What, gone without a word? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Exit THURIO] Now, tell me, Proteus, what''s your will with me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Exit] JULIA How many women would do such a message? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Exit] VALENTINE And why not death rather than living torment? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Exit][ Enter VALENTINE] DUKE Sir Valentine, whither away so fast? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | [ Re- enter LUCETTA] LUCETTA What would your ladyship? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | and how out of count? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | and how thrives your love? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | are you sadder than you were before? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | ay, who art thou? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | belike it hath some burden then? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | didst thou ever see me do such a trick? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | do you change colour? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | do you not like it? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | gavest thou my letter to Julia? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | his spirit? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | nothing? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | out of tune on the strings? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | says one:''What cur is that?'' |
shakespeare-two-3269 | shall he marry her? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | stay''st thou to vex me here? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | was there ever heard a better, That my master, being scribe, to himself should write the letter? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | what are you reasoning with yourself? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | what is she, That all our swains commend her? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | what letter are you reading there? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | what means this passion at his name? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | what news with your mastership? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | when didst thou see me heave up my leg and make water against a gentlewoman''s farthingale? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | why do I pity him That with his very heart despiseth me? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | why weepest thou, man? |
shakespeare-two-3269 | wilt thou be of our consort? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | ''But, say, resides my son in royal port, In rich Orchomenos, or Sparta''s court? homer-odyssey-1259 ''But, when thy soul from her sweet mansion fled, Say, what distemper gave thee to the dead? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | ''O say what angry power Elpenor led To glide in shades, and wander with the dead? homer-odyssey-1259 ''What art thou? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | ''What hurts thee, Polypheme? homer-odyssey-1259 ''Whither( he cried), ah whither will ye run? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Amid these joys, why seels thy mind to know The unhappy series of a wanderer''s woe? homer-odyssey-1259 And is it thou? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And sleeps my child? homer-odyssey-1259 But say, upon the dark and dismal coast, Saw''st thou the worthies of the Grecian host? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But, tell me who thou art? homer-odyssey-1259 From what far clime( said she) remote from fame Arrivest thou here, a stranger to our name? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | I then:''O nymph propitious to my prayer, Goddess divine, my guardian power, declare, Is the foul fiend from human vengeance freed? homer-odyssey-1259 Is Sparta blest, and these desiring eyes View my friend''s son? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Is not thy thought my own? homer-odyssey-1259 Is this( returns the prince) for mirth a time? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Lives then the boy? homer-odyssey-1259 Mark well my voice,( Ulysses straight replies:) What need of aids, if favour''d by the skies? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | May I presume to search thy secret soul? homer-odyssey-1259 Much of the experienced man I long to hear, If or his certain eye, or listening ear, Have learn''d the fortunes of my wandering lord?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | O that such baseness should disgrace the light? homer-odyssey-1259 O whither, whither flies my son( she cried) To realms; that rocks and roaring seas divide? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Princess? homer-odyssey-1259 Relate( Antinous cries), devoid of guile, When spread the prince his sale for distant Pyle? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Then she:''O worn by toils, O broke in fight, Still are new toils and war thy dire delight? homer-odyssey-1259 Thus I; while raging he repeats his cries, With hands uplifted to the starry skies? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Was ever chief for wars like these renown''d? homer-odyssey-1259 What cause( he cried) can justify our flight To tempt the dangers of forbidding night? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What mutters he? homer-odyssey-1259 What ship transported thee, O father, say; And what bless''d hands have oar''d thee on the way?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What words are these, and what imprudence thine? homer-odyssey-1259 What words are these? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What words( the matron cries) have reach''d my ears? homer-odyssey-1259 Why, dearest object of my duteous love,( Replied the prince,) will you the bard reprove? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Will Neptune( Vulcan then) the faithless trust? homer-odyssey-1259 Worn as I am with age, decay''d with woe; Say, is it baseness to decline the foe? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Ye gods( he cried), upon what barren coast, In what new region, is Ulysses toss''d? homer-odyssey-1259 ''Tis so-- the suitors for their wrongs have paid-- But what shall guard us, if the town invade? homer-odyssey-1259 ( Exclaims Antinous;) can a vigorous foe Meanly decline to combat age and woe? homer-odyssey-1259 ( Melanthius sharp rejoins;) This crafty miscreant, big with dark designs? homer-odyssey-1259 ( Minerva cries,) If man on frail unknowing man relies, Doubt you the gods? homer-odyssey-1259 ( These tender words on every side I hear) What other joy can equal thy return? homer-odyssey-1259 ( Thus quick replied the wisest of mankind) Doubt you my oath? homer-odyssey-1259 ( he cries) what power above Has steel''d that heart, averse to spousal love? homer-odyssey-1259 ( he cries;) Can these lean shrivell''d limbs, unnerved with age, These poor but honest rags, enkindle rage? homer-odyssey-1259 ( what I question most) Is this the far- famed Ithacensian coast? homer-odyssey-1259 ( with tears the prince returns) Yet cease to go-- what man so blest but mourns? homer-odyssey-1259 Ah, why did I Alcinous''grace implore? homer-odyssey-1259 Ah, why forsake Phaeacia''s happy shore? homer-odyssey-1259 All- knowing, say, What godhead interdicts the watery way? homer-odyssey-1259 Am I inferior to a mortal dame? homer-odyssey-1259 Am I the envy of your blissful bowers? homer-odyssey-1259 And fate to numbers, by a single hand? homer-odyssey-1259 And from his holy lips these accents broke:''Why, mortal, wanderest thou from cheerful day, To tread the downward, melancholy way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And is the name of Ithaca forgot? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And now, the rage of thirst and hunger fled, Thus young Ulysses to Eumaeus said:"Whence, father, from what shore this stranger, say? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And oh, what first, what last shall I relate, Of woes unnumbered sent by Heaven and Fate? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And robes like these, so recent and so fair?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And what so tedious as a twice- told tale?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And where that conduct, which revenged the lust Of Priam''s race, and laid proud Troy in dust? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And whither, whither its sad owner fly? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And will Omnipotence neglect to save The suffering virtue of the wise and brave? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And would''st thou evil for his good repay? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | And yet, ah yet, what fates are we to try? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Are thus by Jove who constant beg his aid With pious deed, and pure devotion, paid? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Arise, and bless thee with the glad survey?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Art thou the son of that illustrious sire? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Ask, who disfigured thus that eyeless face? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | At length Telemachus:"Oh, who can find A woman like Penelope unkind? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | At this the father, with a father''s care:"Must he too suffer? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Breathes there a man who dares that hero slay, While I behold the golden light of day? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Bring''st thou these vagrants to infest the land? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But answer, the good ship that brought ye o''er, Where lies she anchor''d? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But heavier fates were destined to attend: What man is happy, till he knows his end?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But if reluctant, who shall force thy stay? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But say, if in my steps my son proceeds, And emulates his godlike father''s deeds? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But say, if in the court the queen reside Severely chaste, or if commenced a bride?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But say, that stranger guest who late withdrew, What and from whence? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But say, why yonder on the lonely strands, Unmindful of her son, Anticlea stands? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But say, yon jovial troops so gaily dress''d, Is this a bridal or a friendly feast? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But tell me, stranger, be the truth confess''d, What years have circled since thou saw''st that guest? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But this to me? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But to Jove''s will submission we must pay; What power so great to dare to disobey? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But what to me avail my honours gone, Successful toils, and battles bravely won? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But who the lighted taper will provide( The female train retired) your toils to guide?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But why these sorrows when my lord arrives? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | But, by the almighty author of thy race, Tell me, oh tell, is this my native place? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | By loved Telemachus''blooming years? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Can living eyes behold the realms below? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Can strangers safely in the court reside,''Midst the swell''d insolence of lust and pride? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Can we alone in furious battle stand, Against that numerous and determined band? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Can yet a doubt or any dread remain, When sworn that oath which never can be vain?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Comest thou alive from pure, ethereal day? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Did chosen chiefs across the gulfy main Attend his voyage, or domestic train? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Did ever sorrows equal mine? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Did fate, or we, when great Atrides died, Urge the bold traitor to the regicide? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Did he with all the greatly wretched, crave A blank oblivion, and untimely grave?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Did nightly thieves, or pirates''cruel bands, Drench with your blood your pillaged country''s sands? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Did not the sun, through heaven''s wide azure roll''d, For three long years the royal fraud behold? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Do public or domestic care constrain This toilsome voyage o''er the surgy main?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Does any mortal, in the unguarded hour Of sleep, oppress thee, or by fraud or power? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Dread ye a foe? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Dwells there a god on all the Olympian brow More swift than Mars, and more than Vulcan slow? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | E''en then to drain it lengthen''d out his breath; Changed to the deep, the bitter draught of death: For fate who fear''d amidst a feastful band? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Enough: in misery can words avail? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Fly unperceived, seducing half the flower Of nobles, and invite a foreign power? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | For lo? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | For swift as thought the goddess had been there, And thence had glided, viewless as the air: The paths of gods what mortal can survey? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | From sleep debarr''d, we sink from woes to woes: And cruel''enviest thou a short repose? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Has Heaven from Pylos brought my lovely boy? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Has life''s fair lamp declined by slow decays, Or swift expired it in a sudden blaze? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Hast thou forgot, ungrateful as thou art, Who saved thy father with a friendly part? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Hast thou not heard how young Orestes, fired With great revenge, immortal praise acquired? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Have not your fathers oft my lord defined, Gentle of speech, beneficent of mind? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | He seized my hand, and gracious thus began:''Ah whither roam''st thou, much- enduring man? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Him while he pass''d, the monster blind bespoke:''What makes my ram the lag of all the flock? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | His barbarous insult even the goddess fires, Who thus the warrior to revenge inspires:"Art thou Ulysses? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | His bed dishonour, and his house betray? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | His bulk and beauty speak no vulgar praise: If, as he seems, he was in better days, Some care his age deserves; or was he prized For worthless beauty? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | His hand to Euryclea''s mouth applied,"Art thou foredoom''d my pest? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Hope ye success? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | How could that numerous and outrageous band By one be slain, though by a hero''s hand?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | How could thy soul, by realms and seas disjoin''d, Outfly the nimble sail, and leave the lagging wind? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | How in a realm so distant should you know From what deep source ceaseless sorrows flow? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | How shall this arm, unequal to the bow, Retort an insult, or repel a foe? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | How sprung a thought so monstrous in thy mind? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | How trace the tedious series of our fate? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | How would the gods my righteous toils succeed, And bless the hand that made a stranger bleed? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | If at the clash of arms, and shout of foes, Swells his bold heart, his bosom nobly glows? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | If she must we d, from other hands require The dowry: is Telemachus her sire? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | If shielded to the dreadful fight we move, By mighty Pallas, and by thundering Jove?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | If this displease, why urge ye here your stay? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | If this, when Helen was the cause, were done; What for thy country now, thy queen, thy son? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | If yet Telemachus, my son, survives? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | If, while the news through every city flies, All Ithaca and Cephalenia rise?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | In such heroic games I yield to none, Or yield to brave Laodamas alone: Shall I with brave Laodamas contend? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | In the young soul illustrious thought to raise, Were ye not tutor''d with Ulysses''praise? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Inform him certain, and protect him, kind?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Irreverent to the great, and uncontroll''d, Art thou from wine, or innate folly, bold? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Is common sense quite banish''d from thy breast? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Is he not wise? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Is it that vanquish''d Irus swells thy mind? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Is then our anger vain? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Is then reversed the sentence of the sky, In one man''s favour; while a distant guest I shared secure the AEthiopian feast? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Is then thy home the passion of thy heart? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Is this the promised, long- expected coast, And this the faith Phaeacia''s rulers boast? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Join all your powers? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Less soft my feature less august my frame? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Live Menelaus not in Greece? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Lives there a man beneath the spacious skies Who sacred honours to the bard denies? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Me would ye leave, who boast imperial sway, When beds of royal state invite your stay? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Me would''st thou please? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Me, as some needy peasant, would ye leave, Whom Heaven denies the blessing to relieve? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Must I the warriors weep, Whelm''d in the bottom of the monstrous deep? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Now first to me this visit dost thou deign, Or number''d in my father''s social train? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | O Euryclea, say, What maids dishonour us, and what obey?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | O tell a wretch in exile doom''d to stray, What air I breathe, what country I survey? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | O why was I victorious in the strife? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Oft, Jove''s ethereal rays( resistless fire) The chanters soul and raptured song inspire Instinct divine? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Oh, art thou come to bless my longing sight? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or I first entering introduce the way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or are thy brothers, who should aid thy power, Turn''d mean deserters in the needful hour? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or bled some friend, who bore a brother''s part, And claim''d by merit, not by blood, the heart?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or choose ye vagrant from their rage to fly, Outcasts of earth, to breathe an unknown sky? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or comest thou single, or attend thy train?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or did the kind domestic friend deplore The breathless heroes on their native shore? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or did the rage of stormy Neptune sweep Your lives at once, and whelm beneath the deep? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or drive him hither, to receive the meed From thy own hand, of this detested deed?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or dwells humanity where riot reigns? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or from their deed I rightlier may divine, Unseemly flown with insolence and wine? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or glides a ghost with unapparent shades; How to Icarius in the bridal hour Shall I, by waste undone, refund the dower? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or has hell''s queen an empty image sent, That wretched I might e''en my joys lament?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or hears she, and with blessings loads the day?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or if no more her absent lord she wails, But the false woman o''er the wife prevails?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or is it but a vain pretence, you love? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or leagued against thee, do thy people join, Moved by some oracle, or voice divine? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or men whose bosom tender pity warms? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or say in Pyle? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or say, does high necessity of state Inspire some patriot, and demand debate? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or say, since honour call''d thee to the field, Hast thou thy Ithaca, thy bride, beheld?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or shall the daughters of mankind compare Their earth born beauties with the heavenly fair?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or thieves insidious thy fair flock surprise?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or waits he grieved, His age not honour''d, nor his wants relieved? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or well- defending some beleaguer''d wall, Say,--for the public did ye greatly fall? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or( since to dust proud Troy submits her towers) Comest thou a wanderer from the Phrygian shores? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or, if I rise in arms, can Scylla bleed?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Or, if a merchant in pursuit of gain, What port received thy vessel from the main? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Pirates perhaps, who seek through seas unknown The lives of others, and expose your own?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Possess''d by wild barbarians, fierce in arms? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Proceeds this boldness from a turn of soul, Or flows licentious from the copious bowl? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Returns he? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say why the fate of Troy awaked thy cares, Why heaved thy bosom, and why flowed thy tears? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, by his rule is my dominion awed, Or crush''d by traitors with an iron rod? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, could one city yield a troop so fair? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, do thy subjects in bold faction rise, Or priests in fabled oracles advise? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, hast thou doom''d to this divided state Or peaceful amity or stern debate? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, if my sire, good old Laertes, lives? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, if my spouse maintains her royal trust; Though tempted, chaste, and obstinately just? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, if the suitors measure back the main, Or still in ambush thirst for blood in vain?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, is the fault, through tame submission, thine? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, shall we seek access?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, should some favouring god restore again The lost Ulysses to his native reign, How beat your hearts? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, then, if slain Some dear- loved brother press''d the Phrygian plain? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, to my mournful couch shall I ascend? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Say, with my garments shall I bend my way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Seek ye to meet those evils ye should shun? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Seest thou these lids that now unfold in vain? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Shall I the long, laborious scene review, And open all the wounds of Greece anew? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Shall I the secret of my breast conceal, Or( as my soul now dictates) shall I tell? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Shall I, a queen, by rival chiefs adored, Accept a wandering stranger for my lord? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Shall never the dear land in prospect rise, Or the loved palace glitter in our eyes? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | So left perhaps to tend the fleecy train, Rude pirates seized, and shipp''d thee o''er the main? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | So much more sweet to spoil than to bestow?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Spontaneous did you speed his secret course, Or was the vessel seized by fraud or force?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Still must we restless rove, new seas explore, The sun descending, and so near the shore? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Straight to the guardian of the bristly kind He thus began, benevolent of mind:"What guest is he, of such majestic air? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Straight to the queen and palace shall I fly, Or yet more distant, to some lord apply?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Struck with amaze, yet still to doubt inclined, He stands suspended, and explores his mind:"What shall I do? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Sufficed it not, that, thy long labours pass''d, Secure thou seest thy native shore at last? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Suppliant to her, since first he chose to pray, Why not herself did she conduct the way, And with her handmaids to our court convey?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Swift to the queen returns the gentle swain:"And say( she cries), does fear or shame detain The cautious stranger? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Tell, then, whence art thou? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | That courage, once the Trojans''daily dread, Known nine long years, and felt by heroes dead? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The bold proposal how shall I fulfil, Dark as I am, unconscious of thy will? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The fruitful continent''s extremest bound, Or some fair isle which Neptune''s arms surround? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The godlike leaders who, in battle slain, Fell before Troy, and nobly press''d the plain? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The insulted hero rolls his wrathful eyes And"Why so turbulent of soul? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The least glad tidings of my absent lord?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The pride of fools, and slaves''insulting scorn? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The voice of nymphs that haunt the sylvan bowers, The fair- hair''d Dryads of the shady wood; Or azure daughters of the silver flood; Or human voice? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The whole sad story, from its first, declare: Sunk the fair city by the rage of war, Where once thy parents dwelt? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | The women keep the generous creature bare, A sleek and idle race is all their care: The master gone, the servants what restrains? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Then Theoclymenus:"But who shall lend, Meantime, protection to thy stranger friend? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Then must he suffer what the Fates ordain; For Fate has wove the thread of life with pain? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Then thus Eumaeus:"Judge we which were best; Amidst yon revellers a sudden guest Choose you to mingle, while behind I stay? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Then thus began, Her words addressing to the godlike man:"Camest thou hither, wondrous stranger I say, From lands remote and o''er a length of sea? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Then thus rejoin''d the dame, devoid of fear:"What words, my son, have passed thy lips severe? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Then thus the prince:"To these shall we afford A fate so pure as by the martial sword? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Then to her maids:"Why, why, ye coward train, These fears, this flight? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Think''st thou by wit to model their escape? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | This hostile crew What single arm hath prowess to subdue? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Those arms are dreadful which thou canst not bear, Why should this bow be fatal to the brave? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Through the wild ocean plough the dangerous way, And leave his fortunes and his house a prey? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Thus wilt thou leave me, are we thus to part? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Thy town, thy parents, and thy native place? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To give another''s is thy hand so slow? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To him Antinous thus with fury said:"What words ill- omen''d from thy lips have fled? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To these, the nightly prostitutes to shame, And base revilers of our house and name?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To this the king:"Ah, why must I disclose A dreadful story of approaching woes? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To whom Antinous thus his rage express''d:"What god has plagued us with this gourmand guest? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To whom the Father of the immortal powers, Who swells the clouds, and gladdens earth with showers,"Can mighty Neptune thus of man complain? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To whom with dubious joy the queen replies:"Wise is thy soul, but errors seize the wise; The works of gods what mortal can survey? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To whom with sighs Ulysses gave reply:"Ah why the ill- suiting pastime must I try? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | To whom, insensate, dost thou bear the bow? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Too great a bliss to weep within her arms? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Wait ye, till he to arms in council draws The Greeks, averse too justly to our cause? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Was it to flatter or deride my woes? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Wast thou not furnish''d by our choicest care For Greece, for home and all thy soul held dear?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | We stand discover''d by the rising fires; Askance the giant glares, and thus inquires:"''What are ye, guests? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Were all these partners of one native air? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What angry gods to these dark regions led Thee, yet alive, companion of the deed? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What bark to waft me, and what wind to blow?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What can not Wisdom do? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What can not want? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What cause compell''d so many, and so gay, To tread the downward, melancholy way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What guilt provokes him, and what vows appease?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What hopest thou here? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What if the immortals on the man bestow Sufficient strength to draw the mighty bow? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What man, or god, deceived his better sense, Far on the swelling seas to wander hence? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What power becalms the innavigable seas? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What ships have I, what sailors to convey, What oars to cut the long laborious way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What sounds are these that gather from he shores? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What sum, what prize from AEolus I brought? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | What vessel bore him o''er the watery way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | When to his lust AEgysthus gave the rein, Did fate, or we, the adulterous act constrain? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Whence this unguarded openness of soul, But from the license of the copious bowl? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Where goes the swineherd with that ill- look''d guest? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Where shall Ulysses shun, or how sustain Nations embattled to revenge the slain?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Where shall this treasure now in safely be? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Where through the vales the mazy waters stray? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Whilst to his neighbour each express''d his thought:"''Say, whence ye gods, contending nations strive Who most shall please, who most our hero give? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Who calls, from distant nations to his own, The poor, distinguish''d by their wants alone? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Who could Ulysses in that form behold? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Who eyes their motion? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Who from such youth could hope considerate care? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Who knows their motives, who shall trace their way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Who knows thy bless''d, thy wish''d return? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Who then thy master, say? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why cease we then the wrath of heaven to stay? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why cease ye then to implore the powers above, And offer hecatombs to thundering Jove? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why here once more in solemn council sit? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why in this hour of transport wound thy ears, When thou must learn what I must speak with tears? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why is she silent, while her son is nigh? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why must I waste a tedious life in tears, Nor bury in the silent grave my cares? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why roll those eyes unfriended of repose? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why seize ye not yon beeves, and fleecy prey? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why thus in silence? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why to the ground she bends her downcast eye? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why to thy godlike son this long disguise? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why was I born? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Why were my cares beguiled in short repose? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Will martial flames for ever fire thy mind, And never, never be to Heaven resign''d? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | With the begging kind Shame suits but ill."Eumaeus thus rejoin''d:"He only asks a more propitious hour, And shuns( who would not?) |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Would''st thou to rise in arms the Greeks advise? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | Ye young, ye old, the weighty cause disclose: Arrives some message of invading foes? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | and can brave souls resent E''en after death? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | and what thy race? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | and whose the land So dress''d and managed by thy skilful hand? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | awful Nestor, tell How he, the mighty Agamemnon, fell; By what strange fraud Aegysthus wrought, relate( By force he could not) such a hero''s fate? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | be mine The rights and honours of a power divine? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | bear Of wanderings and of woes a wretched share? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | but issuing from the shades, Why cease I straight to learn what sound invades?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | by whose commands we meet? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | declare Your name, your parents, and your native air: Sincere from whence begun, your course relate, And to what ship I owe the friendly freight?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | for this( the prudent man replies) Against Ulysses shall thy anger rise? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | for what more fame can yield Than the swift race, or conflict of the field? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | from what coast we came? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | from whence, from whom you came? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | hopes the fool to please so many lords? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | is not vengeance thine? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | must my servant- train The allotted labours of the day refrain, For them to form some exquisite repast? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | my son, why now no more appears That warmth of soul that urged thy younger years? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | near or off the shore?'' |
homer-odyssey-1259 | of thy band? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | of thy promise made; Must sad Ulysses ever be delay''d? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | oh say, To the chaste queen shall we the news convey? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | on board a fond debate arose; What rare device those vessels might inclose? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | on what adventure say, Thus far you wander through the watery way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | on what adventure, say, Thus far ye wander through the watery way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | on what behest Arrivest thou here, an unexpected guest? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | or did they keep, In humbler life, the lowing herds and sheep? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | or where Was then the martial brother''s pious care? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | say, The dark descent, and who shall guide the way? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | shall Irus be no more? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | shall one daring boy The scheme of all our happiness destroy? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | sincere and free declare, Are you, of manly growth, his royal heir? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | strong, To curb wild riot, and to punish wrong?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | the genial banquet o''er, It fits to ask ye, what your native shore, And whence your race? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | the suitor- train Still treat thy worth with lordly dull disdain; Or speaks their deed a bounteous mind humane?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | this lofty strain? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | to dash those teeth away, Like some wild boar''s, that, greedy of his prey, Uproots the bearded corn? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | to strife he draws Peer against peer; and what the weighty cause? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | to whom resign''d The strongest, bravest, greatest of mankind Comest thou the first, to view this dreary state? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | unconcern''d survey Thy lost Ulysses, on this signal day? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | what aid would you afford To the proud suitors, or your ancient lord?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | what demon could''st thou meet To thwart thy passage, and repel thy fleet? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | what farther fates attend This life of toils, and what my destined end? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | what led thy steps to rove The horrid mazes of this magic grove? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | what mortal strength can move The enormous burden, who but Heaven above? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | what speaks the voice of fame? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | what strange affright Thus breaks our slumbers, and disturbs the night? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | whence, that princely air? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | where then shall we find The patient body and the constant mind? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | whither wanders thy distemper''d brain, Thou bold intruder on a princely train? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | whither wanders thy distemper''d mind? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | whither wilt thou go? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | who knows But other gods intend me other woes? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | who monarch of the place? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | who shall trace their way?" |
homer-odyssey-1259 | who, like thyself, excel In arts of counsel and dissembling well; To me? |
homer-odyssey-1259 | why with winning charms Thus slow to fly with rapture to his arms? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And Montague our topmost; what of him? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And Richard but a ragged fatal rock? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And Somerset another goodly mast? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And am I guerdon''d at the last with shame? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And am I then a man to be beloved? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And happy always was it for that son Whose father for his hoarding went to hell? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And now what rests but that we spend the time With stately triumphs, mirthful comic shows, Such as befits the pleasure of the court? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And now, to soothe your forgery and his, Sends me a paper to persuade me patience? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And what is Edward but ruthless sea? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And what makes robbers bold but too much lenity? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And when came George from Burgundy to England? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And where''s that valiant crook- back prodigy, Dicky your boy, that with his grumbling voice Was wo nt to cheer his dad in mutinies? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And who durst mine when Warwick bent his brow? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And who shines now but Henry''s enemies? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And will you pale your head in Henry''s glory, And rob his temples of the diadem, Now in his life, against your holy oath? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And, by thy guess, how nigh is Clarence now? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | And, though unskilful, why not Ned and I For once allow''d the skilful pilot''s charge? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | BONA Dear brother, how shall Bona be revenged But by thy help to this distressed queen? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Becomes it thee to be thus bold in terms Before thy sovereign and thy lawful king? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Bids''t thou me rage? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But how is it that great Plantagenet Is crown''d so soon, and broke his solemn oath? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But in this troublous time what''s to be done? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But is your grace dead, my Lord of Somerset? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But let me see: is this our foeman''s face? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But say, is Warwick friends with Margaret? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But think you, lords, that Clifford fled with them? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But what said Henry''s queen? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But what said Lady Bona to my marriage? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But what said Warwick to these injuries? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But wherefore dost thou come? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But why come you in arms? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But why commands the king That his chief followers lodge in towns about him, While he himself keeps in the cold field? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | But, Clifford, tell me, didst thou never hear That things ill- got had ever bad success? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLARENCE Alas, you know,''tis far from hence to France; How could he stay till Warwick made return? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLARENCE Didst thou not hear me swear I would not do it? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLARENCE Father of Warwick, know you what this means? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLARENCE To whom, my lord? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLARENCE What else? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLARENCE What will your grace have done with Margaret? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLARENCE What? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLIFFORD And reason too: Who should succeed the father but the son? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLIFFORD I slew thy father, call''st thou him a child? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | CLIFFORD Whom should he follow but his natural king? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Can I do this, and can not get a crown? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Canst thou not speak? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Cousin of Exeter, what thinks your lordship? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Dare he presume to scorn us in this manner? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Did I forget that by the house of York My father came untimely to his death? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Did I impale him with the regal crown? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Did I let pass the abuse done to my niece? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Did I put Henry from his native right? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | EDWARD Dazzle mine eyes, or do I see three suns? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | EDWARD Say, Henry, shall I have my right, or no? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | EDWARD Where is the Duke of Norfolk, gentle Warwick? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Edward, what satisfaction canst thou make For bearing arms, for stirring up my subjects, And all the trouble thou hast turn''d me to? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Enter KING HENRY VI, WARWICK, MONTAGUE, CLARENCE, EXETER, and OXFORD] WARWICK What counsel, lords? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Enter RUTLAND and his Tutor] RUTLAND Ah, whither shall I fly to''scape their hands? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Father Was ever father so bemoan''d his son? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | First Watchman Who goes there? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | For what doth cherish weeds but gentle air? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | For what hath broach''d this tumult but thy pride? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GEORGE Where''s Captain Margaret, to fence you now? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GLOUCESTER But wherefore stay we? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GLOUCESTER Come, Warwick, take the time; kneel down, kneel down: Nay, when? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GLOUCESTER I thought, at least, he would have said the king; Or did he make the jest against his will? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GLOUCESTER Think''st thou I am an executioner? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GLOUCESTER Why should she live, to fill the world with words? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GLOUCESTER Why, brother, wherefore stand you on nice points? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GLOUCESTER[ Aside to CLARENCE] Ay, widow? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | GLOUCESTER[ Aside to CLARENCE] Yea, is it so? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | HASTINGS Why, knows not Montague that of itself England is safe, if true within itself? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | HASTINGS Why, master mayor, why stand you in a doubt? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Had he none else to make a stale but me? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Hath not our brother made a worthy choice? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Hath that poor monarch taught thee to insult? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | How couldst thou drain the life- blood of the child, To bid the father wipe his eyes withal, And yet be seen to bear a woman''s face? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | How far hence is thy lord, mine honest fellow? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | How fares my brother? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Impairing Henry, strengthening misproud York, The common people swarm like summer flies; And whither fly the gnats but to the sun? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Is this the alliance that he seeks with France? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV And would you not do much to do them good? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV Ay, what of that? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV But Warwick''s king is Edward''s prisoner: And, gallant Warwick, do but answer this: What is the body when the head is off? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV But whither shall we then? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV How many children hast thou, widow? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV Huntsman, what say''st thou? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV Is Lewis so brave? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV Is proclamation made, that who finds Edward Shall have a high reward, and he his life? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV Now, Warwick, wilt thou ope the city gates, Speak gentle words and humbly bend thy knee, Call Edward king and at his hands beg mercy? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV Now, brother Richard, will you stand by us? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV What if both Lewis and Warwick be appeased By such invention as I can devise? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV What service wilt thou do me, if I give them? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV What, Warwick, wilt thou leave the town and fight? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV What, doth she swoon? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV Yea, brother Richard, are you offended too? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING EDWARD IV Yea, brother of Clarence, are thou here too? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI Ah, know you not the city favours them, And they have troops of soldiers at their beck? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI And shall I stand, and thou sit in my throne? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI Art thou against us, Duke of Exeter? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI But did you never swear, and break an oath? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI For what, lieutenant? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI Gentle son Edward, thou wilt stay with me? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI More than I seem, and less than I was born to: A man at least, for less I should not be; And men may talk of kings, and why not I? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI My Lord of Somerset, what youth is that, Of whom you seem to have so tender care? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI Think''st thou that I will leave my kingly throne, Wherein my grandsire and my father sat? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI Was ever king so grieved for subjects''woe? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI What title hast thou, traitor, to the crown? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI Where did you dwell when I was King of England? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI Why, am I dead? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING HENRY VI[ Aside] I know not what to say; my title''s weak.-- Tell me, may not a king adopt an heir? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING LEWIS XI But is he gracious in the people''s eye? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING LEWIS XI Now Warwick, tell me, even upon thy conscience, Is Edward your true king? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING LEWIS XI Warwick, what are thy news? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | KING LEWIS XI Why, say, fair queen, whence springs this deep despair? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | LADY GREY Why stops my lord, shall I not hear my task? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | MONTAGUE What talk you of debating? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Many a battle have I won in France, When as the enemy hath been ten to one: Why should I not now have the like success? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Mayor Ay, say you so? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | NORTHUMBERLAND What would your grace have done unto him now? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Nor forward of revenge, though they much err''d: Then why should they love Edward more than me? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Now, brother of Gloucester, Lord Hastings, and the rest, Stand you thus close, to steal the bishop''s deer? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | OXFORD Call him my king by whose injurious doom My elder brother, the Lord Aubrey Vere, Was done to death? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | OXFORD Why, Warwick, canst thou speak against thy liege, Whom thou obeyed''st thirty and six years, And not bewray thy treason with a blush? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Or shall we beat the stones about thine ears? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Or shall we on the helmets of our foes Tell our devotion with revengeful arms? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Or, with the rest, where is your darling Rutland? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Our slaughter''d friends the tackles; what of these? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | PRINCE EDWARD And why not queen? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | PRINCE EDWARD Father, you can not disinherit me: If you be king, why should not I succeed? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Why brother Rivers, are you yet to learn What late misfortune is befall''n King Edward? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | QUEEN MARGARET Nay, never bear me hence, dispatch me here, Here sheathe thy sword, I''ll pardon thee my death: What, wilt thou not? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | QUEEN MARGARET Renowned prince, how shall poor Henry live, Unless thou rescue him from foul despair? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | QUEEN MARGARET What, weeping- ripe, my Lord Northumberland? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | QUEEN MARGARET Who can be patient in such extremes? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | RICHARD Are you there, butcher? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | RICHARD Ay, with five hundred, father, for a need: A woman''s general; what should we fear? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | RICHARD What, not an oath? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | RICHARD and HASTINGS fly over the stage] SOMERSET What are they that fly there? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | RICHARD''Twas you that kill''d young Rutland, was it not? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | RIVERS But, madam, where is Warwick then become? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | RIVERS Then is my sovereign slain? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | RUTLAND I never did thee harm: why wilt thou slay me? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Richard, where art thou? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Say Warwick was our anchor; what of that? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Second Keeper But, if thou be a king, where is thy crown? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Second Keeper Say, what art thou that talk''st of kings and queens? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Second Keeper Why linger we? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Second Watchman Ay, wherefore else guard we his royal tent, But to defend his person from night- foes? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Second Watchman What, will he not to bed? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Shall we go throw away our coats of steel, And wrap our bodies in black mourning gowns, Numbering our Ave- Maries with our beads? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Son Was ever son so rued a father''s death? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Speak suddenly, my lords, are we all friends? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Speak, Clifford, dost thou know who speaks to thee? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | The friends of France our shrouds and tacklings? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | The wanton Edward, and the lusty George? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Third Watchman But say, I pray, what nobleman is that That with the king here resteth in his tent? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Third Watchman O, is it so? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | To entail him and his heirs unto the crown, What is it, but to make thy sepulchre And creep into it far before thy time? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | To whom do lions cast their gentle looks? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK Can Oxford, that did ever fence the right, Now buckler falsehood with a pedigree? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK How far off is our brother Montague? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK Is not a dukedom, sir, a goodly gift? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK Nay, rather, wilt thou draw thy forces hence, Confess who set thee up and pluck''d thee own, Call Warwick patron and be penitent? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK Oxford, how haps it, in this smooth discourse, You told not how Henry the Sixth hath lost All that which Henry Fifth had gotten? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK Suppose, my lords, he did it unconstrain''d, Think you''twere prejudicial to his crown? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK What answers Clarence to his sovereign''s will? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK What say''st thou, Henry, wilt thou yield the crown? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK Who should that be? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WARWICK Why should you sigh, my lord? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | WESTMORELAND What, shall we suffer this? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Was''t you that revell''d in our parliament, And made a preachment of your high descent? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Well, say there is no kingdom then for Richard; What other pleasure can the world afford? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What Clarence but a quicksand of deceit? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What answer makes King Lewis unto our letters? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What brings thee to France? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What fare? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What is your quarrel? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What love, think''st thou, I sue so much to get? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What mutter you, or what conspire you, lords? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What scene of death hath Roscius now to act? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What though the mast be now blown overboard, The cable broke, the holding- anchor lost, And half our sailors swallow''d in the flood? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What''s worse than murderer, that I may name it? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What, at your book so hard? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What, hath thy fiery heart so parch''d thine entrails That not a tear can fall for Rutland''s death? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | What, wilt thou not? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Where are your mess of sons to back you now? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Where is that devil''s butcher, Hard- favour''d Richard? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Where is the post that came from Montague? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Where slept our scouts, or how are they seduced, That we could hear no news of his repair? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Who''s this? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Who''scapes the lurking serpent''s mortal sting? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Whose hand is that the forest bear doth lick? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Why art thou patient, man? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Why ask I that? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Why come you not? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Why comest thou in such post? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Why do we finger thus? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Why faint you, lords? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Why, is not Oxford here another anchor? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Why, what is pomp, rule, reign, but earth and dust? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | YORK About what? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | YORK Mine boy? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | YORK What then? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | YORK What, with five thousand men? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | YORK Why whisper you, my lords, and answer not? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | YORK Will you we show our title to the crown? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Yet, ere thou go, but answer me one doubt, What pledge have we of thy firm loyalty? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | Yonder''s the head of that arch- enemy That sought to be encompass''d with your crown: Doth not the object cheer your heart, my lord? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | You twain, of all the rest, Are near to Warwick by blood and by alliance: Tell me if you love Warwick more than me? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ CLIFFORD groans, and dies] EDWARD Whose soul is that which takes her heavy leave? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Dies] GLOUCESTER What, will the aspiring blood of Lancaster Sink in the ground? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter GEORGE] GEORGE Our hap is loss, our hope but sad despair; Our ranks are broke, and ruin follows us: What counsel give you? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter QUEEN ELIZABETH and RIVERS] RIVERS Madam, what makes you in this sudden change? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter RICHARD] RICHARD Ah, Warwick, why hast thou withdrawn thyself? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter SIR JOHN SOMERVILLE] WARWICK Say, Somerville, what says my loving son? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter WARWICK, the Mayor of Coventry, two Messengers, and others upon the walls] WARWICK Where is the post that came from valiant Oxford? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter WARWICK] KING LEWIS XI What''s he approacheth boldly to our presence? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter a Messenger] But what art thou, whose heavy looks foretell Some dreadful story hanging on thy tongue? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter a Messenger] But, stay: what news? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter a Post] KING EDWARD IV Now, messenger, what letters or what news From France? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Enter a Post] WARWICK What news, my friend? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Exit, guarded] OXFORD What now remains, my lords, for us to do But march to London with our soldiers? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Exit, led out forcibly] KING EDWARD IV Where''s Richard gone? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Exit] WARWICK Ah, who is nigh? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ GLOUCESTER and CLARENCE retire] KING EDWARD IV Now tell me, madam, do you love your children? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ He gives his hand to WARWICK] KING LEWIS XI Why stay we now? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | [ Stabs him] GLOUCESTER Sprawl''st thou? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | and more than so, my father, Even in the downfall of his mellow''d years, When nature brought him to the door of death? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | and yours, fair queen? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | art thou king, and wilt be forced? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | at a strife? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | but how made he escape? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | can so young a thorn begin to prick? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | come to me, friend or foe, And tell me who is victor, York or Warwick? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | dare you speak? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | do I not breathe a man? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | durst the traitor breathe out so proud words? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | for well using me? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | how began it first? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | if God''s good will were so; For what is in this world but grief and woe? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | is he dead already? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | is it for a wife That thou art malcontent? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | is sportful Edward come? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | is''t for my life? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | loss of some pitch''d battle against Warwick? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | multitudes, and fear? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | or is it fear That makes him close his eyes? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | think''st thou that we fear them? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | was it you that would be England''s king? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | what hap? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | what hope of good? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | what news abroad? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | what news? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | what shouts are these? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | what? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | whither shall we fly? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | why is he so sad? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | why, now thou hast thy wish: Wouldst have me weep? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | wilt thou go along? |
shakespeare-third-4147 | wilt thou kneel for grace, And set thy diadem upon my head; Or bide the mortal fortune of the field? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | ''Madam, why laugh you at such a barren rascal? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | ''No man must know:''if this should be thee, Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | ANTONIO How have you made division of yourself? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | ANTONIO Sebastian are you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | ANTONIO Will you deny me now? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Am not I consanguineous? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Are all the people mad? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Are you the lady of the house? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Art any more than a steward? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | But do you remember? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | But shall we make the welkin dance indeed? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | But tell me true, are you not mad indeed? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | But what''s your jest? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | CURIO Will you go hunt, my lord? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown Alas, sir, how fell you besides your five wits? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown Are you ready, sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown But as well? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown Do you not hear, fellows? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown Good madonna, why mournest thou? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown Master Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild fowl? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown What thinkest thou of his opinion? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown Where, good Mistress Mary? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown Would not a pair of these have bred, sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown''Alas, why is she so?'' |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown''Hold thy peace, thou knave,''knight? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown''She loves another''--Who calls, ha? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown''What an if you do?'' |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown[ Sings] O mistress mine, where are you roaming? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Clown[ Sings] What is love? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO And what''s her history? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO But died thy sister of her love, my boy? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO Gracious Olivia,-- OLIVIA What do you say, Cesario? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO How can that be? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO I know thee well; how dost thou, my good fellow? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO My gentleman, Cesario? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO Still so cruel? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO Thou dost speak masterly: My life upon''t, young though thou art, thine eye Hath stay''d upon some favour that it loves: Hath it not, boy? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO What kind of woman is''t? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO What, Curio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO What, to perverseness? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO When came he to this town? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | DUKE ORSINO Who was it? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Do ye make an alehouse of my lady''s house, that ye squeak out your coziers''catches without any mitigation or remorse of voice? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Does not our life consist of the four elements? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Even so quickly may one catch the plague? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | FABIAN Did not I say he would work it out? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | FABIAN Is''t so saucy? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | FABIAN We shall have a rare letter from him: but you''ll not deliver''t? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Fair lady, do you think you have fools in hand? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | First Officer What''s that to us? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Have ye no wit, manners, nor honesty, but to gabble like tinkers at this time of night? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Have you no more to say? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Have you not set mine honour at the stake And baited it with all the unmuzzled thoughts That tyrannous heart can think? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | How do you, Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | How does he, sirrah? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | How dost thou like this tune? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | How is''t with you, sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | How will this fadge? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | I call thee by the most modest terms; for I am one of those gentle ones that will use the devil himself with courtesy: sayest thou that house is dark? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | I could be sad: this does make some obstruction in the blood, this cross- gartering; but what of that? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | I prithee now, ungird thy strangeness and tell me what I shall vent to my lady: shall I vent to her that thou art coming? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | I sent thee sixpence for thy leman: hadst it? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | If that this simple syllogism will serve, so; if it will not, what remedy? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | In what chapter of his bosom? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Is it a world to hide virtues in? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Is that the meaning of''accost''? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Is there no respect of place, persons, nor time in you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Is thy lady within? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Is''t possible that my deserts to you Can lack persuasion? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Know''st thou this country? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Look you, sir, such a one I was this present: is''t not well done? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MALVOLIO Do you know what you say? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MALVOLIO Is''t even so? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MALVOLIO Saying,''Cousin Toby, my fortunes having cast me on your niece give me this prerogative of speech,''-- SIR TOBY BELCH What, what? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MALVOLIO What employment have we here? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MALVOLIO''Go to thou art made, if thou desirest to be so;''-- OLIVIA Am I made? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MALVOLIO''Some achieve greatness,''-- OLIVIA What sayest thou? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MALVOLIO[ Reads] Jove knows I love: But who? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MALVOLIO[ Within] Who calls there? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MARIA How do you, Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MARIA Nay, but say true; does it work upon him? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MARIA What''s that to the purpose? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MARIA Why appear you with this ridiculous boldness before my lady? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MARIA Will you hoist sail, sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MARIA Yet you will be hanged for being so long absent; or, to be turned away, is not that as good as a hanging to you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | MARIA You are resolute, then? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Are you a comedian? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Ay, husband: can he that deny? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Ay, marry, what is he? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Can you do it? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Cousin, cousin, how have you come so early by this lethargy? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Did he write this? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA From the Count Orsino, is it? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Hast thou forgot thyself? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Have I, Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Have you any commission from your lord to negotiate with my face? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA How does he love me? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA How say you to that, Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA How with mine honour may I give him that Which I have given to you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Of what personage and years is he? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Smilest thou? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA What is your name? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA What kind o''man is he? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA What manner of man? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA What meanest thou by that, Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA What think you of this fool, Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA What would my lord, but that he may not have, Wherein Olivia may seem serviceable? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Whence came you, sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Where goes Cesario? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Whither, my lord? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Who has done this, Sir Andrew? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Who of my people hold him in delay? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Why, how dost thou, man? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Why, what would you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Why, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Will it be ever thus? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | OLIVIA Wilt thou go to bed, Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Of charity, what kin are you to me? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Or will not else thy craft so quickly grow, That thine own trip shall be thine overthrow? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Perchance he is not drown''d: what think you, sailors? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SEBASTIAN Do I stand there? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SEBASTIAN Fear''st thou that, Antonio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SEBASTIAN What relish is in this? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SEBASTIAN Why I your purse? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW Are you full of them? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW But it becomes me well enough, does''t not? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW Her C''s, her U''s and her T''s: why that? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW I''faith, or I either? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW Or o''mine either? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW There''s a testril of me too: if one knight give a-- Clown Would you have a love- song, or a song of good life? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW What is''Pourquoi''? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW What''s that? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW Where shall I find you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW Wherefore, sweet- heart? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW Why, would that have mended my hair? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW Will either of you bear me a challenge to him? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR ANDREW''Slight, will you make an ass o''me? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH And cross- gartered? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Art thou good at these kickshawses, knight? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Did she see thee the while, old boy? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Pourquoi, my dear knight? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Prithee, hold thy peace; this is not the way: do you not see you move him? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Shall I play my freedom at traytrip, and become thy bond- slave? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH She''s a beagle, true- bred, and one that adores me: what o''that? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH To anger him we''ll have the bear again; and we will fool him black and blue: shall we not, Sir Andrew? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH What is thy excellence in a galliard, knight? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH What shall we do else? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH What wilt thou do? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH What, for being a puritan? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH What, what? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Wherefore are these things hid? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Who, Sir Andrew Aguecheek? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Will you encounter the house? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Will you help? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH Wouldst thou not be glad to have the niggardly rascally sheep- biter come by some notable shame? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH''Shall I bid him go, and spare not?'' |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | SIR TOBY BELCH''Shall I bid him go?'' |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Shall we go see the reliques of this town? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Shall we set about some revels? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Sir, shall I to this lady? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Sot, didst see Dick surgeon, sot? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Those wits, that think they have thee, do very oft prove fools; and I, that am sure I lack thee, may pass for a wise man: for what says Quinapalus? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | To whom should this be? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Toby approaches; courtesies there to me,-- SIR TOBY BELCH Shall this fellow live? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA And what should I do in Illyria? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Art not thou the Lady Olivia''s fool? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Art thou a churchman? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Ay, but I know-- DUKE ORSINO What dost thou know? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA But if she can not love you, sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA How can this be? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA I beseech you, what manner of man is he? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA I pray you, sir, what is he? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Say I do speak with her, my lord, what then? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Thy reason, man? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA What is the name? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA What money, sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA What''s she? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Who does beguile you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Who governs here? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Why do you speak to me? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Why, man? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA Would it be better, madam, than I am? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | VIOLA You either fear his humour or my negligence, that you call in question the continuance of his love: is he inconstant, sir, in his favours? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Was not this love indeed? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Were you sent hither to praise me? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What are you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What countryman? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What do you say? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What dost thou mean? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What follows? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What foolish boldness brought thee to their mercies, Whom thou, in terms so bloody and so dear, Hast made thine enemies? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What is he at the gate, cousin? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What is to be said to him, lady? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What is your parentage? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What say you sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What shall I do? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What shall you ask of me that I''ll deny, That honour saved may upon asking give? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What should I think on''t? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What will become of this? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What will you do, now my necessity Makes me to ask you for my purse? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What wouldst thou now? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What years, i''faith? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | What''s to do? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Where is Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Where lies your text? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Where''s Antonio, then? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Where''s my cousin Toby? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Which is Sebastian? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Who are they? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Who hath made this havoc with them? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Who, I, sir? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Why dost thou smile so and kiss thy hand so oft? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Why, this is evident to any formal capacity; there is no obstruction in this: and the end,--what should that alphabetical position portend? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Will you walk towards him? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | You''ll nothing, madam, to my lord by me? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | Your will? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter ANTONIO and SEBASTIAN] ANTONIO Will you stay no longer? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter DUKE ORSINO, CURIO, and Attendants] DUKE ORSINO Who saw Cesario, ho? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter DUKE ORSINO, VIOLA, CURIO, and Lords] DUKE ORSINO Belong you to the Lady Olivia, friends? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter MALVOLIO] MALVOLIO My masters, are you mad? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter OLIVIA and MARIA] OLIVIA I have sent after him: he says he''ll come; How shall I feast him? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter SEBASTIAN and Clown] Clown Will you make me believe that I am not sent for you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter SIR ANDREW, SIR TOBY BELCH, and FABIAN] SIR ANDREW Now, sir, have I met you again? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter SIR TOBY BELCH and MARIA] SIR TOBY BELCH What a plague means my niece, to take the death of her brother thus? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter VIOLA, MALVOLIO following] MALVOLIO Were not you even now with the Countess Olivia? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter VIOLA, a Captain, and Sailors] VIOLA What country, friends, is this? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter VIOLA, and Attendants] VIOLA The honourable lady of the house, which is she? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Enter VIOLA, and Clown with a tabour] VIOLA Save thee, friend, and thy music: dost thou live by thy tabour? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Exeunt MARIA and Attendants] Now, sir, what is your text? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Exit] OLIVIA What''s a drunken man like, fool? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Exit] OLIVIA''What is your parentage?'' |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Exit] SIR TOBY BELCH Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Exit] SIR TOBY BELCH O knight thou lackest a cup of canary: when did I see thee so put down? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Exit] VIOLA I left no ring with her: what means this lady? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Exit] VIOLA Pray you, sir, do you know of this matter? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Re- enter FABIAN, with MALVOLIO] DUKE ORSINO Is this the madman? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Re- enter MARIA, with SIR TOBY BELCH and FABIAN] SIR TOBY BELCH Which way is he, in the name of sanctity? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | [ Re- enter MARIA] SIR TOBY BELCH Wilt thou set thy foot o''my neck? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | am I not of her blood? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | are they like to take dust, like Mistress Mall''s picture? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | art thou mad? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | did not I tell you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | did you never see the picture of''we three''? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | do or not do? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | do you come near me now? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | does he rave? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | does she so? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | doth he not mend? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | he is sad and civil, And suits well for a servant with my fortunes: Where is Malvolio? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | how dost thou, chuck? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | how is''t with you, man? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | how is''t with you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | how is''t with you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | how runs the stream? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | is it so long? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | nor will you not that I go with you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | or do you but counterfeit? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | or what are you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | shall we do that? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | shall we rouse the night- owl in a catch that will draw three souls out of one weaver? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | talkest thou nothing but of ladies? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | thy exquisite reason, dear knight? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | were we not born under Taurus? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what bestow of him? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what gentleman? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what is the matter with thee? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what name? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what news from her? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what parentage? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what wilt thou be When time hath sow''d a grizzle on thy case? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what would you? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | what''s your metaphor? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | wherefore have these gifts a curtain before''em? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | who does do you wrong? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | why dost thou not go to church in a galliard and come home in a coranto? |
shakespeare-twelfth-2404 | why, what are you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | ANNE PAGE Alas, how then? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | ANNE PAGE I mean, Master Slender, what would you with me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | ANNE PAGE Now, Master Slender,-- SLENDER Now, good Mistress Anne,-- ANNE PAGE What is your will? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Am I a woodman, ha? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Am I politic? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Am I ridden with a Welsh goat too? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Are these your letters, knight? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | BARDOLPH With eggs, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Between nine and ten, sayest thou? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | But are you sure of your husband now? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | But what make you here? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Can you love the maid? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Can you tell, cousin? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Cried I aim? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | DOCTOR CAIUS It is no matter- a ver dat: do not you tell- a me dat I shall have Anne Page for myself? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | DOCTOR CAIUS Sir Hugh send- a you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | DOCTOR CAIUS Vat be all you, one, two, tree, four, come for? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | DOCTOR CAIUS Vat is de clock, Jack? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | DOCTOR CAIUS What shall de honest man do in my closet? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | DOCTOR CAIUS Wherefore shall I be content- a? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Did not I tell you how you should know my daughter by her garments? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Did she change her determination? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Did you ever hear the like? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Do you know Ford, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Do you understand me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Does he lie at the Garter? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF And these are not fairies? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Ay, marry, was it, mussel- shell: what would you with her? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Brook is his name? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF But not kissed your keeper''s daughter? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF But what says she to me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF But, I pray thee, tell me this: has Ford''s wife and Page''s wife acquainted each other how they love me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Have I laid my brain in the sun and dried it, that it wants matter to prevent so gross o''erreaching as this? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Have you importuned her to such a purpose? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Have you received no promise of satisfaction at her hands? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Is it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Is this true, Pistol? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Now, master Brook, you come to know what hath passed between me and Ford''s wife? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Of what quality was your love, then? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Pistol, did you pick Master Slender''s purse? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Reason, you rogue, reason: thinkest thou I''ll endanger my soul gratis? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Ten and eleven? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF To what purpose have you unfolded this to me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Well, Mistress Ford; what of her? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF What are they? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF What made me love thee? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF What say you, Scarlet and John? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF What shall I do? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF What tellest thou me of black and blue? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Where is it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Which of you know Ford of this town? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FALSTAFF Would it apply well to the vehemency of your affection, that I should win what you would enjoy? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FENTON Shall I do any good, thinkest thou? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FENTON Sir, will you hear me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FENTON What news? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FENTON Yes, marry, have I; what of that? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FENTON[ Within] Who''s within there? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD And as wicked as his wife? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD And did he search for you, and could not find you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD And how long lay you there? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD And one that is as slanderous as Satan? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD And sped you, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD Do you think there is truth in them? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD How so, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD Master Page, as I am a man, there was one conveyed out of my house yesterday in this basket: why may not he be there again? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD Now, sir, who''s a cuckold now? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD Went you not to her yesterday, sir, as you told me you had appointed? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD Were they his men? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD What name, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD What, a hodge- pudding? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD What, while you were there? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD Where had you this pretty weather- cock? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD Which way should be go? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD Will you follow, gentlemen? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | FORD You heard what this knave told me, did you not? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Have I not forbid her my house? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Have not your worship a wart above your eye? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Host What duke should that be comes so secretly? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Host What is the matter, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Host What say you to young Master Fenton? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Host What says my bully- rook? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Host Where be my horses? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Host Which means she to deceive, father or mother? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | How shall I be revenged on him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | How shall I be revenged on him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | I keep but three men and a boy yet, till my mother be dead: but what though? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | I must wait on myself, must I? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | I suspect without cause, mistress, do I? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | I will entertain Bardolph; he shall draw, he shall tap: said I well, bully Hector? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Is Falstaff there? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Is Sir John Falstaff here? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Is he dead, my Ethiopian? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Is it not true, Master Page? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Is she at home? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Is your wife at home indeed? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Jack Rugby,--mine host de Jarteer,--have I not stay for him to kill him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Let me speak with the gentlemen: they speak English? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Are you not ashamed? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD But is my husband coming? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Heaven forgive our sins FALSTAFF What should this be? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD How near is he, Mistress Page? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Shall we tell our husbands how we have served him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD What cause of suspicion? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD What shall I do? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD What think you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD What''s the matter, good Mistress Page? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Where is Nan now and her troop of fairies, and the Welsh devil Hugh? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Why, alas, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Why, does he talk of him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Why, man, why? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Why, what have you to do whither they bear it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD Why? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD You use me well, Master Ford, do you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS FORD''Boarding,''call you it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE A puffed man? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE I pray you, come, hold up the jest no higher Now, good Sir John, how like you Windsor wives? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE O Mistress Ford, what have you done? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE What''s the matter, woman? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE What? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE Why went you not with master doctor, maid? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE Why, did you take her in green? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE You little Jack- a- Lent, have you been true to us? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE You will do it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS PAGE[ Aside to MISTRESS FORD] Heard you that? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY A softly- sprighted man, is he not? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY And Master Slender''s your master? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY And have not they suffered? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY And how does good Master Fenton? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Are they so? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Ay, forsooth; and, I pray, how does good Mistress Anne? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Does he not wear a great round beard, like a glover''s paring- knife? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY How say you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Is it this, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Shall I vouchsafe your worship a word or two? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Will I? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | MISTRESS QUICKLY[ Aside to SIMPLE] Are you avised o''that? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Master Page, will you go with us? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | May I not go out ere he come? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Mistress Ford and Mistress Page have I encompassed you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | My suit then is desperate; you''ll undertake her no more? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | NYM The anchor is deep: will that humour pass? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Now, will you go, Mistress Page? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | O, I should remember him: does he not hold up his head, as it were, and strut in his gait? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE And as poor as Job? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE And did he send you both these letters at an instant? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE How? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE Now, mistress, how chance you went not with Master Slender? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE Of what, son? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE Old, cold, withered and of intolerable entrails? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE Well, let it not be doubted but he''ll come: And in this shape when you have brought him thither, What shall be done with him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE Well, what remedy? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE Why, yet there want not many that do fear In deep of night to walk by this Herne''s oak: But what of this? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE Why? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE Yes: and you heard what the other told me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PAGE[ Within] Who''s there? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PISTOL Didst not thou share? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PISTOL I do relent: what would thou more of man? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PISTOL Shall I Sir Pandarus of Troy become, And by my side wear steel? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PISTOL Wilt thou revenge? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | PISTOL With wit or steel? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Peter Simple, you say your name is? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Pray you, go and vetch me in my closet un boitier vert, a box, a green- a box: do intend vat I speak? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | RUGBY Sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SHALLOW Cousin Abraham Slender, can you love her? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SHALLOW If it be confessed, it is not redress''d: is not that so, Master Page? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SHALLOW Sir, he''s a good dog, and a fair dog: can there be more said? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SHALLOW That''s good too: but what needs either your''mum''or her''budget?'' |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SHALLOW[ To PAGE] Will you go with us to behold it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIMPLE And what says she, I pray, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIMPLE May I be bold to say so, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIMPLE Pray you, sir, was''t not the wise woman of Brentford? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIMPLE What, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS And what is''a stone,''William? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS But can you affection the''oman? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS Come, will this wood take fire? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS Fery well: what is it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS Shall I tell you a lie? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS What is he? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS What is your genitive case plural, William? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS William, how many numbers is in nouns? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SIR HUGH EVANS''Oman, art thou lunatics? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SLENDER Did her grandsire leave her seven hundred pound? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SLENDER How does your fallow greyhound, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SLENDER Mistress Anne Page? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SLENDER What need you tell me that? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | SLENDER Where''s Simple, my man? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Said I well? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | See you these, husband? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Send me a cool rut- time, Jove, or who can blame me to piss my tallow? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Shall I lose my doctor? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Shall I lose my parson, my priest, my Sir Hugh? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Shall I put him into the basket again? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Shall it be so? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | She comes of errands, does she? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Slender, I broke your head: what matter have you against me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Speak I like Herne the hunter? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Therefore, precisely, can you carry your good will to the maid? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Unless you go out disguised-- MISTRESS FORD How might we disguise him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Vere is dat knave Rugby? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Vherefore vill you not meet- a me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Was there a wise woman with thee? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Well, what is your accusative case? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What an unweighed behavior hath this Flemish drunkard picked-- with the devil''s name!--out of my conversation, that he dares in this manner assay me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What do you call your knight''s name, sirrah? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What doth he think of us? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What is he, William, that does lend articles? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What is it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What is the focative case, William? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What is''fair,''William? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What is''lapis,''William? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What say you to''t, Sir John? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What says my AEsculapius? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What shall I do? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What should I say to him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What spirit, what devil suggests this imagination? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What tempest, I trow, threw this whale, with so many tuns of oil in his belly, ashore at Windsor? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What weapons is he? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What with me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | What''s your will? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | When gods have hot backs, what shall poor men do? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Where''s the cowl- staff? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Whether had you rather lead mine eyes, or eye your master''s heels? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Whither go you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Who comes here? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Who hath got the right Anne? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Who says this is improvident jealousy? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Why do your dogs bark so? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Will it do well? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Will they yet look after thee? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Will you go, An- heires? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Will you go, gentles? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Will you take up your wife''s clothes? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Will you, upon good dowry, marry her? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Wilt thou, after the expense of so much money, be now a gainer? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Would any man have thought this? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | Would you speak with me? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | You are afraid, if you see the bear loose, are you not? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | You have not the Book of Riddles about you, have you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Aside to them] PAGE Sir Hugh is there, is he? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Drawing him aside] Host What sayest thou, my bully- rook? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter DOCTOR CAIUS] DOCTOR CAIUS Vere is Mistress Page? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter FALSTAFF, BARDOLPH, NYM, and PISTOL] FALSTAFF Now, Master Shallow, you''ll complain of me to the king? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter FALSTAFF] FALSTAFF Have I caught thee, my heavenly jewel? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter FENTON] FENTON How now, good woman? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter FORD, PAGE, SHALLOW, DOCTOR CAIUS, and SIR HUGH EVANS] FORD Ay, but if it prove true, Master Page, have you any way then to unfool me again? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter Host and SIMPLE] Host What wouldst thou have, boor? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter MISTRESS PAGE, MISTRESS QUICKLY, and WILLIAM PAGE] MISTRESS PAGE Is he at Master Ford''s already, think''st thou? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter MISTRESS QUICKLY] MISTRESS PAGE You are come to see my daughter Anne? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter MISTRESS QUICKLY] Now, whence come you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Enter SIR HUGH EVANS] SIR HUGH EVANS Where is mine host? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exeunt MISTRESS PAGE and ROBIN] FORD Has Page any brains? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exeunt PAGE, DOCTOR CAIUS, and SIR HUGH EVANS] MISTRESS PAGE Is there not a double excellency in this? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exeunt SHALLOW and SIR HUGH EVANS] ANNE PAGE Will''t please your worship to come in, sir? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exeunt SHALLOW, SLENDER, PAGE, and Host] DOCTOR CAIUS Ha, do I perceive dat? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exit BARDOLPH] Have I lived to be carried in a basket, like a barrow of butcher''s offal, and to be thrown in the Thames? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exit BARDOLPH] NYM He was gotten in drink: is not the humour conceited? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exit FALSTAFF] MISTRESS PAGE Are you not ashamed? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exit] FALSTAFF Sayest thou so, old Jack? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Exit][ Enter DOCTOR CAIUS] DOCTOR CAIUS Vere is mine host de Jarteer? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ FALSTAFF hides himself][ Re- enter MISTRESS PAGE and ROBIN] What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Lies down upon his face] SIR HUGH EVANS Where''s Bede? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ MISTRESS PAGE and MISTRESS FORD come forward] MISTRESS PAGE Whither go you, George? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Noise within] MISTRESS PAGE Alas, what noise? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ Singing] And down, down, adown- a,& c.[ Enter DOCTOR CAIUS] DOCTOR CAIUS Vat is you sing? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | [ They converse apart] Host Hast thou no suit against my knight, my guest- cavaleire? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | a bag of flax? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | am I a Machiavel? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | am I subtle? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | are you not ashamed? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | art thou there, my deer? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | be there bears i''the town? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | dispense with trifles; what is it? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | do I sleep? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | do not these fair yokes Become the forest better than the town? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | do you study them both, master parson? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | hadst thou not fifteen pence? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | hast thou no understandings for thy cases and the numbers of the genders? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | hath he any eyes? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | hath he any thinking? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | have I lived to stand at the taunt of one that makes fritters of English? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | have I not, at de place I did appoint? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | have you dispatched? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | have you make- a de sot of us, ha, ha? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | how does pretty Mistress Anne? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | how dost thou? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | how should I bestow him? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | is he dead, bully stale? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | is he dead, my Francisco? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | is he dead? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | is this a dream? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | is this a vision? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | may we, with the warrant of womanhood and the witness of a good conscience, pursue him with any further revenge? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | my Galen? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | my doe? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | my heart of elder? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | my male deer? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | no school to- day? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | privacy? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | said I well? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | shall I have a coxcomb of frize? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | shall I not lose my suit? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | shall we wag? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | speak from thy lungs military: art thou there? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | then there''s more sympathy: you love sack, and so do I; would you desire better sympathy? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | to send him word they''ll meet him in the park at midnight? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | vat is dat? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | vat is dat? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | vat is in my closet? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | what does Master Fenton here? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | what have I forgot? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | what is your plot? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | what news with you? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | what old woman''s that? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | what phrase is this,''He hears with ear''? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | what: thick- skin? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | where have you been? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | whither bear you this? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | who''s at home besides yourself? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | why art thou melancholy? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | why, did you not lend it to Alice Shortcake upon All- hallowmas last, a fortnight afore Michaelmas? |
shakespeare-merry-3204 | wilt thou the spigot wield? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And if you do not,said Philip,"what will you forfeit for your rashness?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And you,said he,"do you also think to keep a man of my age alive by force, and to sit here and silently watch me? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Are you still to learn,said he,"that the end and perfection of our victories is to avoid the vices and infirmities of those whom we subdue?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But,replied the stranger,"suppose there were?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Even so,he said,"if Themistocles had not come before, where had you been now?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For who are we,said they,"and who is it we refuse to obey? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For,said he,"if he had need of wife, why did he part with her? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | How,said Numa,"with the heads of onions?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | How,said he,"dare you presume to reflect upon Cornelia, the mother of Tiberius?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | So I heard,replied Antigonus;"was it of Thasian wine, or Chian?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Then,said Caesar,"in case any man should offer violence to these laws, will you be reedy to give assistance to the people?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Therefore,rejoined Onomarchus,"now you have found such a man, why do n''t you submit quietly to his pleasure?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What effeminacy does Marius see in us, that he should thus like women lock us up from encountering our enemies? plutarch-lives-1350 What evil genius,"he would say,"hurries us perpetually from worse to worse? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What,replied Nasica,"then if Tiberius had bidden you burn the capitol, would you have burnt it?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Wherein,say they,"have we injured or offended you, as to deserve such sufferings, past and present? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Why, then,replied Cato,"did you not give me a sword, that I might stab him, and free my country from this slavery?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Why, then,replied they,"do you not lead us to them, before our blood is dried up in us?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Will you not remember,said he,"you are Caesar, and claim the honor which is due to your merit?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | You can not be contented,said he,"to die with Phocion?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | You speak,said Cineas,"what is perfectly probable, but will the possession of Sicily put an end to the war?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Agesilaus in scorn asked, Why they were not ready to receive them? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Agesilaus turned, and looking him in the face,"Are you not,"said he,"Callippides the showman?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Ah, and what greater pleasure could one have? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And Cleomenes, guessing at his meaning, replied,"What, Lysandridas, you will not surely advise me to restore your city to you again?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And another time to the Samians:"Your counsels are remiss and your performances slow: what think ye will be the end?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And both of them at the same time cried out, he that received the blow, in Latin,"Vile Casca, what does this mean?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And had I not been miserable with less dishonor, if I had met with a more severe and inhuman enemy? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And if he had not, why did he take her again? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And on Sylla looking up and wondering what it meant,"What harm, mighty Sir,"said she,"if I also was desirous to partake a little in your felicity?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And when one express after another came from the camp, confirming and magnifying the victories,"When,"said he,"will the end of them come?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And when one that came in said angrily,"Was this well done of your lady, Charmion?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And why depreciate also my victory, and make my conquests insignificant, by proving yourself a coward, and a foe beneath a Roman? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | And you, young man, why do not you bind your father''s hands behind him, that when Caesar comes, he may find me unable to defend myself? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Antigonus, after the victory, asked the Macedonians, to try them, how it happened the horse had charged without orders before the signal? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Antony, standing at the prow, demanded of him,"Who is this that pursues Antony?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Are we not still masters of our own swords? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Artabanus asking him,"Who must we tell him that you are? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | At last, Cleomenes venturing to tell her, she laughed aloud, and said,"Was this the thing that you had so often a mind to tell me, and were afraid? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | At which words when Casca was surprised, the other said laughing,"How come you to be so rich of a sudden, that you should stand to be chosen aedile?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Brutus boldly asked it,"What are you, of men or gods, and upon what business come to me?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But Brutus, calling his two sons by their names,"Canst not thou,"said he,"O Titus, or thou, Tiberius, make any defense against the indictment?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But Demetrius, in a great passion, interrupted him:"And you, good sir, why do you afflict yourself for the matter? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But Dionysodorus the Troezenian proves him to be wrong, and restores the true reading, which is this,-- Who praise their fathers but degenerate sons? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But Titus Vinius, captain of his praetorian guard, spoke thus:"Galba, what means this inquiry? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But did not Cimon also suffer like him in this? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But they were imposed upon by the Mithridatians, who, showing them the Romans encamped on the hills, said,"Do ye see those? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But what was his name?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | But why, O men of Athens, kill others who have offended in nothing?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Caesar asked,"Why do n''t you then, out of the same fear, keep at home?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Caesar called him by his name, and said,"What hopes, Caius Crassinius, and what grounds for encouragement?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Caesar snatching hold of the handle of the dagger, and crying out aloud in Latin,"Villain Casca, what do you?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Cato returned him no answer; but said to his friends,"Can we wonder all has gone ill with us, when our love of office survives even in our very ruin?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Charon was at first disturbed, but asking,"Who are they? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Cineas, after a little pause,"And having subdued Italy, what shall we do next?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Considering therefore with myself Whom shall I set so great a man to face? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Demaratus, being asked in a troublesome manner by an importunate fellow, Who was the best man in Lacedaemon? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Do you think people, if they had received no injury, would come such a journey only to calumniate your father?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Do you think that we are unwilling to requite with favor those who have well deserved, and who are honored even by our enemies?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Does Mithridates then withhold Paphlagonia? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Does not, however, the matter turn the other way? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Does the defeat of Carbo and Caepio, who were vanquished by the enemy, affright him? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For as the hunter considers the whelp itself, not the bitch, and the horse- dealer the foal, not the mare,( for what if the foal should prove a mule?) |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For do you not see the wide and unknown wilderness behind? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For how is it probable that he would have been tender of his life, when he was so bitter against his memory? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For how shall we dare to desire from you another captain, since we can not restore Pelopidas?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For there was, indeed, much wonder and question among the people,"Why should Pompey and Crassus want another consulship? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For what time can men select to think themselves secure, when that of victory itself forces us more than any to dread our own fortune? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | For what wonder had it been for Pompey, to sit in the senate before his time? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Fortune has now given you the sole disposal of us; how will you determine concerning her hard fate? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Have I not suffered something more injurious and deplorable in her lifetime? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Have you brought forth children as she has done? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | He making bold to reply:"How, Sir, can you, being sick, assist me?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | He replied,"Do not you see, O Artasyras, that it is my master, Cyrus?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | He replied,"How can you, except we have a fair hearing?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | He was himself with difficulty heard at all, when he put the question,"Do you wish to put us to death lawfully, or unlawfully?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | He, believing it, cried out,"Now, Antony, why delay longer? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | His friend asked him in reply,"Where is it you have been, Cicero?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | His question to the third was, Which is the cunningest of beasts? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | I would fain know of Cato himself, if we seek riches that we may enjoy them, why is he proud of having a great deal, and being contented with little? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | In what a condition do you think his family is in at his house, when you see him appear in public in such a threadbare cloak? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | In what relation must she salute you as her uncle, or as her husband?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Is it a duty to postpone everything to a sense of injuries, and wrong to gratify a mother in a request like this? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Is it not probable that one who, out of doors, goes thus exposed to the cold, must want food and other necessaries at home? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Is it not that Caesar, who is now invested with all the power of Rome? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Is it to acknowledge two superiors instead of one, whilst we run away from Antigonus, and flatter Ptolemy? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | It should seem, also, that he had a son by her; Eupolis, in his Demi, introduced Pericles asking after his safety, and Myronides replying,"My son?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Menander, in one of his comedies, alludes to this marvel when he says, Was Alexander ever favored more? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Must I be disarmed, and hindered from using my own reason? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Nor was Caesar without suspicions of him, and said once to his friends,"What do you think Cassius is aiming at? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Of the fifth he asked, Which was eldest, night or day? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Or who would with any patience hear his friends, if they should presume to defend his government as not arbitrary and tyrannical? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Or whom oppose? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Or, is it for your mother''s sake that you retreat to Egypt? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Or, shall we sit lazily in Egypt, inquiring what news from Sparta, and whom Antigonus hath been pleased to make governor of Lacedaemon?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Satyr- king, instead of swords, Will you always handle words? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Shall we set free our slaves against Caesar, who have ourselves no more liberty than he is pleased to allow? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | She, being amazed, answered,"But why so suddenly, or what means this haste? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | She, catching him about the neck and kissing him, said,"O father, do you not know that Perseus is dead?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | So, also, the informer whom Eupolis introduces in his Maricas, attacking a good, simple, poor man:-- How long ago did you and Nicias meet? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | The Athenians not unnaturally asked the question,"Why then, as it is, do not you go with a squadron against them?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | The husband returning, and seeing him at it,"What,"says he,"may this mean, O Philopoemen?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | The king was extremely surprised, and asked,"Why impossible to relieve?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Then first he seemed to have recovered his senses, and uttering, it is said, only these words,"What, into the camp too?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Then said Pompaedius,"And you, young sir, what say you to us? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | These conquests once perfected, will any assert that of the enemies who now pretend to despise us, anyone will dare to make further resistance?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | They had only just made their way out, when the soldiers rushed into the room, and called out,"Where are Caesar''s enemies?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | This is the occasion when he is related to have said,"O ye Athenians, will ye believe what dangers I incur to merit your praise?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | This person being highly blamed by his friends, who demanded, Was she not chaste? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | This so irritated Alexander, that throwing one of the cups at his head,"You villain,"said he,"what, am I then a bastard?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | To Metellus Nepos, who, in a dispute between them, repeated several times,"Who was your father, Cicero?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | To this Brutus, in great discomposure replied,"Why then, Casca, do you ask me about it, and not do yourselves what you think fitting?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | To which Cassius with some emotion answered,"But what Roman will suffer you to die? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | To whom he, being a little overcome with the wine replied,"What are these things, Sparamizes? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Upon which one of the better citizens remarked, he was quite right;"If we should torture Phocion, what could we do to you?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Upon which the other, raising his voice, exclaimed loudly,"What, Demosthenes, nothing has been done to me?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Was it that under other commanders they stood upon the defensive? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What he thought of such an action of such a man? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What if Heraclides be perfidious, malicious, and base, must Dion therefore sully or injure his virtue by passionate concern for it? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What is the difference, then, between the two customs? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What is there in all Rome so sacred and venerable as the vestal virgins, to whose care alone the preservation of the eternal fire is committed? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What then induced them so particularly to honor Cimon? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What then? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What, do you not know yourself, Brutus? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | What, then, some may say, has not Rome been advanced and bettered by her wars? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | When Brutus answered, that he would not be there,"But what,"says Cassius,"if they should send for us?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | When all that failed, he boldly accosted him, and asked him, whether he did not remember him? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | When any would say to him, the Great King will have it so; he would reply,"How is he greater than I, unless he be juster?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | When one of Eretria began to oppose him, he said,"Have you anything to say of war, that are like an ink- fish? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | When somebody was saying Pompey the Great was coming, he smiled, and asked him,"How big is he?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | When they were met, he said:"What is it you intend, you men of Sparta? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Whence then, may some say, was it, that Aeschines speaks of him as a person so much to be wondered at for his boldness in speaking? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Which shall we call the worst, their love- making or your compassion? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Whither do we madly sail, flying the evil which is near, to seek that which is at a distance? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Who should prevent you? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Why take pains to expose the city to the terrible conflagration now so near? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Why therefore should you come to see me, or why not rather have left to her evil genius one who has brought upon you her own ill- fortune? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | With the diffusion of this money, at once a number of vices were banished from Lacedaemon; for who would rob another of such a coin? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Would you have me, who aspire to empire, show myself unworthy of it?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Yet what were these men, and what strength had they, to entertain such a thought? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | Yet why should this needs follow? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | and as to the ships, deny that article? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | and asked,"Why stimulate his already eager passion for glory? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | and well made? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | and which of us is a Scipio, a Pompey, or a Cato? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | and who conceals them?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | and why they two together, and not with some third person? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | and, in the next place, when called to account for it, did he not disobey their summons? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | and, lastly, by the blows and other public affronts to the Aediles, had he not done all he could to commence a civil war? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | he continued,"ought not the petitioner to speak first, and the conqueror to listen in silence?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | he replied,"Was it this Minerva, that was lately found playing the harlot in Collytus?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | holding out his shoe, asked them, Whether it was not new? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | into the very camp?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | or, what more effective means to one''s moral improvement? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | said Hannibal,"what will you do with this man, who can bear neither good nor bad fortune? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | said he that brought it;"do you know that he who gives you this is Antony''s son, who is free to give it, if it were all gold? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | was she not fair? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | was she not fruitful? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | what Venus, or what grace divine, Did here with human workmanship combine? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | what is it you have done to me?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | what king more powerful than Mithridates? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | who is the man that seeks another man? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | who of the Italians more warlike than Lamponius and Telesinus? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | who scratches his head with one finger?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | who''s equal to the place? |
plutarch-lives-1350 | will dead men come to you for rations?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | will not you, as well as your brother, intercede with your uncle in our behalf?" |
plutarch-lives-1350 | will you never cease prating of laws to us that have swords by our sides?" |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | ''tis like a demi- cannon: What, up and down, carved like an apple- tart? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | A good matter, surely: comes there any more of it? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | And come to Padua, careless of your life? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | And come you now with,''knocking at the gate''? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | And do you tell me of a woman''s tongue, That gives not half so great a blow to hear As will a chestnut in a farmer''s fire? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | And tell me now, sweet friend, what happy gale Blows you to Padua here from old Verona? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Apollo plays,[ Music] And twenty caged nightingales do sing: Or wilt thou sleep? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Are they all ready? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA But do you hear, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA Didst thou not say he comes? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA How hast thou offended? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA Is he come? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA Is it new and old too? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA Is''t possible you will away to- night? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA Lucentio is your name; of whence, I pray? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA What then? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA What, is the man lunatic? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA What, will my daughter prove a good musician? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA When will he be here? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA Who comes with him? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA Why, tell me, is not this my Cambio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BAPTISTA Why, then thou canst not break her to the lute? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIANCA Am I your bird? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIANCA Is it for him you do envy me so? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIANCA Tranio, you jest: but have you both forsworn me? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIANCA What, master, read you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIANCA Where left we last? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIONDELLO He that has the two fair daughters: is''t he you mean? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIONDELLO What, my old worshipful old master? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIONDELLO Who? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIONDELLO Why, is it not news, to hear of Petruchio''s coming? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | BIONDELLO You saw my master wink and laugh upon you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Be the jacks fair within, the jills fair without, the carpets laid, and every thing in order? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Braved in mine own house with a skein of thread? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But art thou not advised, he took some care To get her cunning schoolmasters to instruct her? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But did I never speak of all that time? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But stay a while: what company is this? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But what talk I of this? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But where is Kate? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But where is Kate? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But who is here? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | But will you woo this wild- cat? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | CURTIS Do you hear, ho? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | CURTIS How? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | CURTIS I prithee, good Grumio, tell me, how goes the world? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | CURTIS Is my master and his wife coming, Grumio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | CURTIS Is she so hot a shrew as she''s reported? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | CURTIS Who knows not that? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Call you this gamut? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Did I not bid thee meet me in the park, And bring along these rascal knaves with thee? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Do you hear, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Dost thou love hawking? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | First Servant Will''t please your lordship drink a cup of sack? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | For shame, thou helding of a devilish spirit, Why dost thou wrong her that did ne''er wrong thee? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GREMIO A bridegroom say you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GREMIO And may not young men die, as well as old? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GREMIO Hark you, sir; you mean not her to-- TRANIO Perhaps, him and her, sir: what have you to do? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GREMIO No, say''st me so, friend? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GREMIO What''s that, I pray? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GREMIO Why will you mew her up, Signior Baptista, for this fiend of hell, And make her bear the penance of her tongue? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GRUMIO Am I but three inches? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GRUMIO What say you to a neat''s foot? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GRUMIO What''s that to thee? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | GRUMIO Will he woo her? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Gentles, methinks you frown: And wherefore gaze this goodly company, As if they saw some wondrous monument, Some comet or unusual prodigy? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | HORTENSIO Confess, confess, hath he not hit you here? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | HORTENSIO Mistress, what cheer? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | HORTENSIO Petruchio, shall I then come roundly to thee And wish thee to a shrewd ill- favour''d wife? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | HORTENSIO Signior Baptista, will you be so strange? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | HORTENSIO Sir, a word ere you go; Are you a suitor to the maid you talk of, yea or no? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | HORTENSIO Sir, let me be so bold as ask you, Did you yet ever see Baptista''s daughter? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | HORTENSIO Who shall begin? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | HORTENSIO You''ll leave his lecture when I am in tune? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Have I not heard great ordnance in the field, And heaven''s artillery thunder in the skies? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Have I not heard the sea puff''d up with winds Rage like an angry boar chafed with sweat? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Have I not in a pitched battle heard Loud''larums, neighing steeds, and trumpets''clang? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Have I not in my time heard lions roar? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Here''s snip and nip and cut and slish and slash, Like to a censer in a barber''s shop: Why, what, i''devil''s name, tailor, call''st thou this? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Hortensio, have you told him all her faults? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Hostess You will not pay for the glasses you have burst? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | How do you all at Verona? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | How does my father? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | How durst you, villains, bring it from the dresser, And serve it thus to me that love it not? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | How likes Hortensio that? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | How near is our master? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | How say you to a fat tripe finely broil''d? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | How say you, Signior Gremio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | If I may be bold, Tell me, I beseech you, which is the readiest way To the house of Signior Baptista Minola? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Is not a comondy a Christmas gambold or a tumbling- trick? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Is that an answer? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Is''t not Hortensio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA Are you content to stay? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA Ay, if the fool could find it where it lies, PETRUCHIO Who knows not where a wasp does wear his sting? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA Call you me daughter? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA I pray you, sir, is it your will To make a stale of me amongst these mates? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA I will be angry: what hast thou to do? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA Mistress, how mean you that? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA The more my wrong, the more his spite appears: What, did he marry me to famish me? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA What is your crest? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA What, in the midst of the street? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA Where did you study all this goodly speech? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | KATHARINA Young budding virgin, fair and fresh and sweet, Whither away, or where is thy abode? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Know you not the cause? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO And then? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO And what of all this? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO And what of him, Tranio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO And what of him? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO Are you so formal, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO Biondello, what of that? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO Hearest thou, Biondello? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO It is: may it be done? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO Mistress, what''s your opinion of your sister? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | LUCENTIO What sayest thou, Biondello? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Lord Do you intend to stay with me tonight? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Lord What''s here? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Master, has my fellow Tranio stolen your clothes? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | NATHANIEL How now, old lad? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Now I begin: Imprimis, we came down a foul hill, my master riding behind my mistress,-- CURTIS Both of one horse? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Now, my spruce companions, is all ready, and all things neat? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Or do I dream? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Or is the adder better than the eel, Because his painted skin contents the eye? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Or you stolen his? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO A herald, Kate? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Am I not wise? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Be patient, gentlemen; I choose her for myself: If she and I be pleased, what''s that to you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Did ever Dian so become a grove As Kate this chamber with her princely gait? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Hortensio, to what end are all these words? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO How but well, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Is not this well? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Marry, peace it bodes, and love and quiet life, And awful rule and right supremacy; And, to be short, what not, that''s sweet and happy? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Signior Hortensio, come you to part the fray? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO What is his name? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO What, art thou ashamed of me? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO What, with my tongue in your tail? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO What, you mean my face? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO What? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Where is your sister, and Hortensio''s wife? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Who brought it? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Whose tongue? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Why came I hither but to that intent? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Why, sir, what''s your conceit in that? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Why, what''s a moveable? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Will I live? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | PETRUCHIO Will it not be? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Page Here, noble lord: what is thy will with her? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Pedant Ay, what else? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Pray, have you not a daughter Call''d Katharina, fair and virtuous? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Pray, what do you think is his name? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | SLY Al''ce madam, or Joan madam? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | SLY Am I a lord? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | SLY Are you my wife and will not call me husband? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | SLY What, household stuff? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | SLY What, would you make me mad? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Saw''st thou not, boy, how Silver made it good At the hedge- corner, in the coldest fault? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Say thou wilt walk; we will bestrew the ground: Or wilt thou ride? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Say, Signior Gremio, What can you assure her? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Second Servant Dost thou love pictures? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Second Servant Will''t please your honour taste of these conserves? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Second Servant Will''t please your mightiness to wash your hands? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | See, doth he breathe? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Shall I have some water? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Signior Petruchio, will you go with us, Or shall I send my daughter Kate to you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Spake you not these words plain,''Sirrah, knock me here, rap me here, knock me well, and knock me soundly''? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO Among them know you one Vincentio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO And if I be, sir, is it any offence? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO And is the bride and bridegroom coming home? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO And tells us, what occasion of import Hath all so long detain''d you from your wife, And sent you hither so unlike yourself? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO But hast thou done thy errand to Baptista? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO But say, what to thine old news? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO Curster than she? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO For what reason, I beseech you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO Is this your speeding? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO Of Mantua, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO Saw you no more? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO Shall sweet Bianca practise how to bride it? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO Well, sir, to do you courtesy, This will I do, and this I will advise you: First, tell me, have you ever been at Pisa? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO What countryman, I pray? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO What is he, Biondello? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO What said the wench when he rose again? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | TRANIO Why, sir, I pray, are not the streets as free For me as for you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Tailor But did you not request to have it cut? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Tailor But how did you desire it should be made? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Tell me, sweet Kate, and tell me truly too, Hast thou beheld a fresher gentlewoman? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Tell me, thou villain, where is my son Lucentio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | There, There, Hortensio, will you any wife? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Think you a little din can daunt mine ears? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Thinkest thou, Hortensio, though her father be very rich, any man is so very a fool to be married to hell? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Third Servant What raiment will your honour wear to- day? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Travel you far on, or are you at the farthest? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Trow you whither I am going? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | VINCENTIO Art thou his father? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | VINCENTIO Ay, mistress bride, hath that awaken''d you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | VINCENTIO But is it true? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | VINCENTIO Is Signior Lucentio within, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | VINCENTIO Lives my sweet son? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | VINCENTIO What if a man bring him a hundred pound or two, to make merry withal? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | VINCENTIO What, you notorious villain, didst thou never see thy master''s father, Vincentio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | VINCENTIO Where is that damned villain Tranio, That faced and braved me in this matter so? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Was ever man so beaten? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Was it not to refresh the mind of man After his studies or his usual pain? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What countryman? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What is the jay more precious than the lark, Because his fathers are more beautiful? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What is the wager? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What must I call her? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What say you to a piece of beef and mustard? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What says Lucentio to this shame of ours? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What stars do spangle heaven with such beauty, As those two eyes become that heavenly face? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What will be said? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What will you read to her? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What''s this? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What''s this? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, do you grumble? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, hast thou dined? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, have I choked you with an argosy? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, have I pinch''d you, Signior Gremio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, have you forgot me? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, no attendance? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, not a word? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, shall I be appointed hours; as though, belike, I knew not what to take and what to leave, ha? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | What, sweeting, all amort? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | When did she cross thee with a bitter word? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Whence are you, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where are my slippers? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where is Lucentio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where is Nathaniel, Gregory, Philip? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where is my wife? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where is the foolish knave I sent before? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where is the rascal cook? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where then do you know best We be affied and such assurance ta''en As shall with either part''s agreement stand? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where''s my spaniel Troilus? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Where''s the cook? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Why does the world report that Kate doth limp? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Why, sir, what''cerns it you if I wear pearl and gold? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Will you give thanks, sweet Kate; or else shall I? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | Wilt thou have music? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Drinks to HORTENSIO] BAPTISTA How likes Gremio these quick- witted folks? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter BIANCA and LUCENTIO] LUCENTIO Now, mistress, profit you in what you read? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter BIONDELLO] Sirrah, where have you been? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter CURTIS] CURTIS Who is that calls so coldly? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter GREMIO, and LUCENTIO disguised] Master, master, look about you: who goes there, ha? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter Haberdasher] What news with you, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter PETRUCHIO and GRUMIO] PETRUCHIO Come, where be these gallants? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter PETRUCHIO and HORTENSIO with meat] PETRUCHIO How fares my Kate? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter PETRUCHIO and KATHARINA] PETRUCHIO Where be these knaves? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter TRANIO and HORTENSIO] TRANIO Is''t possible, friend Licio, that Mistress Bianca Doth fancy any other but Lucentio? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter TRANIO, and the Pedant dressed like VINCENTIO] TRANIO Sir, this is the house: please it you that I call? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter VINCENTIO][ To VINCENTIO] Good morrow, gentle mistress: where away? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Enter the Page as a lady, with attendants] Page How fares my noble lord? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exeunt GREMIO and HORTENSIO] TRANIO I pray, sir, tell me, is it possible That love should of a sudden take such hold? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exeunt PETRUCHIO and KATHARINA severally] GREMIO Was ever match clapp''d up so suddenly? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exeunt][ Re- enter Servants severally] NATHANIEL Peter, didst ever see the like? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exit BIANCA] KATHARINA What, will you not suffer me? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exit BIONDELLO] Signior Baptista, shall I lead the way? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exit Haberdasher] PETRUCHIO Thy gown? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exit] BAPTISTA Was ever gentleman thus grieved as I? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exit] KATHARINA Why, and I trust I may go too, may I not? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Exit] LUCENTIO I may, and will, if she be so contented: She will be pleased; then wherefore should I doubt? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Flies after BIANCA] BAPTISTA What, in my sight? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Pedant looks out of the window] Pedant What''s he that knocks as he would beat down the gate? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Re- enter BAPTISTA, GREMIO, and TRANIO] BAPTISTA Now, Signior Petruchio, how speed you with my daughter? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Re- enter BIONDELLO] Now, where''s my wife? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Re- enter CURTIS] GRUMIO Where is he? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Re- enter GREMIO] Signior Gremio, came you from the church? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Re- enter KATARINA] KATHARINA What is your will, sir, that you send for me? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ Re- enter Servants with supper] Why, when, I say? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ They retire][ Re- enter Pedant below; TRANIO, BAPTISTA, and Servants] TRANIO Sir, what are you that offer to beat my servant? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | [ To TRANIO] But, gentle sir, methinks you walk like a stranger: may I be so bold to know the cause of your coming? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | a coxcomb? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | a sleeve? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | and have I such a lady? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | have you married my daughter without asking my good will? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | how but well? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | how may that be? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | how mean you that? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | how, I pray? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | in your dumps? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | is there man has rebused your worship? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | mark''d you not how her sister Began to scold and raise up such a storm That mortal ears might hardly endure the din? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | mutton? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | nay, what are you, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | no duty? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | no regard? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | one dead, or drunk? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | or both? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | or else is it your pleasure, Like pleasant travellers, to break a jest Upon the company you overtake? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | or have I dream''d till now? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | pray, what''s the news? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | shall a buzzard take thee? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | that Petruchio came? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | thou hast hawks will soar Above the morning lark or wilt thou hunt? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | was ever man so rayed? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | was ever man so weary? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | what a foolish duty call you this? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | what masquing stuff is here? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | what may I call your name? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | what news? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | what, is there such a place? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | whence grows this insolence? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | where are you? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | where is my lovely bride? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | who is it? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | who''s at home? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | whom should I knock? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | why dost thou look so pale? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | why, sir, what am I, sir, that I should knock you here, sir? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | will you let it fall? |
shakespeare-taming-2827 | you villains, when? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | ''How comes that?'' |
shakespeare-second-4244 | ''Where is the life that late I led?'' |
shakespeare-second-4244 | ARCHBISHOP OF YORK Say on, my Lord of Westmoreland, in peace: What doth concern your coming? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | ARCHBISHOP OF YORK What well- appointed leader fronts us here? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | ARCHBISHOP OF YORK Wherefore do I this? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | ARCHBISHOP OF YORK Will you thus break your faith? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Again: Said he young Harry Percy''s spur was cold? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | And art not thou Poins his brother? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | And didst thou not kiss me and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | And how doth my good cousin Silence? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | And how doth the martlemas, your master? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | And is Jane Nightwork alive? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | And shall good news be baffled? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | And what accites your most worshipful thought to think so? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Are you not ashamed to enforce a poor widow to so rough a course to come by her own? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | BARDOLPH Come, you virtuous ass, you bashful fool, must you be blushing? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | But do you use me thus, Ned? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | But for William cook: are there no young pigeons? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | But what mean I To speak so true at first? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | But what need I thus My well- known body to anatomize Among my household? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | But what of that? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | But, i''faith, you have drunk too much canaries; and that''s a marvellous searching wine, and it perfumes the blood ere one can say''What''s this?'' |
shakespeare-second-4244 | CLARENCE What would my lord and father? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | COLEVILE Are not you Sir John Falstaff? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Canst thou deny it? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Come, thou must not be in this humour with me; dost not know me? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Come, will you hence? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | DAVY Doth the man of war stay all night, sir? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | DAVY Marry, sir, thus; those precepts can not be served: and, again, sir, shall we sow the headland with wheat? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | DOLL TEARSHEET Can a weak empty vessel bear such a huge full hogshead? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | DOLL TEARSHEET Sirrah, what humour''s the prince of? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | DOLL TEARSHEET Why does the prince love him so, then? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | DOLL TEARSHEET You muddy rascal, is that all the comfort you give me? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Did not goodwife Keech, the butcher''s wife, come in then and call me gossip Quickly? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Do ye yield, sir? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Do you think me a swallow, an arrow, or a bullet? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Dost thou so hunger for mine empty chair That thou wilt needs invest thee with my honours Before thy hour be ripe? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Doth it not show vilely in me to desire small beer? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Doth she hold her own well? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Doth this become your place, your time and business? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Enter FALSTAFF and COLEVILE, meeting] FALSTAFF What''s your name, sir? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Comes the king back from Wales, my noble lord? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Didst thou hear me? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Dost thou hear, hostess? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Dost thou hear? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF He a good wit? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF I am glad to see you well, good Master Robert Shallow: Master Surecard, as I think? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF I hope, my lord, all''s well: what is the news, my lord? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Is thy name Mouldy? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Is thy name Wart? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Master Gower, shall I entreat you with me to dinner? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF My lord? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF O base Assyrian knight, what is thy news? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Shadow, whose son art thou? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF What disease hast thou? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF What is the gross sum that I owe thee? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF What money is in my purse? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF What stuff wilt have a kirtle of? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF What trade art thou, Feeble? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF What wind blew you hither, Pistol? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF What''s the news, my lord? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF What, is the old king dead? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Where''s he? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Why, sir, did I say you were an honest man? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Will I live? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Will you sup with me, Master Gower? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Will you tell me, Master Shallow, how to choose a man? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FALSTAFF Will your lordship lend me a thousand pound to furnish me forth? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | FANG Sirrah, where''s Snare? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Fear we broadsides? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | From a prince to a prentice? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | God''s light, with two points on your shoulder? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Ha, Sir John, said I well? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Have we not Heren here? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Have we not Hiren here? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Have you not a moist eye? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Have you provided me here half a dozen sufficient men? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Have you read o''er the letters that I sent you? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | How a good yoke of bullocks at Stamford fair? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | How a score of ewes now? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | How chance thou art not with the prince thy brother? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | How do you now? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | How doth the good knight? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | How doth the king? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | How fares your grace? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | How might a prince of my great hopes forget So great indignities you laid upon me? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | If my tongue can not entreat you to acquit me, will you command me to use my legs? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Is he so hasty that he doth suppose My sleep my death? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Is here all? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Is old Double of your town living yet? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Is there not wars? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Is your master here in London? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Is''t a lusty yeoman? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Is''t not so? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Is''t such a matter to get a pottle- pot''s maidenhead? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV And how accompanied? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV And how accompanied? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV And wherefore should these good news make me sick? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV Are these things then necessities? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV But wherefore did he take away the crown? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV Humphrey, my son of Gloucester, Where is the prince your brother? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV Is it good morrow, lords? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV Is not his brother, Thomas of Clarence, with him? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV Where is the crown? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV Why art thou not at Windsor with him, Thomas? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | KING HENRY IV Why did you leave me here alone, my lords? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | LANCASTER Is thy name Colevile? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | LORD BARDOLPH The question then, Lord Hastings, standeth thus; Whether our present five and twenty thousand May hold up head without Northumberland? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | LORD BARDOLPH What, is the king but five and twenty thousand? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | LORD BARDOLPH Who is it like should lead his forces hither? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | LORD BARDOLPH Who, he? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Let me see; where is Mouldy? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice Come all his forces back? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice Do you set down your name in the scroll of youth, that are written down old with all the characters of age? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice For what sum? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice Have you your wits? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice He that was in question for the robbery? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice How comes this, Sir John? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice How doth the king? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice What foolish master taught you these manners, Sir John? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice What tell you me of it? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice What''s he that goes there? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice What, to York? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Lord Chief- Justice Where lay the king last night? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MISTRESS QUICKLY All victuallers do so; what''s a joint of mutton or two in a whole Lent? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Do I? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MISTRESS QUICKLY He you not hurt i''the groin? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Master Fang, have you entered the action? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MISTRESS QUICKLY What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Where''s your yeoman? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MISTRESS QUICKLY Will you have Doll Tearsheet meet you at supper? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MOWBRAY Is this proceeding just and honourable? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MOWBRAY Shall we go draw our numbers and set on? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | MOWBRAY What thing, in honour, had my father lost, That need to be revived and breathed in me? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | May this be wash''d in Lethe, and forgotten? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | NORTHUMBERLAND How doth my son and brother? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | NORTHUMBERLAND How is this derived? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | NORTHUMBERLAND Now, Travers, what good tidings comes with you? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | NORTHUMBERLAND Why should that gentleman that rode by Travers Give then such instances of loss? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | O thou dull god, why liest thou with the vile In loathsome beds, and leavest the kingly couch A watch- case or a common''larum- bell? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | O, Jesu, are you come from Wales? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Of Hotspur Coldspur? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PISTOL Harry the Fourth? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PISTOL Under which king, Besonian? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | POINS Is it not strange that desire should so many years outlive performance? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | POINS Is''t come to that? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | POINS No abuse? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | POINS The reason? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY And how doth thy master, Bardolph? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY For the women? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY From a God to a bull? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY Has not the boy profited? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY Heard he the good news yet? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY How might we see Falstaff bestow himself to- night in his true colours, and not ourselves be seen? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY Instruct us, boy; what dream, boy? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY Not to dispraise me, and call me pantier and bread- chipper and I know not what? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY See now, whether pure fear and entire cowardice doth not make thee wrong this virtuous gentlewoman to close with us? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY Shall I tell thee one thing, Poins? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY Sup any women with him? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY What company? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY What pagan may that be? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY What wouldst thou think of me, if I should weep? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY Where sups he? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY Would not this nave of a wheel have his ears cut off? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | PRINCE HENRY You, gentlewoman,- DOLL TEARSHEET What says your grace? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Page Sir? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Phrase call you it? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Porter What shall I say you are? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW And how doth my cousin, your bedfellow? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW And is old Double dead? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW By yea and nay, sir, I dare say my cousin William is become a good scholar: he is at Oxford still, is he not? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW Come, Sir John, which four will you have? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW Do you like him, Sir John? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW I am Robert Shallow, sir; a poor esquire of this county, and one of the king''s justices of the peace: What is your good pleasure with me? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW O, Sir John, do you remember since we lay all night in the windmill in Saint George''s field? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW Peace, fellow, peace; stand aside: know you where you are? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW Shall I prick him down, Sir John? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW Shall I prick him, sir? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW What think you, Sir John? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW Where''s Shadow? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SHALLOW Where''s the roll? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SILENCE Is''t so? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SILENCE This Sir John, cousin, that comes hither anon about soldiers? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | SILENCE Who, I? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Saw you the field? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Say, Morton, didst thou come from Shrewsbury? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Shall we fall foul for toys? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Shall we steal upon them, Ned, at supper? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Since when, I pray you, sir? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Stand from him, fellow: wherefore hang''st upon him? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Tell me, how many good young princes would do so, their fathers being so sick as yours at this time is? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | The Earl of Hereford was reputed then In England the most valiant gentlemen: Who knows on whom fortune would then have smiled? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Thou wo''t, wo''t ta? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Thou wo''t, wo''t thou? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | WARWICK What would your majesty? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | WARWICK Will''t please your grace to go along with us? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | WESTMORELAND Is your assembly so? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | WESTMORELAND When ever yet was your appeal denied? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Was this easy? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Westmoreland? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | What said Master Dombledon about the satin for my short cloak and my slops? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | What trust is in these times? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | When that my care could not withhold thy riots, What wilt thou do when riot is thy care? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Where is he? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Where is my Lord of Warwick? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Where''s Bardolph? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Wherein have you been galled by the king? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Who hath not heard it spoken How deep you were within the books of God? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Who is next? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Who then persuaded you to stay at home? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Why is Rumour here? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Will fortune never come with both hands full, But write her fair words still in foulest letters? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Will you not, Master Bardolph? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Will you sit? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Wilt thou make as many holes in an enemy''s battle as thou hast done in a woman''s petticoat? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | Wilt thou? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | You''ll pay me all together? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter BARDOLPH and one with him] BARDOLPH Good morrow, honest gentlemen: I beseech you, which is Justice Shallow? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter BARDOLPH] How now Bardolph? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter FALSTAFF, with his Page bearing his sword and buckler] FALSTAFF Sirrah, you giant, what says the doctor to my water? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter GOWER] Lord Chief- Justice Now, Master Gower, what news? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter LORD BARDOLPH] LORD BARDOLPH Who keeps the gate here, ho? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter PRINCE HENRY] PRINCE HENRY Who saw the Duke of Clarence? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter WARWICK, and others] KING HENRY IV Doth any name particular belong Unto the lodging where I first did swoon? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter WESTMORELAND] Who''s here? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter a Messenger] HASTINGS Now, what news? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter the ARCHBISHOP OF YORK, MOWBRAY, LORD HASTINGS, and others] ARCHBISHOP OF YORK What is this forest call''d? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter the Lord Chief- Justice, and his men] Lord Chief- Justice What is the matter? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Enter two Drawers] First Drawer What the devil hast thou brought there? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Exeunt all but PRINCE HENRY] Why doth the crown lie there upon his pillow, Being so troublesome a bedfellow? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Exit DAVY] Where are you, Sir John? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Exit First Drawer] MISTRESS QUICKLY Cheater, call you him? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Exit Porter] NORTHUMBERLAND What news, Lord Bardolph? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Exit WESTMORELAND] Now, Falstaff, where have you been all this while? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Knocking within] MISTRESS QUICKLY Who knocks so loud at door? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Laying down his sword] Come we to full points here; and are etceteras nothing? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Re- enter BARDOLPH] FALSTAFF Have you turned him out o''doors? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Re- enter FALSTAFF and the Justices] FALSTAFF Come, sir, which men shall I have? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Re- enter WARWICK, GLOUCESTER, CLARENCE, and the rest] CLARENCE Doth the king call? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Re- enter WARWICK] Now, where is he that will not stay so long Till his friend sickness hath determined me? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Re- enter WESTMORELAND] LANCASTER Now, have you left pursuit? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Re- enter WESTMORELAND] Now, cousin, wherefore stands our army still? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ She comes blubbered] Yea, will you come, Doll? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ Singing] PISTOL Shall dunghill curs confront the Helicons? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ The Porter opens the gate] Where is the earl? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | [ To BARDOLPH] A cup of wine, sir? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | a bastard son of the king''s? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | a decreasing leg? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | a dry hand? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | a white beard? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | a yellow cheek? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | an increasing belly? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | and every part about you blasted with antiquity? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | and will you yet call yourself young? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | and your fairest daughter and mine, my god- daughter Ellen? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | apple- johns? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | came you from Shrewsbury? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | canst thou not forbear me half an hour? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | canst thou tell that? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | do not the rebels need soldiers? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | do you think I would deny her? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | doth not the king lack subjects? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | doth the old boar feed in the old frank? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | for tearing a poor whore''s ruff in a bawdy- house? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | good my lord captain,-- FALSTAFF What, dost thou roar before thou art pricked? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | have I, in my poor and old motion, the expedition of thought? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | is not your voice broken? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | is she of the wicked? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | is there not employment? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | is thine hostess here of the wicked? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | know we not Galloway nags? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | know you what''tis to speak? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | may I ask how my lady his wife doth? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | must I marry your sister? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | of what condition are you, and of what place, I pray? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | or Fifth? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | or honest Bardolph, whose zeal burns in his nose, of the wicked? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | or is thy boy of the wicked? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | or shall I sweat for you? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | shall we have incision? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | shall we imbrue? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | that rebellion Had met ill luck? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | thou abominable damned cheater, art thou not ashamed to be called captain? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | what are you brawling here? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | what man of good temper would endure this tempest of exclamation? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | what news? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | what says the almanac to that? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | where''s the roll? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | where''s the roll? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | wherefore blush you now? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | whither away? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | who knocks? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | who took it from my pillow? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | whose mare''s dead? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | will a''stand to''t? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | wilt thou kill God''s officers and the king''s? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | wilt thou? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | you slave, for what? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | your chin double? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | your wind short? |
shakespeare-second-4244 | your wit single? |
plato-philebus-1340 | ''Why, Socrates,''they will say,''how can we? |
plato-philebus-1340 | --Is not this a very rational and suitable reply, which mind has made, both on her own behalf, as well as on the behalf of memory and true opinion? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Am I not right in saying that they have a deeper want and greater pleasure in the satisfaction of their want? |
plato-philebus-1340 | And mind what you say: I ask whether any animal who is in that condition can possibly have any feeling of pleasure or pain, great or small? |
plato-philebus-1340 | And must I then finish the argument? |
plato-philebus-1340 | And now I want to know whether I may depart; or will you keep me here until midnight? |
plato-philebus-1340 | And now let us go back and interrogate wisdom and mind: Would you like to have any pleasures in the mixture? |
plato-philebus-1340 | And there are colours which are of the same character, and have similar pleasures; now do you understand my meaning? |
plato-philebus-1340 | And they will reply:--''What pleasures do you mean?'' |
plato-philebus-1340 | And you remember how pleasures mingle with pains in lamentation and bereavement? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Answer now, and tell me whether you see, I will not say more, but more intense and excessive pleasures in wantonness than in temperance? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Are we not, on the contrary, almost wholly unconscious of this and similar phenomena?'' |
plato-philebus-1340 | But how would you decide this question, Protarchus? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Can there be another source? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Could this be otherwise? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Do not certain ingenious philosophers teach this doctrine, and ought not we to be grateful to them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Do you mean that you are to throw into the cup and mingle the impure and uncertain art which uses the false measure and the false circle? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Do you think that any one who asserts pleasure to be the good, will tolerate the notion that some pleasures are good and others bad? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Does not the more and less, which dwells in their very nature, prevent their having any end? |
plato-philebus-1340 | For must not pleasure be of all things most absolutely like pleasure,--that is, like itself? |
plato-philebus-1340 | For what in Heaven''s name is the feeling to be called which is thus produced in us?--Pleasure or pain? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Have I not given, Philebus, a fair statement of the two sides of the argument? |
plato-philebus-1340 | I am of opinion that they would certainly answer as follows: PROTARCHUS: How? |
plato-philebus-1340 | If this be clearly established, then pleasure will lose the victory, for the good will cease to be identified with her:--Am I not right? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Is not and was not this what we were saying, Protarchus? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Is not this the sort of enquiry in which his life is spent? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Is that purest which is greatest or most in quantity, or that which is most unadulterated and freest from any admixture of other colours? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Is there such a thing as opinion? |
plato-philebus-1340 | May not a man who is empty have at one time a sure hope of being filled, and at other times be quite in despair? |
plato-philebus-1340 | May we not say of him, that he is in an intermediate state? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PHILEBUS: And did not you, Protarchus, propose to answer in my place? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PHILEBUS: How so? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PHILEBUS: I think so too, but how do his words bear upon us and upon the argument? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PHILEBUS: What is that? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: And pray, what is dialectic? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: And what is this life of mind? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: And what was that? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: And who may they be? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: And would you like to have a fifth class or cause of resolution as well as a cause of composition? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: And would you tell me again, sweet Socrates, which of the aforesaid classes is the mixed one? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: And would you, Socrates, have us agree with them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: But how, Socrates, can there be false pleasures and pains? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: But what, Socrates, are those other marvels connected with this subject which, as you imply, have not yet become common and acknowledged? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: But when and how does he do this? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: But why, Socrates, do we ask the question at all? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Certainly not, Socrates; but why repeat such questions any more? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How can we make the further division which you suggest? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How can we? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How do they afford an illustration? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How indeed? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How is that? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How is that? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How shall I change them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How so? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How so? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How so? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How will that be? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How will you proceed? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How would you distinguish them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: How? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: I believe that you are right, Socrates; but will you try to be a little plainer? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: In the class of the infinite, you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: In what manner? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: In what respect? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Not if the pleasure is mistaken; how could we? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Of what affections, and of what kind of life, are you speaking? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Of what nature? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Of what nature? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Of what? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Of whom are you speaking, and what do they mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Out of the union, that is, of pleasure with mind and wisdom? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Then what pleasures, Socrates, should we be right in conceiving to be true? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Upon what principle would you make the division? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Very likely; but how will this invalidate the argument? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What am I to infer? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What answer? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What are the two kinds? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What are they, and how do you separate them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What are they, and how shall we find them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What are they? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What are they? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What are they? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What disorders? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do they mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean by the class of the finite? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean by''intermediate''? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean, and what proof have you to offer of what you are saying? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean, my good friend? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What have you to say? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What instance shall we select? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is that? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is that? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What is your explanation? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What life? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What manner of natures are they? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What phenomena do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What pleasures? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What point? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What principle? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What question? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What question? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What question? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What question? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What question? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What road? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What shall we say about them, and what course shall we take? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What was it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What was that? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What will that be? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: What? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: When can that be, Socrates? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Where shall we begin? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Which of them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Who is he? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Why do you ask, Socrates? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Why do you not answer yourself, Socrates? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Why not, Socrates? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Why should I? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Why so? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Why, how could any man who gave any other be deemed in his senses? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: Yes, certainly; for how can there be anything which has no cause? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: You are speaking of beauty, truth, and measure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: You mean that he may live neither rejoicing nor sorrowing? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: You mean, what would happen if the body were not changed either for good or bad? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: You want to know whether that which is called essence is, properly speaking, for the sake of generation? |
plato-philebus-1340 | PROTARCHUS: You, Philebus, have handed over the argument to me, and have no longer a voice in the matter? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Perhaps you will allow me to ask you a question before you answer? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: A better and more unexceptionable way of speaking will be-- PROTARCHUS: What? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: A just and pious and good man is the friend of the gods; is he not? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And a man must be pleased by something? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And all men, as we were saying just now, are always filled with hopes? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And am I to include music, which, as I was saying just now, is full of guesswork and imitation, and is wanting in purity? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And an opinion must be of something? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And are not mind and wisdom the names which are to be honoured most? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And are they felt by us to be or become greater, when we are sick or when we are in health? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And are you aware that even at a comedy the soul experiences a mixed feeling of pain and pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And can opinions be good or bad except in as far as they are true or false? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And did we think that either of them alone would be sufficient? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And do not opinion and the endeavour to form an opinion always spring from memory and perception? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And do not people who are in a fever, or any similar illness, feel cold or thirst or other bodily affections more intensely? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And do they think that they have pleasure when they are free from pain? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And do we feel pain or pleasure in laughing at it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And do we not acknowledge this ignorance of theirs to be a misfortune? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And do you, Protarchus, accept the position which is assigned to you? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And from a like admixture of the finite and infinite come the seasons, and all the delights of life? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And further, even if we admit the existence of qualities in other objects, may not pleasure and pain be simple and devoid of quality? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And has he not the pleasure of memory when he is hoping to be filled, and yet in that he is empty is he not at the same time in pain? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And has not the argument in what has preceded, already shown that the arts have different provinces, and vary in their degrees of certainty? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And he who is pleased, whether he is rightly pleased or not, will always have a real feeling of pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And how, Protarchus, can there be true and false fears, or true and false expectations, or true and false opinions? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And how, Protarchus, shall we answer the enquiry? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And if badness attaches to any of them, Protarchus, then we should speak of a bad opinion or of a bad pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And if the thing opined be erroneous, might we not say that the opinion, being erroneous, is not right or rightly opined? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And if we see a pleasure or pain which errs in respect of its object, shall we call that right or good, or by any honourable name? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And ignorance, and what is termed clownishness, are surely an evil? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And in these sorts of mixtures the pleasures and pains are sometimes equal, and sometimes one or other of them predominates? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And is not destruction universally admitted to be the opposite of generation? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And is not our fire small and weak and mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And is not the agent the same as the cause in all except name; the agent and the cause may be rightly called one? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And is not thirst desire? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And is the good sufficient? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And is there not and was there not a further point which was conceded between us? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And may not all this be truly called an evil condition? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And may not the same be said about fear and anger and the like; are they not often false? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And may we not say that the good, being friends of the gods, have generally true pictures presented to them, and the bad false pictures? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And may we not say with reason that we are now at the vestibule of the habitation of the good? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And memory may, I think, be rightly described as the preservation of consciousness? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And must we not attribute to pleasure and pain a similar real but illusory character? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And now have I not sufficiently shown that Philebus''goddess is not to be regarded as identical with the good? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And now we must begin to mix them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And now what is the next question, and how came we hither? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And now what nature shall we ascribe to the third or compound kind? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And of the names expressing cognition, ought not the fairest to be given to the fairest things? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And ought we not to select some of these for examination, and see what makes them the greatest? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And shall we not find them also full of the most wonderful pleasures? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And such a thing as pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And surely pleasure often appears to accompany an opinion which is not true, but false? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And that can not be the body, for the body is supposed to be emptied? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the class to which pleasure belongs has also been long ago discovered? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the creator or cause of them has been satisfactorily proven to be distinct from them,--and may therefore be called a fourth principle? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the finite or limit had not many divisions, and we readily acknowledged it to be by nature one? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the images answering to true opinions and words are true, and to false opinions and words false; are they not? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the obvious instances of the greatest pleasures, as we have often said, are the pleasures of the body? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the same may be said of the patient, or effect; we shall find that they too differ, as I was saying, only in name-- shall we not? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the soul may be truly said to be oblivious of the first but not of the second? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the union or communion of soul and body in one feeling and motion would be properly called consciousness? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And the unjust and utterly bad man is the reverse? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And there is a higher note and a lower note, and a note of equal pitch:--may we affirm so much? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And these hopes, as they are termed, are propositions which exist in the minds of each of us? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And these names may be said to have their truest and most exact application when the mind is engaged in the contemplation of true being? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And these were the names which I adduced of the rivals of pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And this was the source of false opinion and opining; am I not right? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And was not envy the source of this pleasure which we feel at the misfortunes of friends? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And we have also agreed that the restoration of the natural state is pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And we maintain that they are each of them one? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And we see what is the place and nature of this life and to what class it is to be assigned? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And what do you say, Philebus? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And what if there be a third state, which is better than either? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And what shall we say, Philebus, of your life which is all sweetness; and in which of the aforesaid classes is that to be placed? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And what would you say of the intermediate state? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And whether the opinion be right or wrong, makes no difference; it will still be an opinion? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And why do you suppose me to have pointed out to you the admixture which takes place in comedy? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And will you help us to test these two lives? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And will you let me go? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And wisdom and mind can not exist without soul? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And yet he who desires, surely desires something? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And yet the envious man finds something in the misfortunes of his neighbours at which he is pleased? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And yet they are very different; what common nature have we in view when we call them by a single name? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And yet you will acknowledge that they are different from one another, and sometimes opposed? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And you remember also how at the sight of tragedies the spectators smile through their tears? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: And you say that pleasure, and I say that wisdom, is such a state? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Are not we the cup- bearers? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Are there not three ways in which ignorance of self may be shown? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Are you going to ask, Philebus, what this has to do with the argument? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Assuredly you have already arrived at the answer to the question which, as you say, you have been so long asking? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But do we not distinguish memory from recollection? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But do you see the consequence? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But do you see the consequence? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But had we not better have a preliminary word and refresh our memories? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But how can we rightly judge of them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But is such a life eligible? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But to feel joy instead of sorrow at the sight of our friends''misfortunes-- is not that wrong? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But were you right? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: But what do you say of another question:--have we not heard that pleasure is always a generation, and has no true being? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Capital; and now will you please to give me your best attention? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Certainly, Protarchus; but are not these also distinguishable into two kinds? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Did not the things which were generated, and the things out of which they were generated, furnish all the three classes? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Did we not begin by enquiring into the comparative eligibility of pleasure and wisdom? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Did we not place hunger, thirst, and the like, in the class of desires? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Did we not say that ignorance was always an evil? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Do not obvious and every- day phenomena furnish the simplest illustration? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Do we mean anything when we say''a man thirsts''? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Do you deny that some pleasures are false, and others true? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Do you mean to say that I must make the division for you? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Does not the right participation in the finite give health-- in disease, for instance? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Good; and where shall we begin this great and multifarious battle, in which such various points are at issue? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Have pleasure and pain a limit, or do they belong to the class which admits of more and less? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Have we not found a road which leads towards the good? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: He asks himself--''What is that which appears to be standing by the rock under the tree?'' |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: He does not desire that which he experiences, for he experiences thirst, and thirst is emptiness; but he desires replenishment? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Here then is one kind of pleasures and pains originating severally in the two processes which we have described? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: How can anything fixed be concerned with that which has no fixedness? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: How can there be purity in whiteness, and what purity? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: I have just mentioned envy; would you not call that a pain of the soul? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: In what way? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Is not envy an unrighteous pleasure, and also an unrighteous pain? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Is the good perfect or imperfect? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Knowledge has two parts,--the one productive, and the other educational? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Let them flow, then; and now, if there are any necessary pleasures, as there were arts and sciences necessary, must we not mingle them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Living thus, you would always throughout your life enjoy the greatest pleasures? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: May I not have led you into a misapprehension? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: May our body be said to have a soul? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Might we imagine the process to be something of this nature? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Now, can that which is neither be either gold or silver? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Or suppose that the better life is more nearly allied to wisdom, then wisdom conquers, and pleasure is defeated;--do you agree? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Reflect; would you not want wisdom and intelligence and forethought, and similar qualities? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Right; but do you understand why I have discussed the subject? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Shall I, Protarchus, have my own question asked of me by you? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Shall the enquiry into these states of feeling be made the occasion of raising a question? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Shall we further agree-- PROTARCHUS: To what? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Shall we next consider measure, in like manner, and ask whether pleasure has more of this than wisdom, or wisdom than pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Sound is one in music as well as in grammar? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Tell me first;--should we be most likely to succeed if we mingled every sort of pleasure with every sort of wisdom? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Tell us, O beloved-- shall we call you pleasures or by some other name?--would you rather live with or without wisdom? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: That is a return to the old position, Protarchus, and so we are to say( are we?) |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: The agent or cause always naturally leads, and the patient or effect naturally follows it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: The bad then commonly delight in false pleasures, and the good in true pleasures? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then he who is empty desires, as would appear, the opposite of what he experiences; for he is empty and desires to be full? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then he will live without pleasure; and who knows whether this may not be the most divine of all lives? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then here we have a third state, over and above that of pleasure and of pain? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then man and the other animals have at the same time both pleasure and pain? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then many other cases still remain? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then mind and science when employed about such changing things do not attain the highest truth? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then now we know the meaning of the word? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then pleasure, being a generation, must surely be for the sake of some essence? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then pleasure, being a generation, will be rightly placed in some other class than that of good? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then the cause and what is subordinate to it in generation are not the same, but different? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then the perfect and universally eligible and entirely good can not possibly be either of them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then there must be something in the thirsty man which in some way apprehends replenishment? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then this is your judgment; and this is the answer which, upon your authority, we will give to all masters of the art of misinterpretation? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then we were not right in saying, just now, that motions going up and down cause pleasures and pains? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Then, how can opinion be both true and false, and pleasure true only, although pleasure and opinion are both equally real? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: There is greater hope of finding that which we are seeking in the life which is well mixed than in that which is not? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: There is nothing envious or wrong in rejoicing at the misfortunes of enemies? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: True, Protarchus; and so the purest white, and not the greatest or largest in quantity, is to be deemed truest and most beautiful? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Very right; and would you say that generation is for the sake of essence, or essence for the sake of generation? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: We agree-- do we not?--that there is such a thing as false, and also such a thing as true opinion? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: We may assume then that there are three lives, one pleasant, one painful, and the third which is neither; what say you? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: We mean to say that he''is empty''? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: We said, if you remember, that the mixed life of pleasure and wisdom was the conqueror-- did we not? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Well, but are not those pleasures the greatest of which mankind have the greatest desires? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Well, but had we not better leave her now, and not pain her by applying the crucial test, and finally detecting her? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Well, but if a man who is full of knowledge loses his knowledge, are there not pains of forgetting? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Well, tell me, is this question worth asking? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Well, then, my view is-- PROTARCHUS: What is it? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Well, then, shall I let them all flow into what Homer poetically terms''a meeting of the waters''? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Were we not saying that God revealed a finite element of existence, and also an infinite? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Were we not speaking just now of hotter and colder? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: What do you mean, Protarchus, by the two pains? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: What do you mean? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: What would you say, Protarchus, to both of these in one, or to one that was made out of the union of the two? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: What, then, is there in the mixture which is most precious, and which is the principal cause why such a state is universally beloved by all? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: When you speak of purity and clearness, or of excess, abundance, greatness and sufficiency, in what relation do these terms stand to truth? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Whereas eating is a replenishment and a pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Whether we experience the feeling of which I am speaking only in relation to the present and the past, or in relation to the future also? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Whether we ought to say that the pleasures and pains of which we are speaking are true or false? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Why, Protarchus, admitting that there is no such interval, I may ask what would be the necessary consequence if there were? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Why, do we not speak of anger, fear, desire, sorrow, love, emulation, envy, and the like, as pains which belong to the soul only? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Why? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Would you choose, Protarchus, to live all your life long in the enjoyment of the greatest pleasures? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Would you consider that there was still anything wanting to you if you had perfect pleasure? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Would you say of drink, or of replenishment with drink? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: Would you say that he was wholly pained or wholly pleased? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: You mean the pleasures which are mingled with pain? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: You mean to say that you would like to desert, if you were not ashamed? |
plato-philebus-1340 | SOCRATES: You will observe that I have spoken of three classes? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Shall I tell you how I mean to escape from them? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Shall we begin thus? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Shall we enquire into the truth of your opinion? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Shall you and I sum up the two sides? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Then both of us are vanquished-- are we not? |
plato-philebus-1340 | We understand what you mean; but is there no charm by which we may dispel all this confusion, no more excellent way of arriving at the truth? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Were we not enquiring whether the second place belonged to pleasure or wisdom? |
plato-philebus-1340 | When we saw those elements of which we have been speaking gathered up in one, did we not call them a body? |
plato-philebus-1340 | When you speak of hotter and colder, can you conceive any limit in those qualities? |
plato-philebus-1340 | Why do I say so at this moment? |
plato-philebus-1340 | because I said that we had better not pain pleasure, which is an impossibility? |
plato-philebus-1340 | need I remind you of the anger''Which stirs even a wise man to violence, And is sweeter than honey and the honeycomb?'' |
plato-philebus-1340 | or some true and some false? |
plato-philebus-1340 | would you not at any rate want sight? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ''Your love says, like an honest gentleman, Where is your mother?'' |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | A fair assembly: whither should they come? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | A''was a merry man-- took up the child:''Yea,''quoth he,''dost thou fall upon thy face? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ABRAHAM Do you bite your thumb at us, sir? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Ah, dear Juliet, Why art thou yet so fair? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Ah, poor my lord, what tongue shall smooth thy name, When I, thy three- hours wife, have mangled it? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Ah, where''s my man? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | And madly play with my forefather''s joints? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | And pluck the mangled Tybalt from his shroud? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | And say''st thou yet that exile is not death? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | And stay thy lady too that lives in thee, By doing damned hate upon thyself? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | And steep''d in blood? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | And thou must stand by too, and suffer every knave to use me at his pleasure? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | And, in this rage, with some great kinsman''s bone, As with a club, dash out my desperate brains? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Are you at leisure, holy father, now; Or shall I come to you at evening mass? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Are you so hot? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO Am I like such a fellow? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO And what to? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO For what, I pray thee? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO Have you importuned him by any means? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO In love? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO My noble uncle, do you know the cause? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO The what? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO Then she hath sworn that she will still live chaste? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO What, art thou hurt? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO Why dost thou stay? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO Why, Romeo, art thou mad? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | BENVOLIO Why, what is Tybalt? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | But now, my lord, what say you to my suit? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | But what say you to Thursday? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | But, wherefore, villain, didst thou kill my cousin? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | CAPULET And why, my lady wisdom? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | CAPULET Go to, go to; You are a saucy boy: is''t so, indeed? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | CAPULET How canst thou try them so? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | CAPULET Will you tell me that? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | CAPULET Young Romeo is it? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Came he not home to- night? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Can vengeance be pursued further than death? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Did ever dragon keep so fair a cave? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Did my heart love till now? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Did you ne''er hear say, Two may keep counsel, putting one away? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Do you not see that I am out of breath? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Dost thou love me? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Dost thou not bring me letters from the friar? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Dost thou not laugh? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Doth not rosemary and Romeo begin both with a letter? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Doth she not think me an old murderer, Now I have stain''d the childhood of our joy With blood removed but little from her own? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Enter Servingmen with napkins] First Servant Where''s Potpan, that he helps not to take away? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Evermore showering? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | FRIAR LAURENCE How long hath he been there? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | FRIAR LAURENCE That''s my good son: but where hast thou been, then? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | FRIAR LAURENCE Who bare my letter, then, to Romeo? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | FRIAR LAURENCE Who is it? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | First Musician What will you give us? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | First Musician Why''Heart''s ease?'' |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | First Watchman[ Within] Lead, boy: which way? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | For who is living, if those two are gone? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | GREGORY Do you quarrel, sir? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | GREGORY The heads of the maids? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Gentlemen, can any of you tell me where I may find the young Romeo? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Hadst thou no poison mix''d, no sharp- ground knife, No sudden mean of death, though ne''er so mean, But''banished''to kill me?--''banished''? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Hast thou met with him? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Hast thou no letters to me from the friar? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Hast thou slain Tybalt? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Hath Romeo slain himself? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Have you deliver''d to her our decree? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | He shift a trencher? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | How doth my lady? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | How fares my Juliet? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | How if, when I am laid into the tomb, I wake before the time that Romeo Come to redeem me? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | How is''t, my soul? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | How long is it now To Lammas- tide? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | I pray you, sir, what saucy merchant was this, that was so full of his ropery? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | I pray, sir, can you read? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | I say, he shall: go to; Am I the master here, or you? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | I think He told me Paris should have married Juliet: Said he not so? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | I warrant, an I should live a thousand years, I never should forget it:''Wilt thou not, Jule?'' |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | I will carry no crotchets: I''ll re you, I''ll fa you; do you note me? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | I''ll bury thee in a triumphant grave; A grave? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Is Romeo slaughter''d, and is Tybalt dead? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Is Rosaline, whom thou didst love so dear, So soon forsaken? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Is he gone, and hath nothing? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Is it e''en so? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Is my father well? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Is she not down so late, or up so early? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Is she not proud? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Is thy news good, or bad? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET And joy comes well in such a needy time: What are they, I beseech your ladyship? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET At what o''clock to- morrow Shall I send to thee? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET By whose direction found''st thou out this place? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET Can heaven be so envious? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET How art thou out of breath, when thou hast breath To say to me that thou art out of breath? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET How camest thou hither, tell me, and wherefore? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET Madam, in happy time, what day is that? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET My ears have not yet drunk a hundred words Of that tongue''s utterance, yet I know the sound: Art thou not Romeo and a Montague? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET Nurse, will you go with me into my closet, To help me sort such needful ornaments As you think fit to furnish me to- morrow? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET Nurse? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET O think''st thou we shall ever meet again? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET Shall I speak ill of him that is my husband? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET Speakest thou from thy heart? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET What devil art thou, that dost torment me thus? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET What man art thou that thus bescreen''d in night So stumblest on my counsel? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET What satisfaction canst thou have to- night? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET What storm is this that blows so contrary? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET What villain madam? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET What''s he that follows there, that would not dance? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET What''s he that now is going out of door? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET Who is''t that calls? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | JULIET Yea, noise? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | LADY CAPULET Evermore weeping for your cousin''s death? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | LADY CAPULET Speak briefly, can you like of Paris''love? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | LADY CAPULET What is the matter? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | LADY CAPULET What say you? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | LADY MONTAGUE O, where is Romeo? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | MERCUTIO And but one word with one of us? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | MERCUTIO And so did I. ROMEO Well, what was yours? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | MERCUTIO Could you not take some occasion without giving? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | MERCUTIO The ship, sir, the slip; can you not conceive? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | MERCUTIO Why, is not this better now than groaning for love? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | MERCUTIO Why, may one ask? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | MERCUTIO Yea, is the worst well? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | MONTAGUE Alas, my liege, my wife is dead to- night; Grief of my son''s exile hath stopp''d her breath: What further woe conspires against mine age? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | My dear- loved cousin, and my dearer lord? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | My husband is on earth, my faith in heaven; How shall that faith return again to earth, Unless that husband send it me from heaven By leaving earth? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | My husband lives, that Tybalt would have slain; And Tybalt''s dead, that would have slain my husband: All this is comfort; wherefore weep I then? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nay, sit, nay, sit, good cousin Capulet; For you and I are past our dancing days: How long is''t now since last yourself and I Were in a mask? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse By my troth, it is well said;''for himself to mar,''quoth a''? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse Have you got leave to go to shrift to- day? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse Is it good den? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse Is your man secret? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse Jesu, what haste? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse May not one speak? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse This afternoon, sir? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse Weeping and wailing over Tybalt''s corse: Will you go to them? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse What''s this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse What? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse Will you speak well of him that kill''d your cousin? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Nurse Your love says, like an honest gentleman, and a courteous, and a kind, and a handsome, and, I warrant, a virtuous,--Where is your mother? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | O nature, what hadst thou to do in hell, When thou didst bower the spirit of a fiend In moral paradise of such sweet flesh? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | O, tell me, friar, tell me, In what vile part of this anatomy Doth my name lodge? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | O, what more favour can I do to thee, Than with that hand that cut thy youth in twain To sunder his that was thine enemy? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Or am I mad, hearing him talk of Juliet, To think it was so? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Or shall we on without a apology? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | PARIS Come you to make confession to this father? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | PARIS Have I thought long to see this morning''s face, And doth it give me such a sight as this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | PETER You will not, then? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | PRINCE Benvolio, who began this bloody fray? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | PRINCE Romeo slew him, he slew Mercutio; Who now the price of his dear blood doth owe? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | PRINCE What fear is this which startles in our ears? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO And is it not well served in to a sweet goose? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Art thou so bare and full of wretchedness, And fear''st to die? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Ay, nurse; what of that? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Good heart, at what? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Have not saints lips, and holy palmers too? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO How should they, when that wise men have no eyes? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Is it even so? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Is love a tender thing? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Is she a Capulet? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Is the day so young? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO My dear? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO O, wilt thou leave me so unsatisfied? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Out-- BENVOLIO Of love? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Sin from thy lips? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Spakest thou of Juliet? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO What hast thou found? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO What is her mother? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO What less than dooms- day is the prince''s doom? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO What say''st thou, my dear nurse? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO What shall I swear by? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO What wilt thou tell her, nurse? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO What, shall I groan and tell thee? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Whither? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Whose house? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Wilt thou provoke me? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO With Rosaline, my ghostly father? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Wouldst thou withdraw it? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO Yet''banished''? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO[ Aside] Shall I hear more, or shall I speak at this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | ROMEO[ To a Servingman] What lady is that, which doth enrich the hand Of yonder knight? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Romeo, good night: I''ll to my truckle- bed; This field- bed is too cold for me to sleep: Come, shall we go? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Romeo, will you come to your father''s? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | SAMPSON[ Aside to GREGORY] Is the law of our side, if I say ay? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Servant Perhaps you have learned it without book: but, I pray, can you read any thing you see? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Shall I be married then to- morrow morning? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Shall I not, then, be stifled in the vault, To whose foul mouth no healthsome air breathes in, And there die strangled ere my Romeo comes? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | She speaks yet she says nothing: what of that? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Sirrah, what made your master in this place? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Speak, nephew, were you by when it began? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Stand up, stand up; stand, and you be a man: For Juliet''s sake, for her sake, rise and stand; Why should you fall into so deep an O? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Sweet, sweet, sweet nurse, tell me, what says my love? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | TYBALT What wouldst thou have with me? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Tell me, daughter Juliet, How stands your disposition to be married? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Tell me, good my friend, What torch is yond, that vainly lends his light To grubs and eyeless skulls? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | That is renown''d for faith? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Thou wilt fall backward when thou comest to age; Wilt thou not, Jule?'' |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Thou wilt fall backward when thou hast more wit; Wilt thou not, Jule?'' |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | To press before thy father to a grave? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Tybalt, liest thou there in thy bloody sheet? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Tybalt, that murderer, which way ran he? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Uncomfortable time, why camest thou now To murder, murder our solemnity? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Was ever book containing such vile matter So fairly bound? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Was that my father that went hence so fast? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Welcome from Mantua: what says Romeo? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What counterfeit did I give you? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What cursed foot wanders this way to- night, To cross my obsequies and true love''s rite? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What dares the slave Come hither, cover''d with an antic face, To fleer and scorn at our solemnity? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What early tongue so sweet saluteth me? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What fray was here? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What hast thou there? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What if her eyes were there, they in her head? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What if this mixture do not work at all? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What is this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What is yond gentleman? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What is your will? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What mean these masterless and gory swords To lie discolour''d by this place of peace? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What sadness lengthens Romeo''s hours? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What said my man, when my betossed soul Did not attend him as we rode? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What say you, Hugh Rebeck? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What say you, James Soundpost? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What say you, Simon Catling? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What say''st thou? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What says he of our marriage? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What should she do here? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What sorrow craves acquaintance at my hand, That I yet know not? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What unaccustom''d cause procures her hither? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What''s Montague? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What''s in a name? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What, have you dined at home? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What, is my daughter gone to Friar Laurence? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What, not a word? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | What, wilt thou wash him from his grave with tears? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where be these enemies? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where is my Romeo? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where is my father, and my mother, nurse? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where is my page? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where is she? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where is the county''s page, that raised the watch? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where shall we dine? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where''s Romeo''s man? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Where''s this girl? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Who else? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Who ever would have thought it? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Why rail''st thou on thy birth, the heaven, and earth? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Why the devil came you between us? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Will it not be? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Will you be ready? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | Will you pluck your sword out of his pitcher by the ears? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Advances] Alack, alack, what blood is this, which stains The stony entrance of this sepulchre? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Beats down their swords][ Enter TYBALT] TYBALT What, art thou drawn among these heartless hinds? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Drawing his sword] FRIAR LAURENCE Hold thy desperate hand: Art thou a man? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Draws] Tybalt, you rat- catcher, will you walk? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter ABRAHAM and BALTHASAR] ABRAHAM Do you bite your thumb at us, sir? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter Apothecary] Apothecary Who calls so loud? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter BENVOLIO and MERCUTIO] MERCUTIO Where the devil should this Romeo be? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter CAPULET in his gown, and LADY CAPULET] CAPULET What noise is this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter CAPULET, LADY CAPULET, and others] CAPULET What should it be, that they so shriek abroad? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter FRIAR LAURENCE and PARIS, with Musicians] FRIAR LAURENCE Come, is the bride ready to go to church? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter FRIAR LAURENCE and PARIS] FRIAR LAURENCE On Thursday, sir? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter LADY CAPULET and Nurse] LADY CAPULET Nurse, where''s my daughter? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter LADY CAPULET] LADY CAPULET What noise is here? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter LADY CAPULET] LADY CAPULET What, are you busy, ho? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter Nurse and PETER] O honey nurse, what news? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter Nurse, with cords] Now, nurse, what news? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter Nurse] Nurse O holy friar, O, tell me, holy friar, Where is my lady''s lord, where''s Romeo? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter PRINCE, with Attendants] PRINCE Rebellious subjects, enemies to peace, Profaners of this neighbour- stained steel,-- Will they not hear? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter Prince, attended; MONTAGUE, CAPULET, their Wives, and others] PRINCE Where are the vile beginners of this fray? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter ROMEO and JULIET above, at the window] JULIET Wilt thou be gone? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter ROMEO, MERCUTIO, BENVOLIO, with five or six Maskers, Torch- bearers, and others] ROMEO What, shall this speech be spoke for our excuse? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter ROMEO] ROMEO Can I go forward when my heart is here? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter ROMEO] ROMEO Father, what news? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter the PRINCE and Attendants] PRINCE What misadventure is so early up, That calls our person from our morning''s rest? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Enter three or four Servingmen, with spits, logs, and baskets] Now, fellow, What''s there? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Exeunt all but MONTAGUE, LADY MONTAGUE, and BENVOLIO] MONTAGUE Who set this ancient quarrel new abroach? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Exit FRIAR LAURENCE] What''s here? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Exit PETER] JULIET Now, good sweet nurse,--O Lord, why look''st thou sad? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Exit ROMEO][ Enter Citizens,& c] First Citizen Which way ran he that kill''d Mercutio? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Exit] JULIET Is there no pity sitting in the clouds, That sees into the bottom of my grief? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Exit] JULIET O God!--O nurse, how shall this be prevented? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ He goeth down] JULIET Art thou gone so? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | [ Knocking] Who knocks so hard? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | a conduit, girl? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | a cup, closed in my true love''s hand? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | and how doth she? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | and what says My conceal''d lady to our cancell''d love? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | answer to that; Say either, and I''ll stay the circumstance: Let me be satisfied, is''t good or bad? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | are you up? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | can you love the gentleman? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | can you not stay awhile? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | come, what says Romeo? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | did Romeo''s hand shed Tybalt''s blood? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | do you like this haste? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | doth she not count her blest, Unworthy as she is, that we have wrought So worthy a gentleman to be her bridegroom? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | doth she not give us thanks? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | drunk all, and left no friendly drop To help me after? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | for what purpose, love? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | hast thou not a word of joy? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | how is it with her? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | is it my lady mother? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | marry, come up, I trow; Is this the poultice for my aching bones? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | need you my help? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | or did I dream it so? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | saw you him to- day? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | shall I believe That unsubstantial death is amorous, And that the lean abhorred monster keeps Thee here in dark to be his paramour? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | she that makes dainty, She, I''ll swear, hath corns; am I come near ye now? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | the cords That Romeo bid thee fetch? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | turn thy back and run? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | wast thou with Rosaline? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what can he say in this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what care I What curious eye doth quote deformities? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what day is this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what is the prince''s doom? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what light through yonder window breaks? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what manners is in this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what news? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what of that? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what''s this? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what''s your will? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what, Paris too? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what, are you mad? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what, dost thou make us minstrels? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | what, still in tears? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | whence come you? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | where have you been gadding? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | where is my lord? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | wherefore art thou Romeo? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | wherefore storm you so? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | which of you all Will now deny to dance? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | which their keepers call A lightning before death: O, how may I Call this a lightning? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | who calls? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | why call you for a sword? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | why dost thou wring thy hands? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | why''music with her silver sound''? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | why, she is within; Where should she be? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | will she none? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | wilt thou slay thyself? |
shakespeare-romeo-2606 | with another, for tying his new shoes with old riband? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | ALBANY But who was this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | ALBANY Knows he the wickedness? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | ALBANY What''s the matter, sir? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | ALBANY Where have you hid yourself? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | ALBANY Which is that adversary? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | ALBANY Who dead? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Adultery? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Alive or dead? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | And art thou come to this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Are you not Kent? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Be my horses ready? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Both? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | But what art thou That hast this fortune on me? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | But where''s my fool? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORDELIA How does my royal lord? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORDELIA Sir, do you know me? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORDELIA Will''t please your highness walk? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORDELIA[ Aside] What shall Cordelia do? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL And what confederacy have you with the traitors Late footed in the kingdom? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Come, sir, what letters had you late from France? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Is he pursued? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Speak yet, how grew your quarrel? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Thou art a strange fellow: a tailor make a man? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL What is your difference? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL What means your grace? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL What was the offence you gave him? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Where hast thou sent the king? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Whither is he going? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Why art thou angry? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Why dost thou call him a knave? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CORNWALL Why, art thou mad, old fellow? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | CURAN Have you heard of no likely wars toward,''twixt the Dukes of Cornwall and Albany? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Call France; who stirs? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Can you make no use of nothing, nuncle? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Come on, my boy: how dost, my boy? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Could my good brother suffer you to do it? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Couldst thou save nothing? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Didst thou give them all? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Do you know this noble gentleman, Edmund? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Do you see this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Do you smell a fault? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Dost thou know Dover? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Dost thou know me? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Dost thou squiny at me? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Dost thou understand me, man? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR But, by your favour, How near''s the other army? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR Do you busy yourself about that? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR Do you hear aught, sir, of a battle toward? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR How long have you been a sectary astronomical? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR Shall I hear from you anon? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR To who, my lord? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR What kind of help? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR What means that bloody knife? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR What''s he that speaks for Edmund Earl of Gloucester? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR What, in ill thoughts again? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR Who gives any thing to poor Tom? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDGAR[ Aside] How should this be? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDMUND Come, come; when saw you my father last? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDMUND Himself: what say''st thou to him? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDMUND How comes that? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDMUND Not I pray you, what are they? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDMUND Parted you in good terms? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | EDMUND Spake you with him? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Enter KENT and a Gentleman, meeting] KENT Who''s there, besides foul weather? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Fair daylight? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | False justicer, why hast thou let her''scape? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Feel you your legs? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Fiery? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Fiery? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Fool Dost thou know the difference, my boy, between a bitter fool and a sweet fool? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Fool May not an ass know when the cart draws the horse? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Fool Prithee, nuncle, tell me whether a madman be a gentleman or a yeoman? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Found you no displeasure in him by word or countenance? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER But have I fall''n, or no? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Canst thou blame him? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Hath he never heretofore sounded you in this business? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER How fell you out? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Is it a beggar- man? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Is that the naked fellow? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Know''st thou the way to Dover? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER No? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Now, good sir, what are you? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Strong and fasten''d villain Would he deny his letter? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER The trick of that voice I do well remember: Is''t not the king? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Think you so? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER What are you there? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER What mean your graces? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER What paper were you reading? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER What, hath your grace no better company? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER What, is he dead? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER What, with the case of eyes? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER Where is the villain, Edmund? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GLOUCESTER You know the character to be your brother''s? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GONERIL Hear me, my lord; What need you five and twenty, ten, or five, To follow in a house where twice so many Have a command to tend you? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GONERIL Marry, your manhood now--[ Enter a Messenger] ALBANY What news? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GONERIL Mean you to enjoy him? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GONERIL Why might not you, my lord, receive attendance From those that she calls servants or from mine? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | GONERIL Why not by the hand, sir? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Gentleman Give me your hand: have you no more to say? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Gentleman Sir, speed you: what''s your will? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Gentleman Who is conductor of his people? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Gentleman Why, good sir? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Had he a hand to write this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Hark, do you hear the sea? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Hark, in thine ear: change places; and, handy- dandy, which is the justice, which is the thief? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Have I caught thee? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | He whom my father named? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | He''s coming hither: now, i''the night, i''the haste, And Regan with him: have you nothing said Upon his party''gainst the Duke of Albany? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Herald What are you? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | How came my man i''the stocks? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | How chance the king comes with so small a train? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | How dost, my lord? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | How fares your majesty? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | How have I offended? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | How have you known the miseries of your father? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | How is''t? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | How, in one house, Should many people, under two commands, Hold amity? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | In the most terrible and nimble stroke Of quick, cross lightning? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is he array''d? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is it not as this mouth should tear this hand For lifting food to''t? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is it not well? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is it the fashion, that discarded fathers Should have thus little mercy on their flesh? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is it two days ago since I tripped up thy heels, and beat thee before the king? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is it your will? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is man no more than this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is there any cause in nature that makes these hard hearts? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is wretchedness deprived that benefit, To end itself by death? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Is your name Goneril? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Alas, sir, are you here? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT But who is with him? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Did your letters pierce the queen to any demonstration of grief? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT How do you, sir? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT How fares your grace? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT I am come To bid my king and master aye good night: Is he not here? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Is not this your son, my lord? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Is this the promised end EDGAR Or image of that horror? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Made she no verbal question? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Of Albany''s and Cornwall''s powers you heard not? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT The same, Your servant Kent: Where is your servant Caius? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Was this before the king return''d? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT What art thou that dost grumble there i''the straw? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Where learned you this, fool? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Who hath he left behind him general? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Who''s there? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Why, fool? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KENT Why, fool? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Am I in France? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR And the creature run from the cur? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Are you our daughter? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Ask her forgiveness? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Be your tears wet? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Because they are not eight? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR But goes thy heart with this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Did I not, fellow? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Do you bandy looks with me, you rascal? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Dost thou call me fool, boy? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Dost thou know me, fellow? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Doth any here know me? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Hast thou given all to thy two daughters? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR How old art thou? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR How''s that? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR I did her wrong-- Fool Canst tell how an oyster makes his shell? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Is this well spoken? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR No seconds? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR O sides, you are too tough; Will you yet hold? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR O, ho, are you there with me? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Return to her, and fifty men dismiss''d? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Say, how is that? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR So young, and so untender? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR The king would speak with Cornwall; the dear father Would with his daughter speak, commands her service: Are they inform''d of this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What art thou? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What dost thou profess? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What hast thou been? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What services canst thou do? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What two crowns shall they be? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What''s he that hath so much thy place mistook To set thee here? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What''s he? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What''s that? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR What, art mad? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR When were you wo nt to be so full of songs, sirrah? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Where have I been? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Who put my man i''the stocks? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Who stock''d my servant? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Who wouldst thou serve? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Why, my boy? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Why, what canst thou tell, my boy? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Why? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Wilt break my heart? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR You are a spirit, I know: when did you die? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING LEAR Your name, fair gentlewoman? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | KING OF FRANCE Is it but this,--a tardiness in nature Which often leaves the history unspoke That it intends to do? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Know''st thou this paper? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Lost he his other eye? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Makest thou this shame thy pastime? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Might not you Transport her purposes by word? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | My lord of Burgundy, What say you to the lady? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | No eyes in your head, nor no money in your purse? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | No help? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | O Regan, wilt thou take her by the hand? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | OSWALD I, madam? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | OSWALD So please you,--[ Exit] KING LEAR What says the fellow there? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | OSWALD What dost thou know me for? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | OSWALD Where may we set our horses? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | OSWALD Why dost thou use me thus? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Old Man Fellow, where goest? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN But have you never found my brother''s way To the forfended place? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Himself in person there? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN I dare avouch it, sir: what, fifty followers? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Lord Edmund spake not with your lord at home? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Now, sweet lord, You know the goodness I intend upon you: Tell me-- but truly-- but then speak the truth, Do you not love my sister? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Sister, you''ll go with us? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN To whose hands have you sent the lunatic king? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Was he not companion with the riotous knights That tend upon my father? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN What might import my sister''s letter to him? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN What need one? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN What, did my father''s godson seek your life? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Wherefore to Dover, sir? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Wherefore to Dover? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Why is this reason''d? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Why not, my lord? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | REGAN Why should she write to Edmund? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Return with her? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Return with her? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | See''st thou this object, Kent? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Shall we not see these daughters and these sisters? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Sir, Your most dear daughter-- KING LEAR No rescue? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Sir, where is the patience now, That thou so oft have boasted to retain? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Sleepest or wakest thou, jolly shepherd? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Smile you my speeches, as I were a fool? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Spare my gray beard, you wagtail? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Speak, Edmund, where''s the king? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Stand you not so amazed: Will you lie down and rest upon the cushions? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | They are sick? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | They have travell''d all the night? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Think''st thou that duty shall have dread to speak, When power to flattery bows? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | This is not Lear: Doth Lear walk thus? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Thou canst tell why one''s nose stands i''the middle on''s face? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Thou hast seen a farmer''s dog bark at a beggar? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Tigers, not daughters, what have you perform''d? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | To stand against the deep dread- bolted thunder? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Upon the crown o''the cliff, what thing was that Which parted from you? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Wantest thou eyes at trial, madam? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Was this a face To be opposed against the warring winds? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Wast thou not charged at peril-- CORNWALL Wherefore to Dover? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What are you, sir? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What do you mean? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What have you done? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What is the cause of thunder? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What is the matter? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What is your study? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What is''t thou say''st? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What is''t you seek? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What needed, then, that terrible dispatch of it into your pocket? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What says our second daughter, Our dearest Regan, wife to Cornwall? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What should you need of more? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What was thy cause? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What will you do? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What wilt thou do, old man? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What wouldst thou? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What''s his offence? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What''s the matter here? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What, a prisoner? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What, have you writ that letter to my sister? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What, i''the storm? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | What, must I come to you With five and twenty, Regan? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | When my dimensions are as well compact, My mind as generous, and my shape as true, As honest madam''s issue? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where am I? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where are his eyes? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where is he? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where is my lord of Gloucester? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where is this daughter? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where is this straw, my fellow? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where is thy lustre now? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where''s my knave? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where''s my son Edmund? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where''s the king? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Where''s thy drum? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Which of them shall I take? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Who are you? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Who comes here? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Who hath the office? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Who is it that can tell me who I am? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Who is''t can say''I am at the worst''? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Why bastard? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Why brand they us With base? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Why dost thou lash that whore? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Why have my sisters husbands, if they say They love you all? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life, And thou no breath at all? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Will you have her? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Yea, it is come to this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Yea, or so many, sith that both charge and danger Speak''gainst so great a number? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | You beastly knave, know you no reverence? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | You have heard of the news abroad; I mean the whispered ones, for they are yet but ear- kissing arguments? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | You spoke not with her since? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Your name, your quality? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | Your names? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ EDGAR interposes] OSWALD Wherefore, bold peasant, Darest thou support a publish''d traitor? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter ALBANY] KING LEAR Woe, that too late repents,--[ To ALBANY] O, sir, are you come? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter CORDELIA, KENT, and Doctor] CORDELIA O thou good Kent, how shall I live and work, To match thy goodness? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter GLOUCESTER, and EDGAR dressed like a peasant] GLOUCESTER When shall we come to the top of that same hill? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter GLOUCESTER, and Servants with torches] GLOUCESTER Now, Edmund, where''s the villain? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter GLOUCESTER, led by an Old Man] My father, poorly led? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter GONERIL, and OSWALD, her steward] GONERIL Did my father strike my gentleman for chiding of his fool? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter KENT and OSWALD, severally] OSWALD Good dawning to thee, friend: art of this house? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter KENT and a Gentleman] KENT Why the King of France is so suddenly gone back know you the reason? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter KENT] KENT Who''s there? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter OSWALD] Is your lady come? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter OSWALD] Now, where''s your master''? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Enter REGAN and OSWALD] REGAN But are my brother''s powers set forth? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exeunt KING LEAR, KENT, and Attendants] GONERIL Do you mark that, my lord? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exeunt all but KENT and Gentleman] Gentleman Holds it true, sir, that the Duke of Cornwall was so slain? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exeunt some Servants] By no means what? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit Gentleman][ Enter KENT] O, is this he? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit a Knight] Where''s my fool, ho? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit an Attendant][ Enter OSWALD] You, you, sirrah, where''s my daughter? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit an Attendant][ Re- enter OSWALD] O, you sir, you, come you hither, sir: who am I, sir? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit an Officer] What can man''s wisdom In the restoring his bereaved sense? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit one with GLOUCESTER] How is''t, my lord? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit] ALBANY Now, gods that we adore, whereof comes this? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit] ALBANY Where was his son when they did take his eyes? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit] EDMUND The duke be here to- night? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit] Fool If a man''s brains were in''s heels, were''t not in danger of kibes? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Exit] Gentleman Made you no more offence but what you speak of? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Putting up the letter] GLOUCESTER Why so earnestly seek you to put up that letter? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Re- enter GLOUCESTER] GLOUCESTER Come hither, friend: where is the king my master? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Re- enter KING LEAR with GLOUCESTER] KING LEAR Deny to speak with me? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Storm still] KING LEAR What, have his daughters brought him to this pass? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ The bodies of GONERIL and REGAN are brought in] KENT Alack, why thus? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ To GONERIL] Art not ashamed to look upon this beard? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ To KENT] O, are you free? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ To the Doctor] How does the king? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | [ Tucket within] CORNWALL What trumpet''s that? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | a heart and brain to breed it in?--When came this to you? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | all myself? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | and where''s Cordelia? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | and why you answer This present summons? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | are the horses ready? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | art cold? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | base, base? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | bastardy? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | did you? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | dost thou think, If I would stand against thee, would the reposal Of any trust, virtue, or worth in thee Make thy words faith''d? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | go to; have you wisdom? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | how dost thou? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | how look you? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | i''the night? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | my fool? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | one? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | or neither? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | said you so? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | sayest thou so? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | speak thus? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | the fiery duke? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | the traitor? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | they are weary? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | to watch-- poor perdu!-- With this thin helm? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | waking? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | what art thou? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | what makes that frontlet on? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | what news? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | what quality? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | what serious contemplation are you in? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | what wouldst thou with us? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | where''s that mongrel? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | where''s the king? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | wherefore base? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | wherefore[ Looking on KENT] Should he sit here? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | who brought it? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | with baseness? |
shakespeare-king-1945 | your Edgar? |
plato-sophist-1258 | --and I should like to know, Theaetetus, how we can possibly answer the younker''s question? |
plato-sophist-1258 | --do you know what sort of object he would single out in reply, and what answer he would make to the enquirer? |
plato-sophist-1258 | And there is another part which is certainly not less ridiculous, but being a trade in learning must be called by some name germane to the matter? |
plato-sophist-1258 | And therefore let us try another track in our pursuit of him: You are aware that there are certain menial occupations which have names among servants? |
plato-sophist-1258 | And what is the name? |
plato-sophist-1258 | And what line of distinction can there possibly be greater than that which divides ignorance from knowledge? |
plato-sophist-1258 | And where does the danger lie? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Can any one say or think that falsehood really exists, and avoid being caught in a contradiction? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Can we imagine that being is devoid of life and mind, and exists in awful unmeaningness an everlasting fixture? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Do we not make one house by the art of building, and another by the art of drawing, which is a sort of dream created by man for those who are awake? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Do you agree with our recent definition? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Do you see his point, Theaetetus? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Do you understand? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Do you, Theaetetus, still feel any doubt of this? |
plato-sophist-1258 | For he who would imitate you would surely know you and your figure? |
plato-sophist-1258 | How are we to understand the word"are"? |
plato-sophist-1258 | How will you maintain your ground against him? |
plato-sophist-1258 | In a word, is not the art of disputation a power of disputing about all things? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Is he the philosopher or the Sophist? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Is he the statesman or the popular orator? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Is not that true? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Is there any doubt, after what has been said, that he is to be located in one of the divisions of children''s play? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Is this possible? |
plato-sophist-1258 | May I not say with confidence that not- being has an assured existence, and a nature of its own? |
plato-sophist-1258 | May we not call these''appearances,''since they appear only and are not really like? |
plato-sophist-1258 | May we not say that motion is other than the other, having been also proved by us to be other than the same and other than rest? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Or are some things communicable and others not?--Which of these alternatives, Theaetetus, will they prefer? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Or is art required in order to do so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Or is not the very opposite true? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Or shall we gather all into one class of things communicable with one another? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Or shall we say that being is not a whole at all? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Or shall we say that they are created by a divine reason and a knowledge which comes from God? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Or should we consider being and other to be two names of the same class? |
plato-sophist-1258 | SOCRATES: But how can any one who is ignorant dispute in a rational manner against him who knows? |
plato-sophist-1258 | SOCRATES: Is he not rather a god, Theodorus, who comes to us in the disguise of a stranger? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: A resemblance, then, is not really real, if, as you say, not true? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Again, false opinion is that form of opinion which thinks the opposite of the truth:--You would assent? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Again, motion is other than the same? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Again, of the various kinds of ignorance, may not instruction be rightly said to be the remedy? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Again; how can that which is not a whole have any quantity? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And a little while ago I said that not- being is unutterable, unspeakable, indescribable: do you follow? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And about what does he profess that he teaches men to dispute? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And all number is to be reckoned among things which are? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And all the arts which were just now mentioned are characterized by this power of producing? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And are we not now in as great a difficulty about being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And do they always fail in their attempt to be thought just, when they are not? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And do they not acknowledge this to be a body having a soul? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And do they not profess to make men able to dispute about law and about politics in general? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And do they not say that one soul is just, and another unjust, and that one soul is wise, and another foolish? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And do you mean this something to be some other true thing, or what do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And does he not also teach others the art of disputation? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And does not false opinion also think that things which most certainly exist do not exist at all? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And equally irrational to admit that a name is anything? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And has not this, as you were saying, as real an existence as any other class? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And here, again, is falsehood? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And in the case of the body are there not two arts which have to do with the two bodily states? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And in using the singular verb, did I not speak of not- being as one? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And is being the same as one, and do you apply two names to the same thing? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And is deformity anything but the want of measure, which is always unsightly? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And is knowing and being known doing or suffering, or both, or is the one doing and the other suffering, or has neither any share in either? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And is not that part of exchange which takes place in the city, being about half of the whole, termed retailing? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And is not the case the same with the parts of the other, which is also one? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And is there any more artistic or graceful form of jest than imitation? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And may not conquest be again subdivided? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And may there not be supposed to be an imitative art of reasoning? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And may we not fairly call the sort of art, which produces an appearance and not an image, phantastic art? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And now, do we seem to have gained a fair notion of being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And now, if we suppose that all things have the power of communion with one another-- what will follow? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And of arts there are two kinds? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And of persuasion, there may be said to be two kinds? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And of swimming animals, one class lives on the wing and the other in the water? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And of the art of instruction, shall we say that there is one or many kinds? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And purification was to leave the good and to cast out whatever is bad? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And shall we call our new friend unskilled, or a thorough master of his craft? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And shall we call the other a fifth class? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And shall we further speak of this latter class as having one or two divisions? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And that which being other is also like, may we not fairly call a likeness or image? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And that which exchanges the goods of one city for those of another by selling and buying is the exchange of the merchant? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And the art of dialectic would be attributed by you only to the philosopher pure and true? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And the false says what is other than true? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And the not true is that which is the opposite of the true? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And the not- great may be said to exist, equally with the great? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And the other is always relative to other? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And there is a private sort of controversy, which is cut up into questions and answers, and this is commonly called disputation? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And there is something which you call''being''? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And therefore speaks of things which are not as if they were? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And therefore this first kind of capture may be called by us capture with enclosures, or something of that sort? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And therefore, to their disciples, they appear to be all- wise? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And they dispute about all things? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And this sort of hunting may be further divided also into two principal kinds? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And we have already admitted, in what preceded, that the Sophist was lurking in one of the divisions of the likeness- making art? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And we know that there exists in speech... THEAETETUS: What exists? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And what about the assertors of the oneness of the all-- must we not endeavour to ascertain from them what they mean by''being''? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And what do you say of the visible things in heaven and earth, and the like? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And what is ignorance but the aberration of a mind which is bent on truth, and in which the process of understanding is perverted? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And what is the name? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And what is the quality of each of these two sentences? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And what shall we call the other? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And what shall we say of human art? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And what would you say of the figure or form of justice or of virtue in general? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And when a man says that he knows all things, and can teach them to another at a small cost, and in a short time, is not that a jest? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And when opinion is presented, not simply, but in some form of sense, would you not call it imagination? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And when the war is one of words, it may be termed controversy? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And when you admit that both or either of them are, do you mean to say that both or either of them are in motion? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And where shall I begin the perilous enterprise? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And where there is insolence and injustice and cowardice, is not chastisement the art which is most required? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And who are the ministers of this art? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And who is the maker of the longer speeches? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And would they say that the whole is other than the one that is, or the same with it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And would they say that they are corporeal? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And would you not call by the same name him who buys up knowledge and goes about from city to city exchanging his wares for money? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And yet they must all be akin? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And yet you would say that both and either of them equally are? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And you mean by true that which really is? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And you remember that we subdivided the swimming and left the land animals, saying that there were many kinds of them? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And, O heavens, can we ever be made to believe that motion and life and soul and mind are not present with perfect being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: And, in the second place, it related to a subject? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Any power of doing or suffering in a degree however slight was held by us to be a sufficient definition of being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But are we to conceive that being and the same are identical? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But can anything which is, be attributed to that which is not? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But does every one know what letters will unite with what? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But how can a man either express in words or even conceive in thought things which are not or a thing which is not without number? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But perhaps you mean to give the name of''being''to both of them together? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But shall we say that has mind and not life? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But surely that which may be present or may be absent will be admitted by them to exist? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But surely we know that no soul is voluntarily ignorant of anything? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But that of which this is the condition can not be absolute unity? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But the stream of thought which flows through the lips and is audible is called speech? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But then, what is the meaning of these two words,''same''and''other''? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But upon this view, is the beautiful a more real and the not- beautiful a less real existence? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But would either of them be if not participating in being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But you would agree, if I am not mistaken, that existences are relative as well as absolute? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: But, on the other hand, when we say''what is not,''do we not attribute unity? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Can we find a suitable name for each of them? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Can you see how without them mind could exist, or come into existence anywhere? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Do we admit that virtue is distinct from vice in the soul? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Do you not conceive discord to be a dissolution of kindred elements, originating in some disagreement? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Do you not see that when the professor of any art has one name and many kinds of knowledge, there must be something wrong? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Do you observe that our scepticism has carried us beyond the range of Parmenides''prohibition? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Do you speak advisedly, or are you carried away at the moment by the habit of assenting into giving a hasty answer? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Do you think that sameness of condition and mode and subject could ever exist without a principle of rest? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Does false opinion think that things which are not are not, or that in a certain sense they are? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: First there is motion, which we affirm to be absolutely''other''than rest: what else can we say? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: For which reason twig baskets, casting- nets, nooses, creels, and the like may all be termed''enclosures''? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: How are we to call it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: How do the Sophists make young men believe in their supreme and universal wisdom? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: How, then, can any one put any faith in me? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: How? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Meaning to say that the soul is something which exists? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Nevertheless, we maintain that you may not and ought not to attribute being to not- being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: O my friend, do you not see that nothing can exceed our ignorance, and yet we fancy that we are saying something good? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Of this merchandise of the soul, may not one part be fairly termed the art of display? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Of whom does the sentence speak, and who is the subject? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Open force may be called fighting, and secret force may have the general name of hunting? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Or do you wish to imply that they are both at rest, when you say that they are? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Or shall we say that both inhere in perfect being, but that it has no soul which contains them? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Or that being has mind and life and soul, but although endowed with soul remains absolutely unmoved? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Or this sentence, again-- THEAETETUS: What sentence? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Seeing, then, that all arts are either acquisitive or creative, in which class shall we place the art of the angler? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Shall we bind up his name as we did before, making a chain from one end of his genealogy to the other? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Shall we regard one as the simple imitator-- the other as the dissembling or ironical imitator? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Shall we say that being is one and a whole, because it has the attribute of unity? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Shall we say that this has or has not a name? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Shall we then be so faint- hearted as to give him up? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Some in the singular( ti) you would say is the sign of one, some in the dual( tine) of two, some in the plural( tines) of many? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: The first question about the angler was, whether he was a skilled artist or unskilled? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: The plain result is that motion, since it partakes of being, really is and also is not? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: The true says what is true about you? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then any taking away of evil from the soul may be properly called purification? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then if, as I was saying, there is one art which includes all of them, ought not that art to have one name? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then let them answer this question: One, you say, alone is? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then suppose that we work out some lesser example which will be a pattern of the greater? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then the Sophist has been shown to have a sort of conjectural or apparent knowledge only of all things, which is not the truth? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then the not- beautiful turns out to be the opposition of being to being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then we are to regard an unintelligent soul as deformed and devoid of symmetry? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then we may without fear contend that motion is other than being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then we must not attempt to attribute to not- being number either in the singular or plural? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then we shall be right in calling vice a discord and disease of the soul? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then why has the sophistical art such a mysterious power? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Then, according to this view, motion is other and also not other? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: There is some part of the other which is opposed to the beautiful? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: These then are the two kinds of image- making-- the art of making likenesses, and phantastic or the art of making appearances? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Thus far, then, the Sophist and the angler, starting from the art of acquiring, take the same road? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: To admit of two names, and to affirm that there is nothing but unity, is surely ridiculous? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: To that which is, may be attributed some other thing which is? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: To them we say-- You would distinguish essence from generation? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Upon this view, again, being, having a defect of being, will become not- being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Very good; and now say, do we venture to utter the forbidden word''not- being''? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Was not the sort of imitation of which we spoke just now the imitation of those who know? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: We were saying of him, if I am not mistaken, that he was a disputer? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Well, fair sirs, we say to them, what is this participation, which you assert of both? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: What art? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: What is the next step? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: What is there which is well known and not great, and is yet as susceptible of definition as any larger thing? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: What name, then, shall be given to the sort of instruction which gets rid of this? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: What then shall we call it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: When I introduced the word''is,''did I not contradict what I said before? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: When any one says''A man learns,''should you not call this the simplest and least of sentences? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: When the affirmation or denial takes Place in silence and in the mind only, have you any other name by which to call it but opinion? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: When we speak of something as not great, does the expression seem to you to imply what is little any more than what is equal? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: When we speak of things which are not, are we not attributing plurality to not- being? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: When we were asked to what we were to assign the appellation of not- being, we were in the greatest difficulty:--do you remember? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Where, then, is a man to look for help who would have any clear or fixed notion of being in his mind? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Whereas being surely has communion with both of them, for both of them are? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Who must be you, and can be nobody else? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Would you not say that rest and motion are in the most entire opposition to one another? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Yes, and the reason, as I should imagine, is that they are supposed to have knowledge of those things about which they dispute? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Yet that which has parts may have the attribute of unity in all the parts, and in this way being all and a whole, may be one? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: Yet they surely both partake of the same and of the other? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: You heard me say what I have always felt and still feel-- that I have no heart for this argument? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: You mean by assenting to imply that he who says something must say some one thing? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: You mean to say that false opinion thinks what is not? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: You mean to say, not in a true sense? |
plato-sophist-1258 | STRANGER: You remember our division of hunting, into hunting after swimming animals and land animals? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Shall I say an angler? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Shall I tell you what we must do? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Again I ask, What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: All things? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: And in what other way can it contain them? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: And is there not some truth in what they say? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: And what is the name of the art? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: And what is the question at issue about names? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: And what is their answer? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: And why? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: But are tame animals ever hunted? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: But are you sure, Stranger, that this will be quite so acceptable to the rest of the company as Socrates imagines? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: But how can he, Stranger? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: For what reason? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How are we to distinguish the two? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How can they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How indeed? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How is that possible? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How is that? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How is that? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How is that? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How shall we get it out of them? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How shall we make the division? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How the Sophist? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How would you make the division? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How, Stranger, can I describe an image except as something fashioned in the likeness of the true? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: How? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: I suppose that you are referring to the precepts of Protagoras about wrestling and the other arts? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: In what respect? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: In what way are they related? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: In what way? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: In what? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Is not this always the aim of imitation? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: May I ask to what you are referring? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Of what are they to be patterns, and what are we going to do with them all? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Of what are you speaking? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: To what are you alluding? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: To what are you referring? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: To what do you refer? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: To what do you refer? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Very likely; but will you tell me how? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Well, and do you see what you are looking for? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they, and what is their name? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What are you saying? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What art? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What can he mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What classification? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What definition? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean, and how do you distinguish them? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What explanation? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is that? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is that? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What is the notion? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What question? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What questions? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What shall be the divisions? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What was that? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What were they? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What will be their answer, Stranger? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What would he mean by''making''? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: What? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Where shall we make the division? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Where, indeed? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Where? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Which is--? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Who are cousins? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Who but he can be worthy? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why do you think so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why not? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why not? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why so? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Why? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Will you tell me first what are the two divisions of which you are speaking? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Yes, there are many such; which of them do you mean? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEAETETUS: Yes; why should there not be another such art? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEODORUS: What is your difficulty about them, and what made you ask? |
plato-sophist-1258 | THEODORUS: What terms? |
plato-sophist-1258 | There will be no impropriety in our demanding an answer to this question, either of the dualists or of the pluralists? |
plato-sophist-1258 | To begin at the beginning-- Does he make them able to dispute about divine things, which are invisible to men in general? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Upon your view, are we to suppose that there is a third principle over and above the other two,--three in all, and not two? |
plato-sophist-1258 | What do you say, Stranger? |
plato-sophist-1258 | What shall we name him? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Will you recall them to my mind? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Will you tell me? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Would you object to begin with the consideration of the words themselves? |
plato-sophist-1258 | Yet one thing may be said of them without offence-- THEAETETUS: What thing? |
plato-sophist-1258 | is there a greater still behind? |
plato-sophist-1258 | my dear youth, do you suppose this possible? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ''Forgive me my foul murder''? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ''Sblood, do you think I am easier to be played on than a pipe? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ''Twere good you let him know; For who, that''s but a queen, fair, sober, wise, Would from a paddock, from a bat, a gib, Such dear concernings hide? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Alas, how shall this bloody deed be answer''d? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Am I a coward? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | And shall I couple hell? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | And what''s in prayer but this two- fold force, To be forestalled ere we come to fall, Or pardon''d being down? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | And will he not come again? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | And with such maimed rites? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Are all the rest come back? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | BERNARDO Have you had quiet guard? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | BERNARDO Looks it not like the king? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | BERNARDO Say, What, is Horatio there? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | BERNARDO| HAMLET Arm''d, say you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | BERNARDO| HAMLET From top to toe? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | BERNARDO| HAMLET Then saw you not his face? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Be the players ready? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | But is there no sequel at the heels of this mother''s admiration? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | But what is your affair in Elsinore? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | But what, in faith, make you from Wittenberg? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | But wilt thou hear me how I did proceed? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | But you''ll be secret? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | But, O, what form of prayer Can serve my turn? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | But, in the beaten way of friendship, what make you at Elsinore? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | But, to the quick o''the ulcer:-- Hamlet comes back: what would you undertake, To show yourself your father''s son in deed More than in words? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | By the mass, I was about to say something: where did I leave? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Can you advise me? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Could you on this fair mountain leave to feed, And batten on this moor? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Cousin Hamlet, You know the wager? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Did these bones cost no more the breeding, but to play at loggats with''em? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Didst perceive? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Do you believe his tenders, as you call them? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Do you consent we shall acquaint him with it, As needful in our loves, fitting our duty? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Dost know this water- fly? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Dost thou come here to whine? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Dost thou hear? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Enter KING CLAUDIUS, QUEEN GERTRUDE, POLONIUS, OPHELIA, ROSENCRANTZ, GUILDENSTERN, and others] KING CLAUDIUS How fares our cousin Hamlet? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Enter to him BERNARDO] BERNARDO Who''s there? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | FRANCISCO Bernardo? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | First Clown A whoreson mad fellow''s it was: whose do you think it was? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | First Clown Can not you tell that? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | First Clown How can that be, unless she drowned herself in her own defence? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | First Clown I like thy wit well, in good faith: the gallows does well; but how does it well? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | First Clown What is he that builds stronger than either the mason, the shipwright, or the carpenter? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | First Clown What, art a heathen? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | First Player What speech, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | First Player''But who, O, who had seen the mobled queen--''HAMLET''The mobled queen?'' |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | GUILDENSTERN In what, my dear lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | GUILDENSTERN The king, sir,-- HAMLET Ay, sir, what of him? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | GUILDENSTERN What should we say, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | GUILDENSTERN What, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | GUILDENSTERN:| HAMLET What noise? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Good lads, how do ye both? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Good my lord, will you see the players well bestowed? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Am I not i''the right, old Jephthah? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET And fix''d his eyes upon you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET And smelt so? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Are you fair? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Ay, marry, why was he sent into England? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Between who? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET But where was this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Did you not speak to it? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Do the boys carry it away? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Do they hold the same estimation they did when I was in the city? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Do you not come your tardy son to chide, That, lapsed in time and passion, lets go by The important acting of your dread command? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Do you see nothing there? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Do you see yonder cloud that''s almost in shape of a camel? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Do you think I meant country matters? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Dost thou think Alexander looked o''this fashion i''the earth? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET For if the sun breed maggots in a dead dog, being a god kissing carrion,--Have you a daughter? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Get thee to a nunnery: why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET God''s bodykins, man, much better: use every man after his desert, and who should''scape whipping? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Goes it against the main of Poland, sir, Or for some frontier? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Has this fellow no feeling of his business, that he sings at grave- making? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Hear you, sir; What is the reason that you use me thus? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Hic et ubique? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET His beard was grizzled-- no? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How came he mad? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How chances it they travel? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How comes it? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How does the queen? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How if I answer''no''? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How is it with you, lady? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How long is that since? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How long will a man lie i''the earth ere he rot? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How purposed, sir, I pray you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How say you, then; would heart of man once think it? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET How strangely? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET I mean, my head upon your lap? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET I must to England; you know that? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET In the secret parts of fortune? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Is not parchment made of sheepskins? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Lady, shall I lie in your lap? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Nay, I know not: Is it the king? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Nor did you nothing hear? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Nor the soles of her shoe? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Or like a whale? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Pale or red? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Saw? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Sir, my good friend; I''ll change that name with you: And what make you from Wittenberg, Horatio? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET So long? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET The concernancy, sir? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Then you live about her waist, or in the middle of her favours? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET This? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Upon the talk of the poisoning? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Upon what ground? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What call you the carriages? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What did you enact? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What hour now? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What imports the nomination of this gentleman? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What man dost thou dig it for? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What woman, then? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What''s his weapon? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What''s the matter now? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What, are they children? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What, look''d he frowningly? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET What? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Who commands them, sir? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Who is to be buried in''t? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Who, I? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Whose was it? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Why did you laugh then, when I said''man delights not me''? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Why he more than another? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Why, what should be the fear? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET Why? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET With drink, sir? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET''Swounds, show me what thou''lt do: Woo''t weep? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HAMLET[ Advancing] What is he whose grief Bears such an emphasis? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO How was this seal''d? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO Indeed? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO Is it a custom? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO Is''t not possible to understand in another tongue? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO Remember it, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO What is it ye would see? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO What is''t, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO What news, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO What''s that, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | HORATIO Where, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Have you any further trade with us? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Have you eyes? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | He took my father grossly, full of bread; With all his crimes broad blown, as flush as May; And how his audit stands who knows save heaven? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Hold you the watch to- night? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | How does Hamlet? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | How dost thou understand the Scripture? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | How dost thou, Guildenstern? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | How dost thou, good lord?'' |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | How is it, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | How long hast thou been a grave- maker? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | How stand I then, That have a father kill''d, a mother stain''d, Excitements of my reason and my blood, And let all sleep? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | I do not set my life in a pin''s fee; And for my soul, what can it do to that, Being a thing immortal as itself? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | I will the king hear this piece of work? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Is it a free visitation? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Is it your own inclining? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Is there no offence in''t? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Is thy union here? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | It might be the pate of a politician, which this ass now o''er- reaches; one that would circumvent God, might it not? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS But how hath she Received his love? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS But where is he? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS Do you think''tis this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS Have you heard the argument? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS Have you your father''s leave? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS How do you, pretty lady? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS How is it that the clouds still hang on you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS How long hath she been thus? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS How may we try it further? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS If it be so, Laertes-- As how should it be so? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS Laertes, was your father dear to you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS What do you call the play? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS What dost you mean by this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS What is the cause, Laertes, That thy rebellion looks so giant- like? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS What, Gertrude? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS Where are my Switzers? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS Where is Polonius? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS Who shall stay you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | KING CLAUDIUS Will you know them then? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES A Norman was''t? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES Alas, then, she is drown''d? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES How came he dead? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES Know you the hand? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES Must there no more be done? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES Say you so? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES What ceremony else? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES What part is that, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES Where is my father? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LAERTES Why ask you this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS And then, sir, does he this-- he does-- what was I about to say? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS Do you know me, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS Hath there been such a time-- I''d fain know that-- That I have positively said''Tis so,''When it proved otherwise? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS Have I, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS Mad for thy love? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS What a treasure had he, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS What do you think of me? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS What follows, then, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS What is the matter, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS What said he? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS With what, i''the name of God? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | LORD POLONIUS[ Aside] How say you by that? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Let me question more in particular: what have you, my good friends, deserved at the hands of fortune, that she sends you to prison hither? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | MARCELLUS Is it not like the king? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | MARCELLUS O, farewell, honest soldier: Who hath relieved you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | MARCELLUS Shall I strike at it with my partisan? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | MARCELLUS What, has this thing appear''d again to- night? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Marcellus? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Marry, how? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | May one be pardon''d and retain the offence? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Must I remember? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Not one now, to mock your own grinning? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Now, out of this,-- LAERTES What out of this, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | O proud death, What feast is toward in thine eternal cell, That thou so many princes at a shot So bloodily hast struck? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | O, where? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA Could beauty, my lord, have better commerce than with honesty? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA Do you doubt that? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA Good my lord, How does your honour for this many a day? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA My lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA No more but so? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA Say you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA What is, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA What means your lordship? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA Will he tell us what this show meant? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA[ Sings] And will he not come again? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OPHELIA[ Sings] How should I your true love know From another one? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OSRIC How is''t, Laertes? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OSRIC Of Laertes? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OSRIC Shall I re- deliver you e''en so? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | OSRIC Sir? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Or are you like the painting of a sorrow, A face without a heart? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Or is it some abuse, and no such thing? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Plucks off my beard, and blows it in my face? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE Alas, how is''t with you, That you do bend your eye on vacancy And with the incorporal air do hold discourse? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE Alas, sweet lady, what imports this song? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE Ay me, what act, That roars so loud, and thunders in the index? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE Did he receive you well? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE Did you assay him? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE Have you forgot me? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE How fares my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE If it be, Why seems it so particular with thee? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE O my son, what theme? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE To whom do you speak this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE What have I done, that thou darest wag thy tongue In noise so rude against me? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE What shall I do? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE What wilt thou do? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | QUEEN GERTRUDE What would she have? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | REYNALDO But, my good lord,-- LORD POLONIUS Wherefore should you do this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ROSENCRANTZ Believe what? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ROSENCRANTZ Good my lord, what is your cause of distemper? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ROSENCRANTZ How can that be, when you have the voice of the king himself for your succession in Denmark? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ROSENCRANTZ Take you me for a sponge, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ROSENCRANTZ To what end, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | ROSENCRANTZ[ Aside to GUILDENSTERN] What say you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Say, Voltimand, what from our brother Norway? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Say, why is this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Second Clown But is this law? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Second Clown Was he a gentleman? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Second Clown Will you ha''the truth on''t? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Second Clown''Who builds stronger than a mason, a shipwright, or a carpenter?'' |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Shall we to the court? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Stay''d it long? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | The Scripture says''Adam digged:''could he dig without arms? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | The very conveyances of his lands will hardly lie in this box; and must the inheritor himself have no more, ha? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | These foils have all a length? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | This might be my lord such- a- one, that praised my lord such- a- one''s horse, when he meant to beg it; might it not? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Thus:[ Reads]''In her excellent white bosom, these,& c.''QUEEN GERTRUDE Came this from Hamlet to her? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | To any pastime? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | To outface me with leaping in her grave? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | To what issue will this come? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | To withdraw with you:--why do you go about to recover the wind of me, as if you would drive me into a toil? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Try what repentance can: what can it not? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Tweaks me by the nose? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Was''t Hamlet wrong''d Laertes? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Well, sir? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Were you not sent for? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What devil was''t That thus hath cozen''d you at hoodman- blind? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What do you read, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What if this cursed hand Were thicker than itself with brother''s blood, Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What is a man, If his chief good and market of his time Be but to sleep and feed? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What is between you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What players are they? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What says Polonius? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What should a man do but be merry? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What should such fellows as I do crawling between earth and heaven? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What should this mean? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What then? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What think you on''t? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What think you on''t? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What wilt thou do for her? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What would he do, Had he the motive and the cue for passion That I have? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What would your gracious figure? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What wouldst thou have, Laertes? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba, That he should weep for her? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What''s the news? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | What, have you given him any hard words of late? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Where be his quiddities now, his quillets, his cases, his tenures, and his tricks? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Where be your gibes now? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Where is he gone? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Where is your son? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Where''s your father? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Whereon do you look? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Whereto serves mercy But to confront the visage of offence? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Who calls me villain? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Who does it, then? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Who''s there? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Whose grave''s this, sirrah? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Why does the drum come hither? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Why is this''imponed,''as you call it? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Why may not imagination trace the noble dust of Alexander, till he find it stopping a bung- hole? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Why should the poor be flatter''d? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Will they pursue the quality no longer than they can sing? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Will you play upon this pipe? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Will you walk out of the air, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Woo''t drink up eisel? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | Yet what can it when one can not repent? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | You can not speak of reason to the Dane, And loose your voice: what wouldst thou beg, Laertes, That shall not be my offer, not thy asking? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | You could, for a need, study a speech of some dozen or sixteen lines, which I would set down and insert in''t, could you not? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | You have me, have you not? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | You told us of some suit; what is''t, Laertes? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ A flourish of trumpets, and ordnance shot off, within] What does this mean, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ A noise within] QUEEN GERTRUDE Alack, what noise is this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Enter GHOST and HAMLET] HAMLET Where wilt thou lead me? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Enter HAMLET and GUILDENSTERN] KING CLAUDIUS Now, Hamlet, where''s Polonius? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Enter HAMLET and HORATIO] HAMLET So much for this, sir: now shall you see the other; You do remember all the circumstance? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Enter HORATIO and MARCELLUS] MARCELLUS How is''t, my noble lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Enter HORATIO and a Servant] HORATIO What are they that would speak with me? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Enter ROSENCRANTZ and GUILDENSTERN] ROSENCRANTZ What have you done, my lord, with the dead body? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Enter another Gentleman] What is the matter? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Enter two Clowns, with spades,& c] First Clown Is she to be buried in Christian burial that wilfully seeks her own salvation? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exeunt FORTINBRAS and Soldiers][ Enter HAMLET, ROSENCRANTZ, GUILDENSTERN, and others] HAMLET Good sir, whose powers are these? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exeunt KING CLAUDIUS, QUEEN GERTRUDE, and Attendants][ Enter HAMLET, reading] O, give me leave: How does my good Lord Hamlet? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exeunt VOLTIMAND and CORNELIUS] And now, Laertes, what''s the news with you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exit POLONIUS with all the Players but the First] Dost thou hear me, old friend; can you play the Murder of Gonzago? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exit POLONIUS] Will you two help to hasten them? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exit] HAMLET Is this a prologue, or the posy of a ring? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exit] HAMLET Madam, how like you this play? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exit] LAERTES Do you see this, O God? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exit] LORD POLONIUS What is''t, Ophelia, be hath said to you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Exit] ROSENCRANTZ Wilt please you go, my lord? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Falls and dies] QUEEN GERTRUDE O me, what hast thou done? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ March afar off, and shot within] What warlike noise is this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ March within][ Enter FORTINBRAS, the English Ambassadors, and others] PRINCE FORTINBRAS Where is this sight? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Noise within][ Enter LAERTES, armed; Danes following] LAERTES Where is this king? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ POLONIUS hides behind the arras][ Enter HAMLET] HAMLET Now, mother, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Re- enter HORATIO, with OPHELIA] OPHELIA Where is the beauteous majesty of Denmark? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Retiring with HORATIO] LAERTES What ceremony else? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ They play] Another hit; what say you? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ Throws up another skull] HAMLET There''s another: why may not that be the skull of a lawyer? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | [ To POLONIUS] My lord, you played once i''the university, you say? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | a rat? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | and is''t not to be damn''d, To let this canker of our nature come In further evil? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | are they so followed? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | are you honest? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | art thou there, truepenny? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | breaks my pate across? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | canst work i''the earth so fast? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | die two months ago, and not forgotten yet? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | do they grow rusty? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | do you mark that? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | eat a crocodile? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | gives me the lie i''the throat, As deep as to the lungs? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | have you eyes? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | how are they escoted? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | how otherwise?-- Will you be ruled by me? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | is''t possible, a young maid''s wits Should be as moral as an old man''s life? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | quite chap- fallen? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | say''st thou so? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | thou wilt not murder me? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | thy face is valenced since I saw thee last: comest thou to beard me in Denmark? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | what else? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | what hath befall''n? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | what news? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | what noise is that? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | what replication should be made by the son of a king? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | what rests? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | what should we do? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | where is thy blush? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | where? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | wherefore? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | who brought them? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | who calls on Hamlet? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | who comes here? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | who does me this? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | who maintains''em? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | who would do so? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | who? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | whose phrase of sorrow Conjures the wandering stars, and makes them stand Like wonder- wounded hearers? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | why do we wrap the gentleman in our more rawer breath? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | why does he suffer this rude knave now to knock him about the sconce with a dirty shovel, and will not tell him of his action of battery? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | will his vouchers vouch him no more of his purchases, and double ones too, than the length and breadth of a pair of indentures? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | woo''t fast? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | woo''t fight? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | woo''t tear thyself? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | you tremble and look pale: Is not this something more than fantasy? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | your flashes of merriment, that were wo nt to set the table on a roar? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | your gambols? |
shakespeare-hamlet-1735 | your songs? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ''O heart,''as the goodly saying is,''--O heart, heavy heart, Why sigh''st thou without breaking? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES A maiden battle, then? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES Ay; what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES Dost thou entreat me, Hector? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES From whence, fragment? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES How can that be? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES How so? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES I do believe it; for they pass''d by me As misers do by beggars, neither gave to me Good word nor look: what, are my deeds forgot? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES Shall Ajax fight with Hector? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES So I do: what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES Tell me, you heavens, in which part of his body Shall I destroy him? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES What are you reading? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES What''s the quarrel? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES What, am I poor of late? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES What, comes the general to speak with me? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES What, what? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES What, with me too, Thersites? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES What? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES What? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES Where, where? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ACHILLES Why, but he is not in this tune, is he? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AENEAS If not Achilles, sir, What is your name? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AENEAS Is not Prince Troilus here? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AENEAS Is the prince there in person? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AENEAS Is this great Agamemnon''s tent, I pray you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AENEAS May one, that is a herald and a prince, Do a fair message to his kingly ears? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AENEAS[ Within] My lord, is the lady ready? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON Is not yond Diomed, with Calchas''daughter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON Sir, you of Troy, call you yourself AEneas? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON The nature of the sickness found, Ulysses, What is the remedy? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON What Trojan is that same that looks so heavy? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON What says Achilles? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON What wouldst thou of us, Trojan? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON What''s his excuse? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON What''s your affair I pray you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON Which way would Hector have it? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AGAMEMNON Why will he not upon our fair request Untent his person and share the air with us? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX A''should not bear it so, a''should eat swords first: shall pride carry it? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX Can he not be sociable? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX Ha? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX Is he so much? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX Shall I call you father? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX Thou bitch- wolf''s son, canst thou not hear? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX What wouldst thou? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX Why should a man be proud? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX Will you subscribe his thought, and say he is? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | AJAX Yes, lion- sick, sick of proud heart: you may call it melancholy, if you will favour the man; but, by my head,''tis pride: but why, why? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | And buckle in a waist most fathomless With spans and inches so diminutive As fears and reasons? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Art thou come? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Art thou of blood and honour? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | As gentle tell me, of what honour was This Cressida in Troy? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | At whose request do these men play? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | But if I tell how these two did co- act, Shall I not lie in publishing a truth? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | But to the sport abroad: are you bound thither? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | But what care I? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | By my troth, I knew you not: what news with you so early? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CALCHAS[ Within] Who calls? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA And is it true that I must go from Troy? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA And whither go they? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Are you a- weary of me? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA At what was all this laughing? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Be those with swords? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA But how should this man, that makes me smile, make Hector angry? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA But there was more temperate fire under the pot of her eyes: did her eyes run o''er too? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Can Helenus fight, uncle? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Did not I tell you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Do you think I will? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Good; and what of him? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Have the gods envy? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA In faith, I can not: what would you have me do? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA In kissing, do you render or receive? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Is he so young a man and so old a lifter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Is it possible? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA My lord, will you be true? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Nor nothing monstrous neither? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA To bring, uncle? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA What sneaking fellow comes yonder? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA What was his answer? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA What was his cause of anger? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA What, and from Troilus too? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA What, is he angry too? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA What, this? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Who comes here? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Why sigh you so profoundly? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Why tell you me of moderation? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Will he give you the nod? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | CRESSIDA Will you walk in, my lord? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Can it be That so degenerate a strain as this Should once set footing in your generous bosoms? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Come, come, thou boy- queller, show thy face; Know what it is to meet Achilles angry: Hector? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Come, what''s Agamemnon? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | DIOMEDES But will you, then? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | DIOMEDES Ha, art thou there? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | DIOMEDES I will have this: whose was it? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | DIOMEDES What did you swear you would bestow on me? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | DIOMEDES What, shall I come? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | DIOMEDES Whose was it? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | DIOMEDES Whose was''t? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | DIOMEDES Will you remember? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Do you know a man if you see him? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Do you know what a man is? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Do you not think he thinks himself a better man than I am? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Enter AGAMEMNON, NESTOR, ULYSSES, MENELAUS, and others] AGAMEMNON Princes, What grief hath set the jaundice on your cheeks? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | For what, alas, can these my single arms? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | HECTOR Is this Achilles? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | HECTOR O, you, my lord? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | HECTOR What vice is that, good Troilus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | HECTOR Who must we answer? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | HELEN My Lord Pandarus,-- PANDARUS What says my sweet queen, my very very sweet queen? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | HELEN Nay, but, my lord,-- PANDARUS What says my sweet queen? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Had she no lover there That wails her absence? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Hector is gone: Who shall tell Priam so, or Hecuba? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Hector, what say you to''t? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Helen was not up, was she? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | How chance my brother Troilus went not? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | How do you, cousin? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | How doth pride grow? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | How may A stranger to those most imperial looks Know them from eyes of other mortals? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | How now, lambs? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | I like thy armour well; I''ll frush it and unlock the rivets all, But I''ll be master of it: wilt thou not, beast, abide? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | I shall-- ACHILLES Will you set your wit to a fool''s? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | I would be gone: Where is my wit? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Know they not Achilles? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Look you, who comes here? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | MENELAUS How do you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | May I, sweet lady, beg a kiss of you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | My lord, will you vouchsafe me a word? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR I see them not with my old eyes: what are they? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR Well, and how? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR What is''t? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR What says Ulysses? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR Wherefore should you so? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR Who, Thersites? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR Would you, my lord, aught with the general? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR Yes,''tis most meet: whom may you else oppose, That can from Hector bring his honour off, If not Achilles? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | NESTOR Yet he loves himself: is''t not strange? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Nature craves All dues be render''d to their owners: now, What nearer debt in all humanity Than wife is to the husband? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | One bear will not bite another, and wherefore should one bastard? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Does he not? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Good morrow, cousin Cressid: what do you talk of? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Helenus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Is a''not? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Is he here, say you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Is this the generation of love? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Know you the musicians? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS To do what? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Was he angry? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS What were you talking of when I came? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS What''s that? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS What, not between Troilus and Hector? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Where are my tears? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Where? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Who play they to? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Who''s there? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Who, Troilus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS Will this gear ne''er be mended? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS You depend upon him, I mean? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS You know me, do you not? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PANDARUS[ Within] What,''s all the doors open here? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PARIS What exploit''s in hand? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PATROCLUS Thy lord, Thersites: then tell me, I pray thee, what''s thyself? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PATROCLUS What say you to''t? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PATROCLUS What, art thou devout? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PATROCLUS Who keeps the tent now? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PATROCLUS Why am I a fool? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PATROCLUS Why thou damnable box of envy, thou, what meanest thou to curse thus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | PRIAM What noise? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Paris? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Servant No, sir, Helen: could you not find out that by her attributes? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Servant Who shall I command, sir? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Shall the elephant Ajax carry it thus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Should not our father Bear the great sway of his affairs with reasons, Because your speech hath none that tells him so? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Sweet lord, who''s a- field to- day? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES Agamemnon, how if he had boils? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES And those boils did run? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES Do I curse thee? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES Dost thou think I have no sense, thou strikest me thus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES I will hold my peace when Achilles''brach bids me, shall I? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES Thy knower, Patroclus: then tell me, Patroclus, what art thou? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES What art thou? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES Who, I? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES Will he swagger himself out on''s own eyes? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | THERSITES You see him there, do you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Are there such? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS By whom, AEneas? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Doth that grieve thee? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Have I not tarried? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Have I not tarried? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Is it so concluded? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Say I she is not fair? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Shall sweet lord, be bound to you so much, After we part from Agamemnon''s tent, To bring me thither? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS This she? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS What is aught, but as''tis valued? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS What now? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS What offends you, lady? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS What should she remember? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS What should they grant? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS What, art thou angry, Pandarus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Who should withhold me? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Who, I? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | TROILUS Why was my Cressid then so hard to win? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Tell me, Apollo, for thy Daphne''s love, What Cressid is, what Pandar, and what we? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Tell me, sweet uncle, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | The grief is fine, full, perfect, that I taste, And violenteth in a sense as strong As that which causeth it: how can I moderate it? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | The imaginary relish is so sweet That it enchants my sense: what will it be, When that the watery palate tastes indeed Love''s thrice repured nectar? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Then tell me, Patroclus, what''s Achilles? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | They that have the voice of lions and the act of hares, are they not monsters? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Thou canst strike, canst thou? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Thou crusty batch of nature, what''s the news? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ULYSSES And wake him to the answer, think you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ULYSSES Is that a wonder? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ULYSSES May worthy Troilus be half attach''d With that which here his passion doth express? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ULYSSES What hath she done, prince, that can soil our mothers? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ULYSSES Why stay we, then? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | ULYSSES You shake, my lord, at something: will you go? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Was Cressid here? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Was Hector armed and gone ere ye came to Ilium? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Weigh you the worth and honour of a king So great as our dread father in a scale Of common ounces? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What Propugnation is in one man''s valour, To stand the push and enmity of those This quarrel would excite? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What business, lord, so early? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What news, AEneas, from the field to- day? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What says she there? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What should he do here? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What think you of this man that takes me for the general? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What too curious dreg espies my sweet lady in the fountain of our love? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What''s become of the wenching rogues? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What, are you gone again? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | What, billing again? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | When comes Troilus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | When is she thence? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | When shall I see you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | When shall we see again? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | When that the general is not like the hive To whom the foragers shall all repair, What honey is expected? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | When were you at Ilium? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Where''s Achilles? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Where''s your daughter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Which is the high and mighty Agamemnon? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Who said he came hurt home to- day? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Who shall answer him? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Why do you not speak to her? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Why dost thou so oppress me with thine eye? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Why have I blabb''d? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Why keep we her? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Why should you say Cressida? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Why then, you princes, Do you with cheeks abash''d behold our works, And call them shames? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Why, they are vipers: is love a generation of vipers? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | Will you walk on, my lord? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | You''ll remember your brother''s excuse? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ A tucket] AGAMEMNON What trumpet? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ AENEAS passes] PANDARUS That''s AEneas: is not that a brave man? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ ANTENOR passes] CRESSIDA Who''s that? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter ACHILLES] ACHILLES Where is this Hector? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter ACHILLES] ACHILLES Who''s there? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter AENEAS] AGAMEMNON What would you''fore our tent? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter CASSANDRA] CASSANDRA Where is my brother Hector? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter CRESSIDA and ALEXANDER] CRESSIDA Who were those went by? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter DIOMEDES, with CRESSIDA] AGAMEMNON Is this the Lady Cressid? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter DIOMEDES] DIOMEDES What, are you up here, ho? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter HECTOR and ANDROMACHE] ANDROMACHE When was my lord so much ungently temper''d, To stop his ears against admonishment? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter PANDARUS] PANDARUS Do you hear, my lord? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Enter PATROCLUS] PATROCLUS Who''s there? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exeunt TROILUS and AENEAS] PANDARUS Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exeunt TROILUS and CRESSIDA] PANDARUS Who''s there? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exeunt TROILUS and DIOMEDES, fighting][ Enter HECTOR] HECTOR What art thou, Greek? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exeunt all except TROILUS and ULYSSES] TROILUS My Lord Ulysses, tell me, I beseech you, In what place of the field doth Calchas keep? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exeunt, fighting][ Enter HECTOR] HECTOR Yea, Troilus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit Boy] PANDARUS Have you seen my cousin? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit ULYSSES] AJAX What is he more than another? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit] ACHILLES What mean these fellows? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit] ACHILLES What, does the cuckold scorn me? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit] CRESSIDA I must then to the Grecians? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit] CRESSIDA Will you walk in, my lord? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit] HECTOR Now, youthful Troilus, do not these high strains Of divination in our sister work Some touches of remorse? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit][ Enter AGAMEMNON, ULYSSES, NESTOR, DIOMEDES, and AJAX] AGAMEMNON Where is Achilles? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Exit][ Enter one in sumptuous armour] HECTOR Stand, stand, thou Greek; thou art a goodly mark: No? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ HELENUS passes] CRESSIDA Who''s that? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Knocking within] Who''s that at door? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Music within] What music is this? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ PARIS passes] Look ye yonder, niece; is''t not a gallant man too, is''t not? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Re- enter PANDARUS with CRESSIDA] PANDARUS Come, come, what need you blush? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Re- enter PANDARUS] PANDARUS What, blushing still? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Re- enter TROILUS] TROILUS Ajax hath ta''en AEneas: shall it be? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ TROILUS passes] PANDARUS Where? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | [ Takes AGAMEMNON aside] NESTOR What moves Ajax thus to bay at him? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | and what need these tricks? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | art thou for Hector''s match? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | at my cousin Cressida''s? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | beseech you, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | do you hear? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | do you not hear the people cry''Troilus''? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | full, all over, generally? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | hast not slept to- night? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | have you any eyes? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | have you not done talking yet? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | hot blood, hot thoughts, and hot deeds? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | how came it cloven? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | how do you? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | how go maidenheads? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | is''t not a brave man? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | let her say what: what have I brought you to do? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | look you yonder, do you see? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | mean''st thou to fight to- day? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | no sooner got but lost? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | or do you purpose A victor shall be known? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | or is your blood So madly hot that no discourse of reason, Nor fear of bad success in a bad cause, Can qualify the same? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | pray you, a word: do not you follow the young Lord Paris? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | quoth she,''which of these hairs is Paris, my husband? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | say so: did not the general run then? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | the Grecians keep our aunt: Is she worth keeping? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | the hour? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | they are coming from the field: shall we stand up here, and see them as they pass toward Ilium? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | to do what? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | wast thou in prayer? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | were not that a botchy core? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what do you spy? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what have I done? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what instance for it? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what makes this pretty abruption? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what shall be done To him that victory commands? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what should he do here? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what shout is that? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what shriek is this? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what verse for it? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what wicked deem is this? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what''s that? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what''s that? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what''s the matter, man? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | what, with me? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | where is thy faith? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | where sups he to- night? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | where''s Hector? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | where''s Troilus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | where''s my cousin Cressid? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | where''s my lord? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | where''s thy master? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | wherefore do you thus? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | wherefore not afield? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | whether there, or there, or there? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | who is that there? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | who shall be true to us, When we are so unsecret to ourselves? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | who was here? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | why should our endeavour be so loved and the performance so loathed? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | why, have you any discretion? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | why, my cheese, my digestion, why hast thou not served thyself in to my table so many meals? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | will you beat down the door? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | will you the knights Shall to the edge of all extremity Pursue each other, or shall be divided By any voice or order of the field? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | will you with counters sum The past proportion of his infinite? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | wilt thou not? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | would he aught with us? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | would he not, a naughty man, let it sleep? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | yonder? |
shakespeare-troilus-3039 | you must be watched ere you be made tame, must you? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | A milk- sop, one that never in his life Felt so much cold as over shoes in snow? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | And all my armour laid into my tent? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | And little Ned Plantagenet, his son? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | And soothe the devil that I warn thee from? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | And who doth lead them but a paltry fellow, Long kept in Bretagne at our mother''s cost? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | And who is England''s king but great York''s heir? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Are you now going to dispatch this deed? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BISHOP OF ELY My lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BRAKENBURY Awaked you not with this sore agony? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BRAKENBURY Had you such leisure in the time of death To gaze upon the secrets of the deep? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BRAKENBURY In God''s name what are you, and how came you hither? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BRAKENBURY What one, my lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BRAKENBURY What was your dream? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BRAKENBURY Yea, are you so brief? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BUCKINGHAM Are all things fitting for that royal time? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BUCKINGHAM Look I so pale, Lord Dorset, as the rest? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BUCKINGHAM My gracious sovereign? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BUCKINGHAM What says your highness to my just demand? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BUCKINGHAM What think''st thou, then, of Stanley? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BUCKINGHAM Who knows the lord protector''s mind herein? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | BUCKINGHAM Why let it strike? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Both To, to, to-- CLARENCE To murder me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Boy Good aunt, you wept not for our father''s death; How can we aid you with our kindred tears? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Boy Think you my uncle did dissemble, grandam? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | But canst thou guess that he doth aim at it? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | But what''s the matter, Clarence? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | But what, is Catesby gone? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | But who comes here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | But, leaving this, what is your grace''s pleasure? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | But, tell me, is young George Stanley living? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | But, tell me, where is princely Richmond now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | CATESBY My lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | CATESBY My lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | CLARENCE Are you call''d forth from out a world of men To slay the innocent? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | CLARENCE In God''s name, what art thou? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | CLARENCE Where art thou, keeper? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Can curses pierce the clouds and enter heaven? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Can not a plain man live and think no harm, But thus his simple truth must be abused By silken, sly, insinuating Jacks? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Can you deny all this? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Children What stay had we but Clarence? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Citizens| BUCKINGHAM To- morrow will it please you to be crown''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Come on, Lord Hastings, will you go with me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Come, shall we to this gear? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Come, will you go? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Cousin, thou wert not wo nt to be so dull: Shall I be plain? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DERBY What men of name resort to him? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DERBY What of his heart perceive you in his face By any likelihood he show''d to- day? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DORSET Be of good cheer: mother, how fares your grace? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK Art thou my son? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK Art thou so hasty? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK How, my pretty York? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK I pray thee, pretty York, who told thee this? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK So many miseries have crazed my voice, That my woe- wearied tongue is mute and dumb, Edward Plantagenet, why art thou dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK Thou toad, thou toad, where is thy brother Clarence? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK What is thy news then? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK What means this scene of rude impatience? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK What stays had I but they? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | DUCHESS OF YORK Who hath committed them? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Did Julius Caesar build that place, my lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Did York''s dread curse prevail so much with heaven? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Did you confer with him? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Fear you the boar, and go so unprovided? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | First Murderer How canst thou urge God''s dreadful law to us, When thou hast broke it in so dear degree? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | First Murderer How dost thou feel thyself now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | First Murderer How if it come to thee again? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | First Murderer What, art thou afraid? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | First Murderer Where is thy conscience now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | First Murderer Who made thee, then, a bloody minister, When gallant- springing brave Plantagenet, That princely novice, was struck dead by thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GENTLEMEN Towards Chertsey, noble lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Alas, why would you heap these cares on me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER But shall I live in hope? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Else wherefore breathe I in a Christian land? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Foul wrinkled witch, what makest thou in my sight? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Her husband, knave: wouldst thou betray me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER How fares our cousin, noble Lord of York? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER How? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER My dagger, little cousin? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER My lord, will''t please you pass along? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Say that I slew them not? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Shall we hear from you, Catesby, ere we sleep? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Touch''d you the bastardy of Edward''s children? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Upon what cause? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Wert thou not banished on pain of death? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER What doth she say, my Lord of Buckingham? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER What news abroad? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER What, think You we are Turks or infidels? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER What, would you have my weapon, little lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Why, madam, have I offer''d love for this To be so bouted in this royal presence? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Why, what should you fear? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Will not the mayor then and his brethren come? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | GLOUCESTER Would you enforce me to a world of care? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Girl Why do you look on us, and shake your head, And call us wretches, orphans, castaways If that our noble father be alive? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | HASTINGS And then? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | HASTINGS Can not thy master sleep these tedious nights? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | HASTINGS Good morrow, Catesby; you are early stirring What news, what news, in this our tottering state? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | HASTINGS If they have done this thing, my gracious lord-- GLOUCESTER If I thou protector of this damned strumpet-- Tellest thou me of''ifs''? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | HASTINGS[ Within] Who knocks at the door? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Hath any well- advised friend proclaim''d Reward to him that brings the traitor in? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Hath he set bounds betwixt their love and me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Hath she forgot already that brave prince, Edward, her lord, whom I, some three months since, Stabb''d in my angry mood at Tewksbury? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Heard ye not what an humble suppliant Lord hastings was to her for his delivery? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | How far into the morning is it, lords? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | How hath your lordship brook''d imprisonment? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | I am their mother; who should keep me from them? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | I tell thee, Catesby-- CATESBY What, my lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | I''ll tell you what, my cousin Buckingham,-- BUCKINGHAM What, my gracious lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | If not, that, I being queen, you bow like subjects, Yet that, by you deposed, you quake like rebels? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | In God''s name, speak: when is the royal day? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Is ink and paper ready? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Is the king dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Is there a murderer here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING EDWARD IV Have a tongue to doom my brother''s death, And shall the same give pardon to a slave? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING EDWARD IV Is Clarence dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III And buried, gentle Tyrrel? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III And came I not at last to comfort you? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Art thou, indeed? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Ay, what''s o''clock? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III But didst thou see them dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Cold friends to Richard: what do they in the north, When they should serve their sovereign in the west? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Darest thou resolve to kill a friend of mine? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Even he that makes her queen who should be else? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Good news or bad, that thou comest in so bluntly? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III He said the truth: and what said Surrey then? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III How chance the prophet could not at that time Have told me, I being by, that I should kill him? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III I, even I: what think you of it, madam? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Is the chair empty? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Kind Tyrrel, am I happy in thy news? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Know''st thou not any whom corrupting gold Would tempt unto a close exploit of death? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Saw''st thou the melancholy Lord Northumberland? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Shall we hear from thee, Tyrrel, ere we sleep? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Some light- foot friend post to the Duke of Norfolk: Ratcliff, thyself, or Catesby; where is he? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Tut, tut, thou art all ice, thy kindness freezeth: Say, have I thy consent that they shall die? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Well, but what''s o''clock? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Well, sir, as you guess, as you guess? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III What do you think? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III What is his name? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Where is thy power, then, to beat him back? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | KING RICHARD III Why, what wouldst thou do there before I go? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | LADY ANNE Dost grant me, hedgehog? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | LADY ANNE What black magician conjures up this fiend, To stop devoted charitable deeds? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | LADY ANNE What is it? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | LADY ANNE What, do you tremble? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | LADY ANNE Where is he? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | LORDS How have you slept, my lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Lord Mayor What, had he so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Lord cardinal, will your grace Persuade the queen to send the Duke of York Unto his princely brother presently? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Lords, will you go with us? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Madam, and you, my mother, will you go To give your censures in this weighty business? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Mark''d you not How that the guilty kindred of the queen Look''d pale when they did hear of Clarence''death? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Master lieutenant, pray you, by your leave, How doth the prince, and my young son of York? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | My Lord of Surrey, why look you so sad? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | O, who hath any cause to mourn but I? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | On me, that halt and am unshapen thus? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | On me, whose all not equals Edward''s moiety? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Once more, what news? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Or shall they last, and we rejoice in them? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Or thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Or, he that slew her brothers and her uncles? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | PRINCE EDWARD A beggar, brother? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | PRINCE EDWARD Is it upon record, or else reported Successively from age to age, he built it? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | PRINCE EDWARD Welcome, my lord: what, will our mother come? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | PRINCE EDWARD What say you, uncle? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Page My lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH And must she die for this? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH And wilt thou learn of me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH But how long fairly shall her sweet lie last? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH But how long shall that title''ever''last? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Flatter my sorrows with report of it; Tell me what state, what dignity, what honour, Canst thou demise to any child of mine? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH For what offence? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH How canst thou woo her? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH How fares the prince? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH If he were dead, what would betide of me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Say then, who dost thou mean shall be her king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Shall I be tempted of the devil thus? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Shall I forget myself to be myself? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Shall I go win my daughter to thy will? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Up to some scaffold, there to lose their heads? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH What good is cover''d with the face of heaven, To be discover''d, that can do me good? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH What likelihood of his amendment, lords? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH What stay had I but Edward? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH What were I best to say? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH What, thou? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Where is kind Hastings, Rivers, Vaughan, Grey? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN ELIZABETH Wilt thou, O God, fly from such gentle lambs, And throw them in the entrails of the wolf? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN MARGARET And leave out thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN MARGARET What were you snarling all before I came, Ready to catch each other by the throat, And turn you all your hatred now on me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | QUEEN MARGARET What, dost thou scorn me for my gentle counsel? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | RATCLIFF My lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | RATCLIFF My lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | RICHMOND What men of name are slain on either side? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | RIVERS Is it concluded that he shall be protector? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | RIVERS Saw you the king to- day, my Lord of Derby? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | RIVERS To whom in all this presence speaks your grace? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | RIVERS Why with some little train, my Lord of Buckingham? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Ravish our daughters? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Second Citizen I promise you, I scarcely know myself: Hear you the news abroad? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Second Murderer What shall we do? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Shall these enjoy our lands? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | She may, yea, marry, may she-- RIVERS What, marry, may she? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Tell me, how fares our loving mother? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Tell me, thou villain slave, where are my children? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | That Henry''s death, my lovely Edward''s death, Their kingdom''s loss, my woful banishment, Could all but answer for that peevish brat? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Then, tell me, what doth he upon the sea? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | There is no creature loves me; And if I die, no soul shall pity me: Nay, wherefore should they, since that I myself Find in myself no pity to myself? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Third Citizen Doth this news hold of good King Edward''s death? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Third Citizen Stood the state so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | This is All- Souls''day, fellows, is it not? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Thou didst usurp my place, and dost thou not Usurp the just proportion of my sorrow? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Under what title shall I woo for thee, That God, the law, my honour and her love, Can make seem pleasing to her tender years? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Was ever woman in this humour won? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Was not your husband In Margaret''s battle at Saint Alban''s slain? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What canst thou swear by now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What do I fear? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What heir of York is there alive but we? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What is my offence? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What lawful quest have given their verdict up Unto the frowning judge? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What may she not? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What news? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What sayest thou? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What think''st thou, Norfolk? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What thinkest thou, will our friends prove all true? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What though I kill''d her husband and her father? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What traitor hears me, and says not amen? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What, from myself? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What, go you toward the Tower? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What, is he in his bed? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What, is my beaver easier than it was? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What, myself upon myself? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | What, shall we toward the Tower? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | When didst thou sleep when such a deed was done? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | When have I injured thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Where are the evidence that do accuse me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Where are thy children? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Where are thy tenants and thy followers? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Where be the bending peers that flatter''d thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Where be the thronging troops that follow''d thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Where is thy husband now? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Wherefore do you come? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Wherefore? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Wherein, my friends, have I offended you? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Which never dreamt on aught but butcheries: Didst thou not kill this king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Which of you trembles not that looks on me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | White- liver''d runagate, what doth he there? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Whither away? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who hath descried the number of the foe? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who is most inward with the royal duke? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who knows not that the noble duke is dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who saw the sun to- day? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who sent you hither? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who sued to me for him? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who sues to thee and cries''God save the queen''? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who told me how the poor soul did forsake The mighty Warwick, and did fight for me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Who told me, in the field by Tewksbury When Oxford had me down, he rescued me, And said,''Dear brother, live, and be a king''? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Why dost thou run so many mile about, When thou mayst tell thy tale a nearer way? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Why grow the branches now the root is wither''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Why strew''st thou sugar on that bottled spider, Whose deadly web ensnareth thee about? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Why who''s so gross, That seeth not this palpable device? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Why wither not the leaves the sap being gone? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Why, what is that to me More than to Richmond? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Withdraw thee, wretched Margaret: who comes here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Wot you what, my lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | YORK And therefore is he idle? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | YORK What, will you go unto the Tower, my lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Yet who''s so blind, but says he sees it not? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | Your eyes do menace me: why look you pale? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter CATESBY] Here comes his servant: how now, Catesby, What says he? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter CLARENCE and BRAKENBURY] BRAKENBURY Why looks your grace so heavily today? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter CLARENCE, guarded, and BRAKENBURY] Brother, good day; what means this armed guard That waits upon your grace? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter GLOUCESTER and BUCKINGHAM, at several doors] GLOUCESTER How now, my lord, what say the citizens? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter HASTINGS] HASTINGS What is''t o''clock? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter KING RICHARD III, marching, with drums and trumpets] KING RICHARD III Who intercepts my expedition? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter STANLEY] Come on, come on; where is your boar- spear, man? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter STANLEY] How now, what news with you? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter a Messenger] What says Lord Stanley? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter the DUCHESS OF YORK, with the two children of CLARENCE] Boy Tell me, good grandam, is our father dead? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter the Sheriff, and BUCKINGHAM, with halberds, led to execution] BUCKINGHAM Will not King Richard let me speak with him? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Enter two Citizens meeting] First Citizen Neighbour, well met: whither away so fast? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Exeunt CARDINAL and HASTINGS] Say, uncle Gloucester, if our brother come, Where shall we sojourn till our coronation? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Exeunt all but BUCKINGHAM] BUCKINGHAM Is it even so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Exeunt all but GLOUCESTER] Was ever woman in this humour woo''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Exeunt][ Re- enter KING RICHARD, RATCLIFF, Attendants and Forces] KING RICHARD III What said Northumberland as touching Richmond? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Exit BRAKENBURY] Second Murderer What, shall we stab him as he sleeps? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Exit CATESBY] BUCKINGHAM Now, my lord, what shall we do, if we perceive Lord Hastings will not yield to our complots? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Exit] DUCHESS OF YORK Why should calamity be full of words? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Exit] RATCLIFF What is''t your highness''pleasure I shall do at Salisbury? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ He whispers in his ear][ Enter BUCKINGHAM] BUCKINGHAM What, talking with a priest, lord chamberlain? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Here he ascendeth his throne] Thus high, by thy advice And thy assistance, is King Richard seated; But shall we wear these honours for a day? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ His oration to his Army] What shall I say more than I have inferr''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Re- enter BISHOP OF ELY] BISHOP OF ELY Where is my lord protector? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Re- enter CATESBY] How now, Catesby, what says your lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ Re- enter Page, with TYRREL] Is thy name Tyrrel? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ She spitteth at him] Why dost thou spit at me? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | [ They withdraw into the tent][ Enter, to his tent, KING RICHARD III, NORFOLK, RATCLIFF, CATESBY, and others] KING RICHARD III What is''t o''clock? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | am I king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | and did they so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | are you all afraid? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | dost thou mean the crown? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | for any good That I myself have done unto myself? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | for whose sake did I that ill deed? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | he stirs: shall I strike? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | her father''s brother Would be her lord? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | here will I lie tonight; But where to- morrow? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | how fares our loving brother? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | how goes the world with thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | is it not an easy matter To make William Lord Hastings of our mind, For the instalment of this noble duke In the seat royal of this famous isle? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | is the sword unsway''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | lie with our wives? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | may I know? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | must we not? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | my niece Plantagenet Led in the hand of her kind aunt of Gloucester? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | myself? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | nothing but songs of death? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | or any of your faction? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | or shall I say, her uncle? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | or thee? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | or who pronounced The bitter sentence of poor Clarence''death? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | rewards he my true service With such deep contempt made I him king for this? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | the empire unpossess''d? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | the new- deliver''d Hastings? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | threat you me with telling of the king? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | what mean''st thou, that thou help''st me not? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | what news with you? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | what news? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | what noise is this? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | what will he? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | when done thee wrong? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | where be thy brothers? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | wherein dost thou, joy? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | whither away? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | who is there? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | who knows he is? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | who spake of love? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | who''s here? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | who, in my rage, Kneel''d at my feet, and bade me be advised Who spake of brotherhood? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | why, who knows not so? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | why, who''s that? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | why? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | will he bring his power? |
shakespeare-tragedy-4083 | would not they speak? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | --That will be our answer? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Am I not right, Theaetetus, and is not this your new- born child, of which I have delivered you? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Am I not right? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Am I not right? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | And do you not like the taste of them in the mouth? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | And now, what are you saying?--Are there two sorts of opinion, one true and the other false; and do you define knowledge to be the true? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | And so you are satisfied that false opinion is heterodoxy, or the thought of something else? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | And so, Theaetetus, knowledge is neither sensation nor true opinion, nor yet definition and explanation accompanying and added to true opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | And the same of perceiving: do you understand me? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | And therefore let us draw nearer, as the advocate of Protagoras desires; and give the truth of the universal flux a ring: is the theory sound or not? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | And yet is not the all that of which nothing is wanting? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Are you so profoundly convinced of this? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | But do you begin to see what is the explanation of this perplexity on the hypothesis which we attribute to Protagoras? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | But tell me, Socrates, in heaven''s name, is this, after all, not the truth? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | But what is the third definition? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | But why did he go on, instead of stopping at Megara? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | But, as we are at our wits''end, suppose that we do a shameless thing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | But, seeing that we are no great wits, shall I venture to say what knowing is? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Can we answer that question? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Did you ever hear that too? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Do you agree? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Do you see, Theaetetus, the bearings of this tale on the preceding argument? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Do you suppose that what is one is ever to be found among non- existing things? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Does not explanation appear to be of this nature? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | EUCLID: Have you only just arrived from the country, Terpsion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | How can a man understand the name of anything, when he does not know the nature of it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | How can you or any one maintain the contrary? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | I dare say that you agree with me, do you not? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | I have, I fear, a tedious way of putting a simple question, which is only, whether a man who has learned, and remembers, can fail to know? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | I hope, Theodorus, that I am not betrayed into rudeness by my love of conversation? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | I will endeavour, however, to explain what I believe to be my meaning: When you speak of cobbling, you mean the art or science of making shoes? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | I will make my meaning clearer by an example:--You admit that there is an art of arithmetic? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Is he to be reared in any case, and not exposed? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Is it not one which would task the powers of men perfect in every way? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Is it not so? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Is not the world full of men in their several employments, who are looking for teachers and rulers of themselves and of the animals? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Is there any stopping in the act of seeing and hearing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Is there only one kind of motion, or, as I rather incline to think, two? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Let us grant what you say-- then, according to you, he who takes ignorance will have a false opinion-- am I right? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Man, he says, is the measure of all things, of the existence of things that are, and of the non- existence of things that are not:--You have read him? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Must he not be talking''ad captandum''in all this? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Nay, not even in sleep, did you ever venture to say to yourself that odd is even, or anything of the kind? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | O Theaetetus, are not these speculations sweet as honey? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | O Theodorus, do you think that there is any use in proceeding when the danger is so great? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Once more, then, Theaetetus, I repeat my old question,''What is knowledge?'' |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Or again, if we see letters which we do not understand, shall we say that we do not see them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Or are they both right?--he will have a heat and fever in his own judgment, and not have a fever in the physician''s judgment? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Or where is the spectator having any right to censure or control us, as he might the poets? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Or would he admit that a man is one at all, and not rather many and infinite as the changes which take place in him? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Or would he hesitate to acknowledge that the same man may know and not know the same thing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Or would you say that a whole, although formed out of the parts, is a single notion different from all the parts? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Or, if he is afraid of making this admission, would he ever grant that one who has become unlike is the same as before he became unlike? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Rather would it not be true that it never appears exactly the same to you, because you are never exactly the same? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: According to this new view, the whole is supposed to differ from all? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Again, in speaking of all( in the plural) is there not one thing which we express? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Again, the number of the acre and the acre are the same; are they not? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Am I talking nonsense, then? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And I dare say too, or rather I am absolutely certain, that the midwives know better than others who is pregnant and who is not? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And I who am the patient, and that which is the agent, will produce something different in each of the two cases? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And also that different combinations will produce results which are not the same, but different? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And another and another? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And are you still in labour and travail, my dear friend, or have you brought all that you have to say about knowledge to the birth? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And astronomy and harmony and calculation? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And by wisdom the wise are wise? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And can a man attain truth who fails of attaining being? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And can he who misses the truth of anything, have a knowledge of that thing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And did you find such a class? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And do we mean by a syllable two letters, or if there are more, all of them, or a single idea which arises out of the combination of them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And do you mean by conceiving, the same which I mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And do you not remember that in your case and in that of others this often occurred in the process of learning to read? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And do you suppose that with women the case is otherwise? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And does he not allow that his own opinion is false, if he admits that the opinion of those who think him false is true? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And does not he who thinks some one thing, think something which is? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And does not he who thinks, think some one thing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And does not my art show that you have brought forth wind, and that the offspring of your brain are not worth bringing up? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And does she not perceive the hardness of that which is hard by the touch, and the softness of that which is soft equally by the touch? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And have you never heard, simpleton, that I am the son of a midwife, brave and burly, whose name was Phaenarete? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And he can reckon abstract numbers in his head, or things about him which are numerable? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And he who hears anything, hears some one thing, and hears that which is? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And he who thinks of nothing, does not think at all? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And he who touches anything, touches something which is one and therefore is? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And how about Protagoras himself? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And if any one were to ask you: With what does a man see black and white colours? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And if he closed his eyes, would he forget? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And if our recent definition holds, every man knows that which he has seen? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And if they are to be in motion, and nothing is to be devoid of motion, all things must always have every sort of motion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And if unlike, they are other? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And if we found that he was, we should take his word; and if not, not? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And in each form of expression we spoke of all the six? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And in like manner be may enumerate without knowing them the second and third and fourth syllables of your name? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And in that case, when he knows the order of the letters and can write them out correctly, he has right opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is Theodorus a painter? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is he an astronomer and calculator and musician, and in general an educated man? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is it not shameless when we do not know what knowledge is, to be explaining the verb''to know''? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is memory of something or of nothing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is not a whole likewise that from which nothing is absent? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is not the bodily habit spoiled by rest and idleness, but preserved for a long time by motion and exercise? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is not this also the reason why they are simple and indivisible? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is that different in any way from knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is the discovery of the nature of knowledge so small a matter, as just now said? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And is truth or falsehood to be determined by duration of time? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And may not the same be said of madness and other disorders? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And must therefore be admitted to be unlike? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And of true opinion also? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And seeing is knowing, and therefore not- seeing is not- knowing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And so, when the question is asked, What is knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And that I myself practise midwifery? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And that both are two and each of them one? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And that either of them is different from the other, and the same with itself? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And that is six? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And that which he does not know will sometimes not be perceived by him and sometimes will be perceived and only perceived? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And the army is the number of the army; and in all similar cases, the entire number of anything is the entire thing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And the number of each is the parts of each? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And the number of the stadium in like manner is the stadium? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And the race of animals is generated in the same way? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And the truth of Protagoras being doubted by all, will be true neither to himself to any one else? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And therefore not in science or knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And they are moved in both those ways which we distinguished, that is to say, they move in place and are also changed? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And to reckon is simply to consider how much such and such a number amounts to? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And to which class would you refer being or essence; for this, of all our notions, is the most universal? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And what name would you give to seeing, hearing, smelling, being cold and being hot? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And what of the mental habit? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And what would you say of perceptions, such as sight and hearing, or any other kind of perception? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And when you speak of carpentering, you mean the art of making wooden implements? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And who could take up arms against such a great army having Homer for its general, and not appear ridiculous? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And would you call the two processes by the same name, when there is so great a difference between them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And would you not say that persuading them is making them have an opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And would you not say the same of Socrates sleeping and waking, or in any of the states which we were mentioning? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And would you say that all and the whole are the same, or different? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And would you say the same of the noble and base, and of good and evil? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And would you say this also of like and unlike, same and other? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And you allow and maintain that true opinion, combined with definition or rational explanation, is knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And you would admit that there is such a thing as memory? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: And, in order to avoid this, we suppose it to be different from them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Attend to what follows: must not the perfect arithmetician know all numbers, for he has the science of all numbers in his mind? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But all the parts are admitted to be the all, if the entire number is the all? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But although we admit that he has right opinion, he will still be without knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But can he be ignorant of either singly and yet know both together? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But can you certainly determine by any other means which of these opinions is true? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But if it be one and indivisible, then the syllables and the letters are alike undefined and unknown, and for the same reason? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But if letters are not parts of syllables, can you tell me of any other parts of syllables, which are not letters? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But is a part a part of anything but the whole? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But is the aim attained always? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But is there any parallel to this? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But may not the following be the description of what we express by this name? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But must not the mind, or thinking power, which misplaces them, have a conception either of both objects or of one of them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But surely he can not suppose what he knows to be what he does not know, or what he does not know to be what he knows? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But then, my boy, how can any one contend that knowledge is perception, or that to every man what appears is? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But through what do you perceive all this about them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But were we not saying that when a thing has parts, all the parts will be a whole and all? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: But when I am sick, the wine really acts upon another and a different person? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Can a man see something and yet see nothing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Capital; and what followed? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Do you hear, Theaetetus, what Theodorus says? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Do you see another question which can be raised about these phenomena, notably about dreaming and waking? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Does he not say that things are to you such as they appear to you, and to me such as they appear to me, and that you and I are men? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Either together or in succession? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Exactly; and I want you to consider whether this does not imply that the twelve in the waxen block are supposed to be eleven? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Excellent; but then, how did he distinguish between things which are and are not''knowable''? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: He knows, that is, the S and O? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: He then who sees some one thing, sees something which is? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: He who knows, can not but know; and he who does not know, can not know? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: He will certainly not think that he has a false opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: He will think that his opinion is true, and he will fancy that he knows the things about which he has been deceived? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Herein lies the difficulty which I can never solve to my satisfaction-- What is knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: How about sounds and colours: in the first place you would admit that they both exist? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: How can the exchange of one knowledge for another ever become false opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: How then, Protagoras, would you have us treat the argument? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: How then, if I never err, and if my mind never trips in the conception of being or becoming, can I fail of knowing that which I perceive? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: I think so too; for, suppose that some one asks you to spell the first syllable of my name:--Theaetetus, he says, what is SO? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: I wish that you would give me a similar definition of the S. THEAETETUS: But how can any one, Socrates, tell the elements of an element? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: If a man has both of them in his thoughts, he can not think that the one of them is the other? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: If they only moved in place and were not changed, we should be able to say what is the nature of the things which are in motion and flux? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: If you have any thought about both of them, this common perception can not come to you, either through the one or the other organ? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: If, then, anything happens to become like or unlike itself or another, when it becomes like we call it the same-- when unlike, other? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: In both cases you define the subject matter of each of the two arts? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: In the first place, I should like to ask what you learn of Theodorus: something of geometry, perhaps? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Is he a geometrician? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Is it still worth our while to resume the discussion touching opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: It is possible then upon your view for the mind to conceive of one thing as another? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Let me offer an illustration: Suppose that a person were to ask about some very trivial and obvious thing-- for example, What is clay? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Let us take them and put them to the test, or rather, test ourselves:--What was the way in which we learned letters? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Let us take you and me, or anything as an example:--There is Socrates in health, and Socrates sick-- Are they like or unlike? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: May we not pursue the image of the doves, and say that the chase after knowledge is of two kinds? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Neither, if he has one of them only in his mind and not the other, can he think that one is the other? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Nor of any other science? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Of things learned and perceived, that is? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Often a man remembers that which he has seen? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Once more we shall have to begin, and ask''What is knowledge?'' |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Or that anything appears the same to you as to another man? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Perception would be the collective name of them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Quite true, Theaetetus, and therefore, according to our present view, a syllable must surely be some indivisible form? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Shall I tell you the reason? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Shall I tell you, Theodorus, what amazes me in your acquaintance Protagoras? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Shall we say that we know every thing which we see and hear? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Tell me, now-- How in that case could I have formed a judgment of you any more than of any one else? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: That is good news; whose son is he? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: That is of six? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: That was my reason for asking how we ought to speak when an arithmetician sets about numbering, or a grammarian about reading? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: The wine which I drink when I am in health, appears sweet and pleasant to me? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then as many things as have parts are made up of parts? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then do we not come back to the old difficulty? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then false opinion has no existence in us, either in the sphere of being or of knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then he who does not know what science or knowledge is, has no knowledge of the art or science of making shoes? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then he who thinks of that which is not, thinks of nothing? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then he will think that he has captured knowledge and not ignorance? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then in predicating the word''all''of things measured by number, we predicate at the same time a singular and a plural? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then is not the syllable in the same case as the elements or letters, if it has no parts and is one form? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then it must appear so to each of them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then motion is a good, and rest an evil, to the soul as well as to the body? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then no one can think that which is not, either as a self- existent substance or as a predicate of something else? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then now let me ask the awful question, which is this:--Can a man know and also not know that which he knows? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then now we may admit the existence of false opinion in us? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then now, Theaetetus, take another view of the subject: you answered that knowledge is perception? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then perception is always of existence, and being the same as knowledge is unerring? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then perception, Theaetetus, can never be the same as knowledge or science? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then right opinion implies the perception of differences? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then the whole is not made up of parts, for it would be the all, if consisting of all the parts? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then they must be distinguished? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then to think falsely is different from thinking that which is not? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then when any one thinks of one thing as another, he is saying to himself that one thing is another? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then when we were asked what is knowledge, we no more answered what is knowledge than what is not knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then wisdom and knowledge are the same? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then you and Theodorus mean to say that we must look at the matter in some other way? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then, I suppose, my friend, that we have been so far right in our idea about knowledge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Then, if that which acts upon me has relation to me and to no other, I and no other am the percipient of it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Thus, then, the assertion that knowledge and perception are one, involves a manifest impossibility? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: We have at length satisfactorily proven beyond a doubt there are these two sorts of opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Well, and shall we do as he says? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Well, and what is the difficulty? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Well, and what is the meaning of the term''explanation''? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Well, but are we to assert that what you think is true to you and false to the ten thousand others? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Well, but have we been right in maintaining that the syllables can be known, but not the letters? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Well, but is there any difference between all( in the plural) and the all( in the singular)? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Well, but will you not be equally inclined to disagree with him, when you remember your own experience in learning to read? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Well, may not a man''possess''and yet not''have''knowledge in the sense of which I am speaking? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Were we not saying that there are agents many and infinite, and patients many and infinite? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: What definition will be most consistent with our former views? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: What shall we say then? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: What was it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: What was that, Theaetetus? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: What, then, shall we say of adding reason or explanation to right opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Where, then, is false opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Whereas the other side do not admit that they speak falsely? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Which is probably correct-- for how can there be knowledge apart from definition and true opinion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Which, as we say, has no part in the attainment of truth any more than of being? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: Wisdom; are not men wise in that which they know? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: You can further observe whether they are like or unlike one another? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | SOCRATES: You have heard the common explanation of the verb''to know''? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Shall I answer for him? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Shall I explain this matter to you or to Theaetetus? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Shall we say that the opinions of men are always true, or sometimes true and sometimes false? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Shall we say, that although he knows, he comes back to himself to learn what he already knows? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | TERPSION: The dysentery, you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | TERPSION: The prophecy has certainly been fulfilled; but what was the conversation? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | TERPSION: Was he alive or dead? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | TERPSION: Where then? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: About what? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: And do you not agree in that view, Socrates? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: And how would you amend the former statement? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: And is not that, Socrates, nobly said? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: And was that wrong? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: And why should that be shameless? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: As for example, Socrates...? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: But if you avoid these expressions, Socrates, how will you ever argue at all? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: But what puts you out of heart? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: Can you give me any example of such a definition? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: How can he? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: How could it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: How do the two expressions differ? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: How do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: How is that, and what profession do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: How so? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: How? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: I am glad to hear it, Socrates; but what if he was only in jest? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: I should call all of them perceiving-- what other name could be given to them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: I should reply S and O. SOCRATES: That is the definition which you would give of the syllable? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: In what manner? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: Let us imagine such an aviary-- and what is to follow? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: Pray what is it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: Tell me; what were you going to say just now, when you asked the question? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: Then what is colour? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: To what are you alluding? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What are they? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What experience? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What hostages? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What is it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What is that? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What makes you say so? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What makes you say so? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What question? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What was it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: What? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: Who indeed, Socrates? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: Who, Socrates, would dare to say so? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: Why? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: You mean that I mistook the letters and misspelt the syllables? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEAETETUS: You mean to compare Socrates in health as a whole, and Socrates in sickness as a whole? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: How could I fail to observe all that, Socrates? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: How shall we answer, Theaetetus? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: How so? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: In what is the difference seen? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: In what way? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: Well, but is not Theaetetus better able to follow a philosophical enquiry than a great many men who have long beards? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: What do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: What is it? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: What is that? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | THEODORUS: Who indeed? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Tell me, then, are not the organs through which you perceive warm and hard and light and sweet, organs of the body? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Tell me, then, whether I am right in saying that you may learn a thing which at one time you did not know? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | They would say, as I imagine-- Can that which is wholly other than something, have the same quality as that from which it differs? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Think: is not seeing perceiving, and is not sight perception? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Was that the form in which the dream appeared to you? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Well, you ask, and how will Protagoras reinforce his position? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Were not you and Theodorus just now remarking very truly, that in discussions of this kind we may take our own time? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | What are we to say in reply, Theaetetus? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | What do they mean when they say that all things are in motion? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | What say you? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | What say you? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Who is our judge? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Will you answer me a question:''Is not learning growing wiser about that which you learn?'' |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | Will you have the companion picture of the philosopher, who is of our brotherhood; or shall we return to the argument? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | You remember? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | and of what sort do you mean? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | and yet, Theaetetus, what are we going to do? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | and, first of all, are we right in saying that syllables have a definition, but that letters have no definition? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | can you tell me? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | do not mistakes often happen? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | for example, shall we say that not having learned, we do not hear the language of foreigners when they speak to us? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | for what reason? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | or shall we aver that, seeing them, we must know them? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | or shall we say that we not only hear, but know what they are saying? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | or the one which he does not know to be the one which he knows? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | or will you bear to see him rejected, and not get into a passion if I take away your first- born? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | or, if he knows neither of them, can he think that the one which he knows not is another which he knows not? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | or, if he knows one and not the other, can he think the one which he knows to be the one which he does not know? |
plato-theaetetus-1564 | which of us will speak first? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Again, is the not- one part of the one; or rather, would it not in that case partake of the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Again, of the parts of the one, if it is-- I mean being and one-- does either fail to imply the other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Again, the like is opposed to the unlike? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Am I not right? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And a multitude implies a number larger than one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And all the parts are contained by the whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And all these others we shall affirm to be parts of the whole and of the one, which, as soon as the end is reached, has become whole and one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And also in other things? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And also of one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And are not things of a different kind also other in kind? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And are not things other in kind unlike? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And as it becomes one and many, must it not inevitably experience separation and aggregation? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And because having limits, also having extremes? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And being of equal parts with itself, it will be numerically equal to itself; and being of more parts, more, and being of less, less than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And being one and many and in process of becoming and being destroyed, when it becomes one it ceases to be many, and when many, it ceases to be one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And can that which has no participation in being, either assume or lose being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And can there be individual thoughts which are thoughts of nothing? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And can you think of anything else which is between them other than equality? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And change is motion-- we may say that? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And could we hear it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And did we not mean by becoming, and being destroyed, the assumption of being and the loss of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And do not''will be,''''will become,''''will have become,''signify a participation of future time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And do we not say that the others being other than the one are not one and have no part in the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And do you remember that the older becomes older than that which becomes younger? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And does this strange thing in which it is at the time of changing really exist? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And each kind of absolute knowledge will answer to each kind of absolute being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And greatness and smallness always stand apart? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And has not- being also, if it is not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And have we not already shown that it can not be in anything? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if I speak of being and the other, or of the one and the other,--in any such case do I not speak of both? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if all number participates in being, every part of number will also participate? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if any one of them is wanting to anything, will that any longer be a whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if each of them is one, then by the addition of any one to any pair, the whole becomes three? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if neither more nor less, then in a like degree? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if there are not two, there is no contact? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if there are two there must also be twice, and if there are three there must be thrice; that is, if twice one makes two, and thrice one three? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if there be such a thing as participation in absolute knowledge, no one is more likely than God to have this most exact knowledge? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if they are unlike the one, that which they are unlike will clearly be unlike them? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if this is so, does any number remain which has no necessity to be? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And if to the two a third be added in due order, the number of terms will be three, and the contacts two? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And in either case, the one would be many, and not one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And in such particles the others will be other than one another, if others are, and the one is not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And in that it was other it was shown to be like? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And in this way, the one, if it has being, has turned out to be many? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And inequality implies greatness and smallness? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And is each of these parts-- one and being-- to be simply called a part, or must the word''part''be relative to the word''whole''? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And is it or does it become a longer time than itself or an equal time with itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And is not time always moving forward? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And is not''other''a name given to a thing? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And is the one a part of itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And it is older( is it not?) |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And it will also be like and unlike itself and the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And it would seem that number can be predicated of them if each of them appears to be one, though it is really many? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And may not all things partake of both opposites, and be both like and unlike, by reason of this participation?--Where is the wonder? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And must not that which is correctly called both, be also two? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And not having the same measures, the one can not be equal either with itself or with another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And of two things how can either by any possibility not be one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And parts, as we affirm, have relation to a whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And sameness has been shown to be of a nature distinct from oneness? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And shall we say that the lesser or the greater is the first to come or to have come into existence? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And since we affirm that we speak truly, we must also affirm that we say what is? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And since we have at this moment opinion and knowledge and perception of the one, there is opinion and knowledge and perception of it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And so all being, whatever we think of, must be broken up into fractions, for a particle will have to be conceived of without unity? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And so the one, if it is, must be infinite in multiplicity? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And so the other things will be younger than the one, and the one older than other things? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And so when he says''If one is not''he clearly means, that what''is not''is other than all others; we know what he means-- do we not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And surely there can not be a time in which a thing can be at once neither in motion nor at rest? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And that is the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And that which contains, is a limit? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And that which has parts will be as many as the parts are? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And that which is ever in the same, must be ever at rest? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And that which is of the same age, is neither older nor younger? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And that which is older is older than that which is younger? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And that which is older, must always be older than something which is younger? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the absolute natures or kinds are known severally by the absolute idea of knowledge? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the assuming of being is what you would call becoming? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the one has been proved both to be and not to be? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the one is all its parts, and neither more nor less than all? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the one is other than the others in the same degree that the others are other than it, and neither more nor less? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the one is the whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the one was also shown to be the same with the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the other to the same? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the relinquishing of being you would call destruction? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And the straight is that of which the centre intercepts the view of the extremes? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And there is and was and will be something which is in relation to it and belongs to it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And there will seem to be odd and even among them, which will also have no reality, if one is not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And therefore is and is not in the same state? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And therefore neither smallness, nor greatness, nor equality, can be attributed to it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And therefore not other than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And therefore other things can neither be like or unlike, the same, or different in relation to it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And they are unequal to an unequal? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And things that are not equal are unequal? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And three are odd, and two are even? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And thus the one can neither be the same, nor other, either in relation to itself or other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And to be the same with the others is the opposite of being other than the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And we have not got the idea of knowledge? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And we said that it could not be in itself, and could not be in other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And we surely can not say that what is truly one has parts? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And what are its relations to other things? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And what is a whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And what is the nature of this exercise, Parmenides, which you would recommend? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And what of that? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And what shall be our first hypothesis, if I am to attempt this laborious pastime? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And when being in motion it rests, and when being at rest it changes to motion, it can surely be in no time at all? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And when it becomes greater or less or equal it must grow or diminish or be equalized? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And when two things are alike, must they not partake of the same idea? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And when we put them together shortly, and say''One is,''that is equivalent to saying,''partakes of being''? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And when we say that a thing is not, do we mean that it is not in one way but is in another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And when you say it once, you mention that of which it is the name? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And whenever it becomes like and unlike it must be assimilated and dissimilated? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And who will answer me? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And will not all things that are not one, be other than the one, and the one other than the not- one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And will not knowledge-- I mean absolute knowledge-- answer to absolute truth? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And will not that of which the two partake, and which makes them alike, be the idea itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And will not the something which is apprehended as one and the same in all, be an idea? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And will not the things which participate in the one, be other than it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And will there not be many particles, each appearing to be one, but not being one, if one is not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And would you make an idea of man apart from us and from all other human creatures, or of fire and water? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And would you say that the whole sail includes each man, or a part of it only, and different parts different men? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And yet, surely, the one was shown to have parts; and if parts, then a beginning, middle and end? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And you may say the name once or oftener? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And''is,''or''becomes,''signifies a participation of present time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And, further, if not moved in any way, it will not be altered in any way? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | And, indeed, the very supposition of this is absurd, for how can that which is, be devoid of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Because every part is part of a whole; is it not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But are there any modes of partaking of being other than these? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But as to its becoming older and younger than the others, and the others than the one, and neither older nor younger, what shall we say? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But can all this be true about the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But can anything which is in a certain state not be in that state without changing? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But can it partake of being when not partaking of being, or not partake of being when partaking of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But can smallness be equal to anything or greater than anything, and have the functions of greatness and equality and not its own functions? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But for that which partakes of nothing to partake of two things was held by us to be impossible? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But having no parts, it will be neither straight nor round? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But how can that which does not partake of sameness, have either the same measures or have anything else the same? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if it be not altered it can not be moved? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if it becomes or is for an equal time with itself, it is of the same age with itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if it is at all and so long as it is, it must be one, and can not be none? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if one is, what will happen to the others-- is not that also to be considered? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if the one moved in place, must it not either move round and round in the same place, or from one place to another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if the one neither suffers alteration, nor turns round in the same place, nor changes place, can it still be capable of motion? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if the whole is neither in one, nor in more than one, nor in all of the parts, it must be in something else, or cease to be anywhere at all? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if there be only one, and not two, there will be no contact? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But if they are not other, either by reason of themselves or of the other, will they not altogether escape being other than one another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But is the one other than one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But may not the ideas, asked Socrates, be thoughts only, and have no proper existence except in our minds, Parmenides? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But neither can the one be in anything, as we affirm? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But perhaps the motion of the one consists in change of place? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But reflect:--Can one, in its entirety, be in many places at the same time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But since it is not equal to the others, neither can the others be equal to it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But since the one partakes of time, and partakes of becoming older and younger, must it not also partake of the past, the present, and the future? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But surely if it is nowhere among what is, as is the fact, since it is not, it can not change from one place to another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But that which is never in the same place is never quiet or at rest? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But that which is not admits of no attribute or relation? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But the ideas themselves, as you admit, we have not, and can not have? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But the one did not partake of those affections? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But the one, as appears, never being affected otherwise, is never unlike itself or other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But then, again, a beginning and an end are the limits of everything? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But then, that which contains must be other than that which is contained? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But then, will God, having absolute knowledge, have a knowledge of human things? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But to speak of the others implies difference-- the terms''other''and''different''are synonymous? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But we said that things which are neither parts nor wholes of one another, nor other than one another, will be the same with one another:--so we said? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But what do you say to a new point of view? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But why? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But, again, the middle will be equidistant from the extremes; or it would not be in the middle? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But, consider:--Are not the absolute same, and the absolute other, opposites to one another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But, surely, it ought to be one and not many? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But, surely, that which is must always be somewhere? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | But, then, what is to become of philosophy? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Can the one have come into being contrary to its own nature, or is that impossible? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Can there be any other mode of participation? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Do not the words''is not''signify absence of being in that to which we apply them? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Do you see my meaning? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Do you see then, Socrates, how great is the difficulty of affirming the ideas to be absolute? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Does not this hypothesis necessarily imply that one is of such a nature as to have parts? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Does the one also partake of time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | For all which reasons the one touches and does not touch itself and the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | For can anything be a whole without these three? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Further, inasmuch as the parts are parts of a whole, the one, as a whole, will be limited; for are not the parts contained by the whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Further, it must surely in a sort partake of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Further-- is the one equal and unequal to itself and others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How can it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How can there be? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How can they be? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How could they? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How do you mean? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How do you mean? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How do you mean? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How do you mean? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How is that? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How is that? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How is that? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How is that? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How so? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How so? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How so? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How so? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How so? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How so? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How so? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How then can one, being of this nature, be either older or younger than anything, or have the same age with it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | How? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | I may take as an illustration the case of names: You give a name to a thing? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | If it be co- extensive with the one it will be co- equal with the one, or if containing the one it will be greater than the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | If one is not, we ask what will happen in respect of one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | If one is, being must be predicated of it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | If one is, he said, the one can not be many? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | If then it be neither other, nor a whole, nor a part in relation to itself, must it not be the same with itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | If there are three and twice, there is twice three; and if there are two and thrice, there is thrice two? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | If, then, smallness is present in the one it will be present either in the whole or in a part of the whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | In all that you say have you any other purpose except to disprove the being of the many? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | In the first place, the others will not be one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | In this way-- you may speak of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | In what way? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | In what way? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | In what way? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Is it or does it become older or younger than they? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Is not that true? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Is that your meaning, or have I misunderstood you? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Is there a difference only, or rather are not the two expressions-- if the one is not, and if the not one is not, entirely opposed? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Is there any of these which is a part of being, and yet no part? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | It can not therefore experience the sort of motion which is change of nature? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Just as in a picture things appear to be all one to a person standing at a distance, and to be in the same state and alike? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Let us see:--Must not the being of one be other than one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Must it not be of a single something, which the thought recognizes as attaching to all, being a single form or nature? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Must not the one be distinct from the others, and the others from the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Nor as like or unlike? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Nor can it turn on the same spot, for it nowhere touches the same, for the same is, and that which is not can not be reckoned among things that are? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Nor can knowledge, or opinion, or perception, or expression, or name, or any other thing that is, have any concern with it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Nor can we say that it stands, if it is nowhere; for that which stands must always be in one and the same spot? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Nor is there any existing thing which can be attributed to it; for if there had been, it would partake of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Nor yet likeness nor difference, either in relation to itself or to others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Now that which is unmoved must surely be at rest, and that which is at rest must stand still? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Now there can not possibly be anything which is not included in the one and the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Of something which is or which is not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | One then, as would seem, is neither at rest nor in motion? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | One, then, alone is one, and two do not exist? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Other means other than other, and different, different from the different? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Parmenides proceeded: And would you also make absolute ideas of the just and the beautiful and the good, and of all that class? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Secondly, the others differ from it, or it could not be described as different from the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Shall I begin with myself, and take my own hypothesis the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Shall I propose the youngest? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Shall we say as of being so also of becoming, or otherwise? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Since it is not a part in relation to itself it can not be related to itself as whole to part? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Since then what is partakes of not- being, and what is not of being, must not the one also partake of being in order not to be? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | So that the other is not the same-- either with the one or with being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Suppose the first; it will be either co- equal and co- extensive with the whole one, or will contain the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | The one itself, then, having been broken up into parts by being, is many and infinite? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | The one then, being of this nature, is of necessity both at rest and in motion? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | The one then, since it in no way is, can not have or lose or assume being in any way? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | The one was shown to be in itself which was a whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | The one, then, becoming and being the same time with itself, neither is nor becomes older or younger than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | The one, then, will be equal to and greater and less than itself and the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | The theory, then, that other things participate in the ideas by resemblance, has to be given up, and some other mode of participation devised? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | The thought must be of something? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then I will begin again, and ask: If one is not, what are the consequences? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then being is distributed over the whole multitude of things, and nothing that is, however small or however great, is devoid of it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then can the motion of the one be in place? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then do you think that the whole idea is one, and yet, being one, is in each one of the many? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then each individual partakes either of the whole of the idea or else of a part of the idea? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then everything which is and is not in a certain state, implies change? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then if one is not, the others neither are, nor can be conceived to be either one or many? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then if one is, number must also be? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then if the one is neither greater nor less than the others, it can not either exceed or be exceeded by them? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then in respect of any kind of motion the one is immoveable? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then in what way, Socrates, will all things participate in the ideas, if they are unable to participate in them either as parts or wholes? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then it can not be like another, or like itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then it can not move by changing place? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then it does not partake of time, and is not in any time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then it has the greatest number of parts? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then it is never in the same? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then it is not altered at all; for if it were it would become and be destroyed? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then it will not be the same with other, or other than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then its coming into being in anything is still more impossible; is it not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then let us begin again, and ask, If one is, what must be the affections of the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then may we not sum up the argument in a word and say truly: If one is not, then nothing is? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then neither does the one touch the others, nor the others the one, if there is no contact? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then none of the ideas are known to us, because we have no share in absolute knowledge? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then not by virtue of being one will it be other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then not only the one which has being is many, but the one itself distributed by being, must also be many? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then now we have spoken of either of them? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then one can not be anywhere, either in itself or in another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then one can not be older or younger, or of the same age, either with itself or with another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then one is never in the same place? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then shall we say that the one, being in this relation to the not- one, is the same with it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then since the one becomes older than itself, it becomes younger at the same time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then smallness can not be in the whole of one, but, if at all, in a part only? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then that which becomes older than itself must also, at the same time, become younger than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then that which has greatness and smallness also has equality, which lies between them? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then that which is one is both a whole and has a part? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the inference is that it would touch both? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the least is the first? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the nature of the beautiful in itself, and of the good in itself, and all other ideas which we suppose to exist absolutely, are unknown to us? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one always both is and becomes older and younger than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one and the others are never in the same? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one attaches to every single part of being, and does not fail in any part, whether great or small, or whatever may be the size of it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one being always itself in itself and other, must always be both at rest and in motion? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one can never be so affected as to be the same either with another or with itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one can not have parts, and can not be a whole? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one can not possibly partake of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one can not touch itself any more than it can be two? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one has been shown to be at once in itself and in another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one if it has being is one and many, whole and parts, having limits and yet unlimited in number? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one is always becoming older than itself, since it moves forward in time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one is not at all? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one is younger than itself, when in becoming older it reaches the present? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one must have likeness to itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one partakes of inequality, and in respect of this the others are unequal to it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one that is not has no condition of any kind? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one that is not is altered and is not altered? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one that is not, since it in no way partakes of being, neither perishes nor becomes? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one that is not, stands still, and is also in motion? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one was and is and will be, and was becoming and is becoming and will become? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one will be equal both to itself and the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one will be other than the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one will have unlikeness in respect of which the others are unlike it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one will never be either like or unlike itself or other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one will not be in the others as a whole, nor as part, if it be separated from the others, and has no parts? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one will partake of figure, either rectilinear or round, or a union of the two? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one would have parts and would be many, if it partook either of a straight or of a circular form? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, being moved, is altered? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, being of this nature, can not be in time at all; for must not that which is in time, be always growing older than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, having neither beginning nor end, is unlimited? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, if it is not, can not turn in that in which it is not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, if it is not, clearly has being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, if it is to touch itself, ought to be situated next to itself, and occupy the place next to that in which itself is? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, if of such a nature, has greatness and smallness? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, since it partakes of being, partakes of time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the one, which is not, partakes, as would appear, of greatness and smallness and equality? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the other will never be either in the not- one, or in the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the others are both like and unlike themselves and one another? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the others are neither one nor two, nor are they called by the name of any number? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then the others neither are nor contain two or three, if entirely deprived of the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then there is always something between them? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then there is no name, nor expression, nor perception, nor opinion, nor knowledge of it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then there is no way in which the others are one, or have in themselves any unity? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then there is no way in which the others can partake of the one, if they do not partake either in whole or in part? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then they are separated from each other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then they have no number, if they have no one in them? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then we can not suppose that there is anything different from them in which both the one and the others might exist? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then we must say that the one which is not never stands still and never moves? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then we will begin at the beginning:--If one is, can one be, and not partake of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then will the same ever be in the other, or the other in the same? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then will they not appear to be like and unlike? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then will you, Zeno? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then would you like to say, Socrates, that the one idea is really divisible and yet remains one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then, if the individuals of the pair are together two, they must be severally one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then, if the one is to remain one, it will not be a whole, and will not have parts? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then, if there are to be others, there is something than which they will be other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then, in either case, the one would be made up of parts; both as being a whole, and also as having parts? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then, in so far as the one that is not is moved, it is altered, but in so far as it is not moved, it is not altered? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Then, that which is not can not be, or in any way participate in being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | There are two, and twice, and therefore there must be twice two; and there are three, and there is thrice, and therefore there must be thrice three? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | They do so then as multitudes in which the one is not present? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Thus the one that is not has been shown to have motion also, because it changes from being to not- being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Thus, then, as appears, the one will be other than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Thus, then, the one becomes older as well as younger than itself? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Two things, then, at the least are necessary to make contact possible? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | We mean to say, that being has not the same significance as one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | We say that the one partakes of being and therefore it is? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | We say that we have to work out together all the consequences, whatever they may be, which follow, if the one is? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Welcome, Cephalus, said Adeimantus, taking me by the hand; is there anything which we can do for you in Athens? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Well, and do we suppose that one can be older, or younger than anything, or of the same age with it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Well, and if nothing should be attributed to it, can other things be attributed to it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Well, and must not a beginning or any other part of the one or of anything, if it be a part and not parts, being a part, be also of necessity one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Well, and ought we not to consider next what will be the consequence if the one is not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Well, and when I speak of being and one, I speak of them both? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Well, but do not the expressions''was,''and''has become,''and''was becoming,''signify a participation of past time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Well, said Parmenides, and what do you say of another question? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Well, then, if anything be other than anything, will it not be other than that which is other? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What difficulty? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What direction? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What do you mean, Parmenides? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What do you mean? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What do you mean? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What do you mean? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What is it? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What is the meaning of the hypothesis-- If the one is not; is there any difference between this and the hypothesis-- If the not one is not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What may that be? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What of that? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What question? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What thing? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What would you say of another question? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | What? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | When then does it change; for it can not change either when at rest, or when in motion, or when in time? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Whenever, then, you use the word''other,''whether once or oftener, you name that of which it is the name, and to no other do you give the name? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Where shall I begin? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Whither shall we turn, if the ideas are unknown? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not, Parmenides? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why not? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why so? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Why, because the round is that of which all the extreme points are equidistant from the centre? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Yes, he said, and the name of our brother, Antiphon; but why do you ask? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | Yet once more; if one is not, what becomes of the others? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | You mean to say, that if I were to spread out a sail and cover a number of men, there would be one whole including many-- is not that your meaning? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | and consider the consequences which follow on the supposition either of the being or of the not- being of one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | and when more than once, is it something else which you mention? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | for the one is not being, but, considered as one, only partook of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | for the same whole can not do and suffer both at once; and if so, one will be no longer one, but two? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | is the one wanting to being, or being to the one? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | or do we mean, absolutely, that what is not has in no sort or way or kind participation of being? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | or must it always be the same thing of which you speak, whether you utter the name once or more than once? |
plato-parmenides-1544 | would not that of which no part is wanting be a whole? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Alas, why gnaw you so your nether lip? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Am I the motive of these tears, my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | And what was he? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Are they married, think you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Are we turn''d Turks, and to ourselves do that Which heaven hath forbid the Ottomites? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Are you a man? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Are you not well? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BIANCA O Cassio, whence came this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BIANCA Why, I pray you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BIANCA Why, whose is it? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BRABANTIO Not I what are you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BRABANTIO O thou foul thief, where hast thou stow''d my daughter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BRABANTIO What profane wretch art thou? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BRABANTIO What tell''st thou me of robbing? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BRABANTIO What, have you lost your wits? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | BRABANTIO Why, wherefore ask you this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Behold her well; I pray you, look upon her: Do you see, gentlemen? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | But, I pray you, sir, Are you fast married? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | CASSIO Dost thou prate, rogue? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | CASSIO Iago? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | CASSIO Is your Englishman so expert in his drinking? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | CASSIO Prithee, come; will you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | CASSIO To who? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | CASSIO What make you from home? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | CASSIO What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | CASSIO Where are they? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Cassio''s a proper man: let me see now: To get his place and to plume up my will In double knavery-- How, how? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Cassio, may you suspect Who they should be that have thus many led you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Clown Are these, I pray you, wind- instruments? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Come hither, gentle mistress: Do you perceive in all this noble company Where most you owe obedience? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Come, how wouldst thou praise me? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Alas, my lord, what do you mean by that? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Alas, what ignorant sin have I committed? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Am I that name, Iago? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA But shall''t be shortly? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Can any thing be made of this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Can you inquire him out, and be edified by report? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Go to: where lodges he? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA How? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA It is not lost; but what an if it were? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA My lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA My lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA My lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA My lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA O good Iago, What shall I do to win my lord again? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA O, but I fear-- How lost you company? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Shall I deny you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Shall''t be to- night at supper? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Talk you of killing? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA To whom, my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA To- morrow dinner, then? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA What horrible fancy''s this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA What is your pleasure? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA What wouldst thou write of me, if thou shouldst praise me? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA What, is he angry? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA What, my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Who is thy lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Who''s there? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Who, he? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Why do you speak so faintly? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Why do you speak so startingly and rash? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Why, man? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Will you come to bed, my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA With who? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Wouldst thou do such a deed for all the world? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA Wouldst thou do such a deed for all the world? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DESDEMONA[ Singing] I call''d my love false love; but what said he then? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DUKE OF VENICE How say you by this change? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DUKE OF VENICE What would You, Desdemona? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DUKE OF VENICE Why, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | DUKE OF VENICE| Dead? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Didst thou not see her paddle with the palm of his hand? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Do you go back dismay''d? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Do you hear, Roderigo? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Do you know Where we may apprehend her and the Moor? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Do you perceive the gastness of her eye? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Does''t not go well? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Dost thou in conscience think,--tell me, Emilia,-- That there be women do abuse their husbands In such gross kind? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Drunk? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA Alas, what cry is that? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA Alas, who knows? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA But did you ever tell him she was false? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA Good madam, what''s the matter with my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA Hath she forsook so many noble matches, Her father and her country and her friends, To be call''d whore? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA How if fair and foolish? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA Is he not jealous? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA O, are you come, Iago? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA O, is that all? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA O, who hath done this deed? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA Shall I go fetch your night- gown? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA That she was false to wedlock? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA What did thy song bode, lady? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA What handkerchief? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA What will you do with''t, that you have been so earnest To have me filch it? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | EMILIA Why, would not you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Eight score eight hours? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | First Musician Whereby hangs a tale, sir? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | First Senator But, Othello, speak: Did you by indirect and forced courses Subdue and poison this young maid''s affections? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | GRATIANO What is the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | GRATIANO What, of Venice? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Hark, canst thou hear me? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Have you not read, Roderigo, Of some such thing? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | He that lies slain here, Cassio, Was my dear friend: what malice was between you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Her eye must be fed; and what delight shall she have to look on the devil? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Honest Iago, that look''st dead with grieving, Speak, who began this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How am I then a villain To counsel Cassio to this parallel course, Directly to his good? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How came you, Cassio, by that handkerchief That was my wife''s? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How comes this trick upon him? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How didst thou know''twas she? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How do you now, lieutenant? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How do you, madam? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How does Lieutenant Cassio? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How does my old acquaintance of this isle? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How got she out? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How have I been behaved, that he might stick The small''st opinion on my least misuse? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How if she be black and witty? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How is it with you, my most fair Bianca? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How is''t with you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How many, as you guess? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How may the duke be therewith satisfied, Whose messengers are here about my side, Upon some present business of the state To bring me to him? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | How say you, Cassio? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | I think it doth: is''t frailty that thus errs? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | I think it is: and doth affection breed it? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO A thing for me? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO And did you see the handkerchief? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO And may: but, how? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO And when she speaks, is it not an alarum to love? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Are your doors lock''d? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Ay, what of that? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Can he be angry? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Did Michael Cassio, when you woo''d my lady, Know of your love? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Did not you hear a cry? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Did you perceive how he laughed at his vice? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Do you hear, Cassio? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Even he, sir; did you know him? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Hast stol''n it from her? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO How do you, Cassio? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Is my lord angry? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Is''t come to this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Is''t possible, my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Lie-- OTHELLO With her? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO My noble lord-- OTHELLO What dost thou say, Iago? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO No more of drowning, do you hear? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO O, did he so? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Or to be naked with her friend in bed An hour or more, not meaning any harm? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO She gives it out that you shall marry hey: Do you intend it? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Signior Gratiano? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Signior Lodovico? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO So they do nothing,''tis a venial slip: But if I give my wife a handkerchief,-- OTHELLO What then? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What are you here that cry so grievously? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What handkerchief? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What in the contrary? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What name, fair lady? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What was he that you followed with your sword? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What''s the matter, lady? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What, If I had said I had seen him do you wrong? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What, To kiss in private? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO What, are you mad? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Who''s there? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Why did he so? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Why, but you are now well enough: how came you thus recovered? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Will you hear me, Roderigo? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Will you hear''t again? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO Will you sup there? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO You have not been a- bed, then? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO[ Snatching it] Why, what''s that to you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | IAGO[ To BIANCA] What, look you pale? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Iago, who began''t? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Is he not honest? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Is it sport? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Is it they? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Is there division''twixt my lord and Cassio? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Is there not charms By which the property of youth and maidhood May be abused? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Is this the nature Whom passion could not shake? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | It is so too: and have not we affections, Desires for sport, and frailty, as men have? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Know we this face or no? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | LODOVICO Are his wits safe? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | LODOVICO Is it his use? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | LODOVICO O thou Othello, thou wert once so good, Fall''n in the practise of a damned slave, What shall be said to thee? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | LODOVICO This wretch hath part confess''d his villany: Did you and he consent in Cassio''s death? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | LODOVICO What, not to pray? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | LODOVICO Where is that viper? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | LODOVICO Who, I, my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Lieutenant,--sir-- Montano,--gentlemen,-- Have you forgot all sense of place and duty? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Look you pale, mistress? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | MONTANO But is he often thus? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | MONTANO Is he well shipp''d? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | MONTANO What is she? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | MONTANO What''s the matter, lieutenant? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | MONTANO, CASSIO carried in a chair, and Officers with IAGO, prisoner] LODOVICO Where is this rash and most unfortunate man? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Marcus Luccicos, is not he in town? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Mark me with what violence she first loved the Moor, but for bragging and telling her fantastical lies: and will she love him still for prating? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Not dead? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Now, Roderigo, Where didst thou see her? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Now, how dost thou look now? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Now, sir, this granted,--as it is a most pregnant and unforced position-- who stands so eminent in the degree of this fortune as Cassio does? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | O,--Desdemona,-- DESDEMONA My lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Are you not a strumpet? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Are you sure of that? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Are you wise? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Did he confess it? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Do you triumph, Roman? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Dost thou hear, Iago? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Dost thou mock me? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Dost thou say so? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Have you pray''d to- night, Desdemona? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Have you scored me? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO He did, from first to last: why dost thou ask? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO He, woman; I say thy husband: dost understand the word? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO How comes it, Michael, you are thus forgot? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Is''t lost? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Is''t possible? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Nor send you out o''the way? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Not? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Say you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO She is protectress of her honour too: May she give that? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO This fortification, gentlemen, shall we see''t? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO To fetch her fan, her gloves, her mask, nor nothing? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Was not that Cassio parted from my wife? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Was that mine? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Was this fair paper, this most goodly book, Made to write''whore''upon? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Went he hence now? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What dost thou mean? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What dost thou say? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What dost thou think? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What hath he said? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What if I do obey? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What is the matter, think you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What needs this iteration, woman? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What noise is this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What promise, chuck? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What sense had I of her stol''n hours of lust? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What would you with her, sir? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What, did they never whisper? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What, not a whore? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What, now? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO What? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Who is''t you mean? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Who''s there? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Why did I marry? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Why of thy thought, Iago? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Why, what art thou? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Why, why is this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | OTHELLO Will you walk, sir? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Or came it by request and such fair question As soul to soul affordeth? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Or did the letters work upon his blood, And new- create this fault? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Othello? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Perhaps he sees it not; or his good nature Prizes the virtue that appears in Cassio, And looks not on his evils: is not this true? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO And that you would have me to do? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO How do you mean, removing of him? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO Is that true? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO Most reverend signior, do you know my voice? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO Nobody come? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO Signior, is all your family within? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO Well, what is it? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO What say you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO What should I do? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO What will I do, thinkest thou? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO Where shall we meet i''the morning? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | RODERIGO Wilt thou be fast to my hopes, if I depend on the issue? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Senator| DUKE OF VENICE[ To OTHELLO] What, in your own part, can you say to this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Shall she come in? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | She false with Cassio!--did you say with Cassio? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | So, get thee gone; good night Ate eyes do itch; Doth that bode weeping? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Tell me but this, Have you not sometimes seen a handkerchief Spotted with strawberries in your wife''s hand? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | There''s one gone to the harbour? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Think''st thou I''ld make a lie of jealousy, To follow still the changes of the moon With fresh suspicions? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | This is some minx''s token, and I must take out the work? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | This is some token from a newer friend: To the felt absence now I feel a cause: Is''t come to this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Thou dost mean something: I heard thee say even now, thou likedst not that, When Cassio left my wife: what didst not like? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Utter my thoughts? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What are you there? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What did you mean by that same handkerchief you gave me even now? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What had he done to you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What is it that they do When they change us for others? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What is the matter there? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What is the matter, masters? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What is the news? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What miserable praise hast thou for her that''s foul and foolish? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What place? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What said she to you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What shall I say? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What shall we hear of this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What then? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What tidings can you tell me of my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What will you give me now For the same handkerchief? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What wound did ever heal but by degrees? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What''s best to do? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What''s the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | What, keep a week away? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | When shall he come? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | When this advice is free I give and honest, Probal to thinking and indeed the course To win the Moor again? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Where art thou? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Where should Othello go? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Where will you that I go To answer this your charge? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Where''s satisfaction? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Who can control his fate? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Why do you weep? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Why should he call her whore? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Why, say they are vile and false; As where''s that palace whereinto foul things Sometimes intrude not? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Will you go on? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Will you withdraw? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Will you, I pray, demand that demi- devil Why he hath thus ensnared my soul and body? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | With the Moor, say''st thou? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Would you, the supervisor, grossly gape on-- Behold her topp''d? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Yet again your fingers to your lips? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | You would be satisfied? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | Your sword upon a woman? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ A trumpet within] What trumpet is that same? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Aside] O, hardness to dissemble!-- How do you, Desdemona? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ BRABANTIO appears above, at a window] BRABANTIO What is the reason of this terrible summons? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Dies] OTHELLO Why, how should she be murder''d? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter BIANCA] BIANCA What is the matter, ho? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter BIANCA] What do you mean by this haunting of me? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter DESDEMONA with EMILIA] DESDEMONA My lord, what is your will? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter DESDEMONA, EMILIA, and Clown] DESDEMONA Do you know, sirrah, where Lieutenant Cassio lies? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter EMILIA] EMILIA''Las, what''s the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter MONTANO and two Gentlemen] MONTANO What from the cape can you discern at sea? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter MONTANO, GRATIANO, IAGO, and others] MONTANO What is the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter OTHELLO and EMILIA] OTHELLO You have seen nothing then? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter OTHELLO and IAGO] IAGO Will you think so? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter a Sailor] DUKE OF VENICE Now, what''s the business? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Enter a fourth Gentleman] CASSIO What noise? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exeunt MONTANO and GRATIANO] OTHELLO I am not valiant neither, But ever puny whipster gets my sword: But why should honour outlive honesty? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exeunt Musicians] CASSIO Dost thou hear, my honest friend? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exeunt OTHELLO and DESDEMONA] RODERIGO Iago,-- IAGO What say''st thou, noble heart? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exeunt OTHELLO, LODOVICO, and Attendants] EMILIA How goes it now? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exeunt all but IAGO and CASSIO] IAGO What, are you hurt, lieutenant? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit CASSIO] How is it, general? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit CASSIO] OTHELLO[ Advancing] How shall I murder him, Iago? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit EMILIA] DESDEMONA Upon my knees, what doth your speech import? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit] CASSIO Ancient, what makes he here? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit] DESDEMONA Where should I lose that handkerchief, Emilia? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit] EMILIA Alas, what does this gentleman conceive? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit] EMILIA Is not this man jealous? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit] IAGO And what''s he then that says I play the villain? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit] LODOVICO Is this the noble Moor whom our full senate Call all in all sufficient? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Exit] MONTANO But, good lieutenant, is your general wived? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Music][ Enter Clown] Clown Why masters, have your instruments been in Naples, that they speak i''the nose thus? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Opens the letter, and reads] DESDEMONA And what''s the news, good cousin Lodovico? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Re- enter EMILIA with IAGO] IAGO What is your pleasure, madam? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Re- enter GRATIANO] GRATIANO What is the matter? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Re- enter OTHELLO and Attendants] OTHELLO What is the matter here? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Re- enter OTHELLO] IAGO Marry, to-- Come, captain, will you go? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ To BIANCA] What, do you shake at that? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | [ Unlocks the door][ Enter EMILIA] What''s the matter with thee now? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | and discourse fustian with one''s own shadow? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | and lovers''absent hours, More tedious than the dial eight score times? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | and speak parrot? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | and squabble? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | are you of good or evil? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | ay, indeed: discern''st thou aught in that? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | didst not mark that? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | do you triumph? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | false to me? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | from whence ariseth this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | have you a soul or sense? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | have you not hurt your head? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | how am I false? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | how do you, my good lady? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | how satisfied, my lord? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | how then? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | is he not a most profane and liberal counsellor? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | is he not light of brain? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | is it within reason and compass? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | is this true? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | is''t gone? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | is''t true? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | murder!-- What may you be? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | my fear interprets: what, is he dead? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | no more moving? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | no passage? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | no watch? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | not yet quite dead? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | seven days and nights? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | speak, is it out o''the way? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | swagger? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | swear? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | unlawfully? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | weep''st thou for him to my face? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what do you here alone? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what form? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what lights come yond? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what likelihood? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what noise? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what should such a fool Do with so good a woman? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what time? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what villains have done this? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what wife? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what''s the matter, husband? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what''s the news with you? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | what? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | wherefore? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | wherefore? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | who has a breast so pure, But some uncleanly apprehensions Keep leets and law- days and in session sit With meditations lawful? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | who has put in? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | who is''t that cried? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | who is''t that knocks? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | who keeps her company? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | whose noise is this that ones on murder? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | whose solid virtue The shot of accident, nor dart of chance, Could neither graze nor pierce? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | with whom? |
shakespeare-othello-1859 | would it not make one weep? |
sterne-life-3941 | ''How could I know so little of myself, when I sent my Duenna to forbid your coming more under my lattice? |
sterne-life-3941 | ''Returning out of Asia, when I sailed from Aegina towards Megara,''( when can this have been? |
sterne-life-3941 | ''When things move upon bad hinges, an''please your lordships, how can it be otherwise?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | ''Where is Troy and Mycenae, and Thebes and Delos, and Persepolis and Agrigentum?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | ( My father found he got great ease, and went on)--''Kingdoms and provinces, and towns and cities, have they not their periods? |
sterne-life-3941 | ( footnote in Greek Philo.)--statesmen? |
sterne-life-3941 | ( footnote in Greek)--or washer- women? |
sterne-life-3941 | ( for how can I imagine it?) |
sterne-life-3941 | --''And in perfect good health with it?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --''Nec est cur poeniteat,''replies Cocles; that is,''How the duce should such a nose fail?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --''Now what can their two noddles be about?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --And how does your mistress? |
sterne-life-3941 | --And pray what do you call this gentleman? |
sterne-life-3941 | --But can the thing be undone, Yorick? |
sterne-life-3941 | --But when tokens, dear Tom, of thy love and remembrance wear out, said Trim, what shall we say? |
sterne-life-3941 | --But why to Frankfort?--is it that there is a hand unfelt, which secretly is conducting me through these meanders and unsuspected tracts? |
sterne-life-3941 | --But you have some ideas, said my father, of what you talk about? |
sterne-life-3941 | --Could he lie on both sides alike with it?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --Has the bend- sinister been brush''d out, I say? |
sterne-life-3941 | --How could you, Madam, be so inattentive in reading the last chapter? |
sterne-life-3941 | --Is the white bear worth seeing?----Is there no sin in it?-- Is it better than a Black One? |
sterne-life-3941 | --Most of the townsmen, an''please your worship, quoth Obadiah, believe that''tis all the Bull''s fault----But may not a cow be barren? |
sterne-life-3941 | --My young master in London is dead? |
sterne-life-3941 | --Now what can their two noddles be about? |
sterne-life-3941 | --Of what? |
sterne-life-3941 | --Pray, Madam, in what street does the lady live, who would not have done the same? |
sterne-life-3941 | --So you have nothing else in Boulogne worth seeing? |
sterne-life-3941 | --The most perfect,--Madam, that friendship herself could wish me--''And drink nothing!--nothing but water?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --Then a little gayly,--as,''With what skins-- and if they never burst-- Whether the largest were not the best?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --Then, dear Sir, how could my uncle Toby resist it? |
sterne-life-3941 | --Was he able to mount a horse?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --Was it without remission?--''--Was it more tolerable in bed?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --Was motion bad for it?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | --What can they be doing? |
sterne-life-3941 | --What would your worship have me to do in this case? |
sterne-life-3941 | --When shall we get to land? |
sterne-life-3941 | --You Messrs. the Monthly Reviewers!--how could you cut and slash my jerkin as you did?--how did you know but you would cut my lining too? |
sterne-life-3941 | --why was I govern''d by this wicked stiff joint? |
sterne-life-3941 | A negro has a soul? |
sterne-life-3941 | A transient spark of amity shot across the space betwixt us-- She look''d amiable!--Why could I not live, and end my days thus? |
sterne-life-3941 | All is quiet and hush, cried my father, at least above stairs-- I hear not one foot stirring.--Prithee Trim, who''s in the kitchen? |
sterne-life-3941 | Allowing them, an''please your honour, three halfpence a day out of my pay, when they grow old.--And didst thou do that, Trim? |
sterne-life-3941 | Am I ever to see one? |
sterne-life-3941 | And Triptolemus and Phutatorius agreeing thereto, ask, How is it possible there should? |
sterne-life-3941 | And prithee when do they light the lamps? |
sterne-life-3941 | And these again put negatively, Is it not? |
sterne-life-3941 | And what was the Latus Clavus? |
sterne-life-3941 | And where is Dr. Slop? |
sterne-life-3941 | And your theologists, Yorick, tell us-- Theologically? |
sterne-life-3941 | Are we for ever to be twisting, and untwisting the same rope? |
sterne-life-3941 | Bene curasti hoc jumentam? |
sterne-life-3941 | Did I ever see one painted?--described? |
sterne-life-3941 | Did any one of you shed more tears for Hector? |
sterne-life-3941 | Did my father, mother, uncle, aunt, brothers or sisters, ever see a white bear? |
sterne-life-3941 | Did no expression of attitude or countenance fill up the chasm?--Was the eye silent? |
sterne-life-3941 | Do you understand the theory of that affair? |
sterne-life-3941 | Ha!--and no one gives the wall!--but in the School of Urbanity herself, if the walls are besh.. t-- how can you do otherwise? |
sterne-life-3941 | Had I not three strokes of a ferula given me, two on my right hand, and one on my left, for calling Helena a bitch for it? |
sterne-life-3941 | Have I ever seen one? |
sterne-life-3941 | Have I never dreamed of one? |
sterne-life-3941 | How long ago?--Or hypothetically,--If it was? |
sterne-life-3941 | How many Caesars and Pompeys, he would say, by mere inspiration of the names, have been rendered worthy of them? |
sterne-life-3941 | How would the white bear have behaved? |
sterne-life-3941 | How would they behave? |
sterne-life-3941 | I am aware that Didius, the great civilian, will contest this point; and cry out against me, Whence comes this man''s right to this apple? |
sterne-life-3941 | I can not look at it--''What would the world say if I look''d at it? |
sterne-life-3941 | If I never have, can, must, or shall see a white bear alive; have I ever seen the skin of one? |
sterne-life-3941 | If I should never see a white bear, what then? |
sterne-life-3941 | If I should see a white bear, what should I say? |
sterne-life-3941 | If it was not? |
sterne-life-3941 | If the Sun go out of the Zodiac? |
sterne-life-3941 | Is he wild? |
sterne-life-3941 | Is it not a shame to make two chapters of what passed in going down one pair of stairs? |
sterne-life-3941 | Is it not to shift from side to side?--from sorrow to sorrow?--to button up one cause of vexation-- and unbutton another? |
sterne-life-3941 | Is this a fit time, said my father to himself, to talk of Pensions and Grenadiers? |
sterne-life-3941 | It never shall be touched, said he, clasping his hands and bringing them close to his breast, till that hour-- What hour? |
sterne-life-3941 | Lately? |
sterne-life-3941 | May it be? |
sterne-life-3941 | Might I ever have seen one? |
sterne-life-3941 | Might it be? |
sterne-life-3941 | Minimo tangetur, inquit ille( manibus in pectus compositis) usque ad illam horam-- Quam horam? |
sterne-life-3941 | No:--he is dead, my dear brother, quoth my uncle Toby.--Without being ill? |
sterne-life-3941 | Now I can not bear the barbarity of it; how can that unconscionable coachman talk so much bawdy to that lean horse? |
sterne-life-3941 | Now if I might presume, said the corporal, to differ from your honour----Why else do I talk to thee, Trim? |
sterne-life-3941 | Or can I ever see one? |
sterne-life-3941 | Or chronologically,--Has it been always? |
sterne-life-3941 | Ought I ever to have seen one? |
sterne-life-3941 | Pray what''s the matter? |
sterne-life-3941 | Pray, Mr. Shandy, what patent has he to shew for it? |
sterne-life-3941 | Pray, captain, quoth I, as I was going down into the cabin, is a man never overtaken by Death in this passage? |
sterne-life-3941 | Prithee when? |
sterne-life-3941 | Quite: madam-- But what do you mean by a recovery? |
sterne-life-3941 | Rough? |
sterne-life-3941 | Sanson, to be turned back from so lousy a town as Nevers-- What think''st thou, Toby? |
sterne-life-3941 | Shall we for ever make new books, as apothecaries make new mixtures, by pouring only out of one vessel into another? |
sterne-life-3941 | Smooth? |
sterne-life-3941 | Tame? |
sterne-life-3941 | Tell me, ye learned, shall we for ever be adding so much to the bulk-- so little to the stock? |
sterne-life-3941 | Terrible? |
sterne-life-3941 | The Trabea: of which, according to Suetonius, there was three kinds.----But what are all these to the breeches? |
sterne-life-3941 | The blind gut, answered doctor Slop, lies betwixt the Ilion and Colon-- In a man? |
sterne-life-3941 | The cart before the horse, replied my father----And what is he to do there? |
sterne-life-3941 | This unfortunate King of Bohemia, said Trim,--Was he unfortunate, then? |
sterne-life-3941 | To clear up all, she had twice asked Doctor Slop,''if poor captain Shandy was ever likely to recover of his wound--?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | To this hour art thou not tormented with the vile asthma that thou gattest in skating against the wind in Flanders? |
sterne-life-3941 | Upon what account? |
sterne-life-3941 | Votum feci sancto Nicolao, ait peregrinus, nasum meum intactum fore usque ad-- Quodnam tempus? |
sterne-life-3941 | Was it not? |
sterne-life-3941 | Was it? |
sterne-life-3941 | Was that selfish, brother Shandy? |
sterne-life-3941 | Well,--what dost thou think of it? |
sterne-life-3941 | What a mine of wealth, quoth I, as he counted me the money, has this post- chaise brought me in? |
sterne-life-3941 | What could be wanting in my father but to have wrote a book to publish this notion of his to the world? |
sterne-life-3941 | What would follow?--If the French should beat the English? |
sterne-life-3941 | What would they give? |
sterne-life-3941 | Who is there? |
sterne-life-3941 | Why then, an''please your honour, is a black wench to be used worse than a white one? |
sterne-life-3941 | Why? |
sterne-life-3941 | Will it be? |
sterne-life-3941 | Will that restore it to sight? |
sterne-life-3941 | Will this be good for your worships eyes? |
sterne-life-3941 | Will your worships give me leave to squeeze in a story between these two pages? |
sterne-life-3941 | Would it be? |
sterne-life-3941 | a chapter upon whiskers? |
sterne-life-3941 | a chapter upon wishes?--a chapter of noses?--No, I have done that-- a chapter upon my uncle Toby''s modesty? |
sterne-life-3941 | ait illa-- Nullam, respondit peregrinus, donec pervenio ad-- Quem locum,--obsecro? |
sterne-life-3941 | and how did it begin to be his? |
sterne-life-3941 | and into what a delicious riot of things am I rushing? |
sterne-life-3941 | and wherefore, when we go about to make and plant a man, do we put out the candle? |
sterne-life-3941 | and why didst thou not suffer thy servant to go unpolluted to her tomb? |
sterne-life-3941 | continued my father, circumcised his whole army one morning.--Not without a court martial? |
sterne-life-3941 | cried Slop,--(for what is passion, but a wild beast?) |
sterne-life-3941 | cried Trim, presenting his stick like a firelock.--Or when he marches up the glacis? |
sterne-life-3941 | cried my father, interrupting him-- Saint Optat!--how should Saint Optat fail? |
sterne-life-3941 | cried my father.--My nephew, said my uncle Toby.--What-- without leave-- without money-- without governor? |
sterne-life-3941 | cried my uncle Toby, looking firm.--Or when he enters a breach? |
sterne-life-3941 | cried my uncle Toby,''are children brought into the world with a squirt?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | cried my uncle, rising up, and pushing his crutch like a pike.--Or facing a platoon? |
sterne-life-3941 | cried the abbess in the utmost horror-- No; replied Margarita calmly-- but they are words sinful-- What are they? |
sterne-life-3941 | cried the corporal-- what has a woman''s compassion to do with a wound upon the cap of a man''s knee? |
sterne-life-3941 | cried the novice, catching fire at the word servant-- why was I not content to put it here, or there, any where rather than be in this strait? |
sterne-life-3941 | dear brother Toby, said my father, upon his first seeing him after he fell in love-- and how goes it with your Asse? |
sterne-life-3941 | did you see it? |
sterne-life-3941 | did you see it? |
sterne-life-3941 | did you see it?--who saw it? |
sterne-life-3941 | do n''t you see, friend, the streets are so villanously narrow, that there is not room in all Paris to turn a wheelbarrow? |
sterne-life-3941 | for ever in the same track-- for ever at the same pace? |
sterne-life-3941 | for mercy''s sake, who saw it? |
sterne-life-3941 | for now ye will all come into play again, and with Priapus at your tails-- what jovial times!--but where am I? |
sterne-life-3941 | hadst thou no guardian angel to delegate to the inn at the bottom of the hill? |
sterne-life-3941 | he would ask, making use of the sorites or syllogism of Zeno and Chrysippus, without knowing it belonged to them.--Why? |
sterne-life-3941 | his, indeed, was matter of calculation!--Agrippina''s must have been quite a different affair; who else could pretend to reason from history? |
sterne-life-3941 | how is it with you? |
sterne-life-3941 | in a moment?'' |
sterne-life-3941 | in what corner of the world shall I seek thy fellow? |
sterne-life-3941 | is a man to follow rules-- or rules to follow him? |
sterne-life-3941 | is it not, said she, whispering her husband in his ear, is it not a noble nose? |
sterne-life-3941 | kin to her child.-- And what said the duchess of Suffolk to it? |
sterne-life-3941 | meus nasus nunquam tangetur, dum spiritus hos reget artus-- Ad quid agendum? |
sterne-life-3941 | mount him-- mount him-- mount him--(that''s three times, is it not?) |
sterne-life-3941 | my father would say, do tell me seriously how this affair of the bridge happened.--How can you teaze me so much about it? |
sterne-life-3941 | my uncle Toby would reply-- I have told it you twenty times, word for word as Trim told it me.--Prithee, how was it then, corporal? |
sterne-life-3941 | of who? |
sterne-life-3941 | or was it kind to take me at my word, whether my suspicions were just or no, and leave me, as you did, a prey to much uncertainty and sorrow? |
sterne-life-3941 | or when he chew''d it? |
sterne-life-3941 | or when he gathered it? |
sterne-life-3941 | or when he peel''d, or when he brought it home? |
sterne-life-3941 | or when he roasted it? |
sterne-life-3941 | quite? |
sterne-life-3941 | said I,--seeing it was impracticable to pass betwixt him and the gate-- art thou for coming in, or going out? |
sterne-life-3941 | said Trim, pushing in between two chairs.--Or forces the lines? |
sterne-life-3941 | said Yorick,--or speaking after the manner of apothecaries? |
sterne-life-3941 | said he, my nose shall never be touched whilst Heaven gives me strength-- To do what? |
sterne-life-3941 | said my father, did not my uncle leave you a hundred and twenty pounds a year?--What could I have done without it? |
sterne-life-3941 | said my father-- and when did you know it? |
sterne-life-3941 | said my father: And what is Saint Optat''s story? |
sterne-life-3941 | said my uncle Toby-- Am I to set them down, an''please your honour? |
sterne-life-3941 | said my uncle Toby-- He is, said the corporal-- And in what regiment? |
sterne-life-3941 | said my uncle Toby-- What does any woman get by it? |
sterne-life-3941 | said my uncle Toby-- Where-- Who? |
sterne-life-3941 | said my uncle Toby... musing a long time... What became of that story, Trim? |
sterne-life-3941 | said the corporal,--the lieutenant''s last day''s march is over.--Then what is to become of his poor boy? |
sterne-life-3941 | said the stranger, never till I am got-- For Heaven''s sake, into what place? |
sterne-life-3941 | still-- still unsold, and art almost at thy wit''s ends, how to get them off thy hands? |
sterne-life-3941 | the most difficult!--how wilt thou touch it, my dear uncle Toby? |
sterne-life-3941 | three volumes-- the thing I have to ask is, how you feel your heads? |
sterne-life-3941 | to take so much blood-- give such a vile purge-- puke-- poultice-- plaister-- night- draught-- clyster-- blister?--And why so many grains of calomel? |
sterne-life-3941 | two chapters upon the right and the wrong end of a woman? |
sterne-life-3941 | was it, when he set his heart upon it? |
sterne-life-3941 | was not Democritus, who laughed ten times more than I-- town- clerk of Abdera? |
sterne-life-3941 | what do you understand of the affair? |
sterne-life-3941 | what intonation of voice? |
sterne-life-3941 | what secret impulse was it? |
sterne-life-3941 | what''s the matter? |
sterne-life-3941 | what? |
sterne-life-3941 | when? |
sterne-life-3941 | whence came it? |
sterne-life-3941 | where? |
sterne-life-3941 | who did see it? |
sterne-life-3941 | who keeps all those Jack Asses?.... |
sterne-life-3941 | why did I leave the convent of Andouillets? |
sterne-life-3941 | will nothing melt you? |
sterne-life-3941 | you rascal, cried my father, pointing to the mule, what you have done!--It was not me, said Obadiah.--How do I know that? |
sterne-life-3941 | you would try the patience of Job;--and I think I have the plagues of one already without it.--Why?--Where?--Wherein?--Wherefore?--Upon what account? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | How stands the state, O Panthus? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''Ah, whither hurriest thou?'' virgil-aeneid-1203 ''Goddess- born, canst thou sleep on in such danger? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''How, O Turnus, can thine own sister help thee now? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''If this,''cries Nisus,''is the reward of defeat, and thy pity is stirred for the fallen, what fit recompense wilt thou give to Nisus? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''Lingerest thou to vow and pray,''she cries,''Aeneas of Troy? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''Take you not shame to be again held leaguered in your ramparts, O Phrygians twice taken, and to make walls your fence from death? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''Was it this, mine own? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''Was life''s hold on me so sweet, O my son, that I let him I bore receive the hostile stroke in my room? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''What guerdon shall I deem may be given you, O men, what recompense for these noble deeds? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''What now shall good Aeneas give thee, what, O poor boy, for this thy praise, for guerdon of a nature so noble? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''What shapes of crime are here? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''What strange madness is this?'' virgil-aeneid-1203 ''What terror, what utter cowardice hath fallen on your spirits, O never to be stung to shame, O slack alway? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''What yet shall be the end, O wife? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''Whither wanderest thou away? virgil-aeneid-1203 ''Who will be with me, my men, to be first on the foe? virgil-aeneid-1203 --''O father, must we think that any souls travel hence into upper air, and return again to bodily fetters? virgil-aeneid-1203 Achates first accosts Aeneas:''Goddess- born, what purpose now rises in thy spirit? virgil-aeneid-1203 Aeneas rushes up, drawing his sword from the scabbard, and thus above him:''Where now is gallant Mezentius and all his fierce spirit?'' virgil-aeneid-1203 Ah me, was I cause of thy death? virgil-aeneid-1203 Ah, and who is he apart, marked out with sprays of olive, offering sacrifice? virgil-aeneid-1203 Alas, what can he do? virgil-aeneid-1203 Alas, what shall he do? virgil-aeneid-1203 Am I, thy father, saved by these wounds of thine, and living by thy death? virgil-aeneid-1203 And Mnestheus:''Whither next, whither press you in flight? virgil-aeneid-1203 And Turnus pursuing and aiming as he ran, thus upbraids him in triumph:''Didst thou hope, madman, thou mightest escape our hands?'' virgil-aeneid-1203 And do we yet hesitate to give valour scope in deeds, or shrink in fear from setting foot on Ausonian land? virgil-aeneid-1203 And he:''Why seek to frighten me, fierce man, now my son is gone? virgil-aeneid-1203 And how should they let me, if I would? virgil-aeneid-1203 And then? virgil-aeneid-1203 And unfold the truth to this my question: wherefore have they reared this vast size of horse? virgil-aeneid-1203 Are we eating our tables too?_ cries Iülus jesting, and stops. virgil-aeneid-1203 Are we going to meet them? virgil-aeneid-1203 Art thou that Aeneas whom Venus the bountiful bore to Dardanian Anchises by the wave of Phrygian Simoïs? virgil-aeneid-1203 As she saw him glittering in arms and idly exultant:''Why,''she cries,''wanderest thou away? virgil-aeneid-1203 Believe you the foe is gone? virgil-aeneid-1203 But Aeneas presses on, brandishing his vast tree- like spear, and fiercely speaks thus:''What more delay is there[ 889- 924]now? virgil-aeneid-1203 But good Aeneas, his head bared, kept stretching his unarmed hand and calling loudly to his men:''Whither run you? virgil-aeneid-1203 But if so many oracles guided them, given by god and ghost, why may aught now reverse thine ordinance or write destiny anew? virgil-aeneid-1203 But to thee how did winds, how fates give passage? virgil-aeneid-1203 But what shall be the end? virgil-aeneid-1203 But when I assail a third spearshaft with a stronger effort, pulling with knees pressed against the sand; shall I speak or be silent? virgil-aeneid-1203 But who hath bidden thee descend from heaven to bear this sore travail? virgil-aeneid-1203 But who was to believe that Teucrians should come to Hesperian shores? virgil-aeneid-1203 But who, I pray, are you, or from what coasts come, or whither hold you your way?'' virgil-aeneid-1203 But why, unhappy, do I delay the Trojan arms? virgil-aeneid-1203 But you, my chosen, who of you makes ready to breach their palisade at the sword''s point, and join my attack on their fluttered camp? virgil-aeneid-1203 But, I think, my deity lies at last outwearied, or my hatred sleeps and is satisfied? virgil-aeneid-1203 By what means may he essay entrance? virgil-aeneid-1203 Careless, O winds, of my deity, dare you confound sky and earth, and raise so huge a coil? virgil-aeneid-1203 Caïcus raises a cry from the mound in front:''What mass of misty gloom, O citizens, is rolling hitherward? virgil-aeneid-1203 Comest thou driven on ocean wanderings, or by promptings from heaven? virgil-aeneid-1203 Could I not have riven his body in sunder and strewn it on the waves? virgil-aeneid-1203 Could Pallas lay the Argive fleet in ashes, and sink the Argives in the sea, for one man''s guilt, mad Oïlean Ajax? virgil-aeneid-1203 Could they be ensnared when taken? virgil-aeneid-1203 Could they perish on the Sigean[ 295- 326]plains? virgil-aeneid-1203 Couldst thou, the latest solace of mine age, leave me alone so cruelly? virgil-aeneid-1203 Deemest thou the ashes care for that, or the ghost within the tomb? virgil-aeneid-1203 Did the fires of Troy consume her people? virgil-aeneid-1203 Did these very hands build it, did my voice call on our father''s gods, that with thee lying thus I should be away as one without pity? virgil-aeneid-1203 Did we urge him to quit the camp or entrust his life to the winds? virgil-aeneid-1203 Didst thou disdain a sister''s company in death? virgil-aeneid-1203 Dost thou, Hector''s Andromache, keep bonds of marriage with Pyrrhus? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Even so she begins, and thus revolves with her heart alone:''See, what do I? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Fliest thou from me? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Fliest thou not hence headlong, while headlong flight is yet possible? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | For what do I wait? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | For what further outrage do I wait? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | For what had counsel or chance yet to give? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | For why do I conceal it? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | From whom fliest thou? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | From whom fliest thou? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Go,"he continues,"happy in thy son''s affection: why do I run on further, and delay the rising winds in talk?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Hath any man or god constrained Aeneas to court war or make armed attack on King Latinus? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Hath he broken into tears, or had pity on his lover? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Have you no pity, no shame, cowards, for your unhappy country, for your ancient gods, for great Aeneas?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | He stopped and cried weeping,''What land is left, Achates, what tract on earth that is not full of our agony? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | He yonder, seest thou? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Here are our brother Eryx''borders, and Acestes''welcome: who denies us to cast up walls and give our citizens a city? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | How leavest thou me to die, O my guest? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | How shall I begin my desolate moan? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | How shall I trust Aeneas to deceitful breezes, and the placid treachery of sky that hath so often deceived me?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | I forbade Italy to join battle with the Teucrians; why this quarrel in face of my injunction? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | If such glories kindle him in nowise, and he take no trouble for his own honour, does a father grudge his Ascanius the towers of Rome? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | If thy Phoenician eyes are stayed on Carthage towers and thy Libyan city, what wrong is it, I pray, that we Trojans find our rest on Ausonian land? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is Death all so bitter? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is anger so fierce in celestial spirits? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is it granted, O my son, to gaze on thy face and hear and answer in familiar tones? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is it not thus the Phrygian herdsman wound his way to Lacedaemon, and carried Leda''s Helen to the Trojan towns? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is it peace or arms you carry hither?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is it thus thou dost restore our throne?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is it we who would overthrow the tottering state of Phrygia? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is this all of what thou wert that returns to me, O my son? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is this his repayment for my maidenhood? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Is this the reward of goodness? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Knowest thou not the strength is another''s and the gods are changed? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Let us exchange shields, and accoutre ourselves in Grecian suits; whether craft or courage, who will ask of an enemy? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Lo, the deep shuts us in with vast sea barrier; even now land fails our flight; shall we make ocean or Troy our goal?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Long they ran on in mutual change of talk; of what lifeless comrade spoke the soothsayer, of what body for burial? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Markest thou what sentry is seated in[ 575- 609]the doorway? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | May hulls have the right of immortality that were fashioned by mortal hand? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Moved with marvel at the confused throng:''Say, O maiden,''cries Aeneas,''what means this flocking to the river? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Must I wait forsooth till Turnus please to stoop to combat, and choose again to face his conqueror? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Nisus cries:''Lend the gods this fervour to the soul, Euryalus? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Now so many woes are spent, and the same fortune still pursues them; Lord and King, what limit dost thou set to their agony? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | O citizens? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Or will you even find rest here with me and share my kingdom? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Our love holds thee not, nor the hand thou once gavest, nor the bitter death that is left for Dido''s portion? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Palinurus, master of the fleet, cries from the high stern:''Alas, why have these heavy storm- clouds girt the sky? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Paphos is thine and Idalium, thine high Cythera; why meddlest thou with fierce spirits and a city big with war? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Plead you for peace to the lifeless bodies that the battle- lot hath slain? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | See, is this his promise- keeping?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Seest thou how the twin plumes straighten on his crest, and his father''s own emblazonment already marks him for upper air? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shall I again make trial of mine old wooers that will scorn me? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shall I have faith in this perilous thing? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shall I look again on the camp or walls of Laurentum? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shall I make mention of the realm of Neoptolemus, and Idomeneus''household gods overthrown? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shall my hand not refute Drances''jeers? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shall she see her spousal and her home, her parents and children, attended by a crowd of Trojan women and Phrygians to serve her? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shall she verily see Sparta and her native Mycenae unscathed, and depart a queen and triumphant? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shall thy righteousness first wake my wonder, or thy toils in war? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shalt thou die, and by Diana''s weapons?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Shalt thou without burial behold the Stygian waters and the awful river of the Furies? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | She swoons away, and hardly at last speaks after long interval:"Comest thou then a real face, a real messenger to me, goddess- born? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Straightway[ 265- 299]he breaks in:''Layest thou now the foundations of tall Carthage, and buildest up a fair city in dalliance? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | The destruction of their households, this was the one thing yet lacking; shall I suffer it? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Then Queen Juno, swift and passionate:''Why forcest thou me to break long silence and proclaim my hidden pain? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Then her lord speaks, enchained by Love the immortal:''Why these far- fetched pleas? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Then indeed Turnus, when he believed Aeneas turned and fled from him, and his spirit madly drank in the illusive hope:''Whither fliest thou, Aeneas? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Then shall I follow the Ilian fleets and the uttermost bidding of the Teucrians? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Then she thus addressed me, and with this speech allayed my distresses:"What help is there in this mad passion of grief, sweet my husband? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Then she thus[ 228- 261]accosts her amazed lord:''Wakest thou, seed of gods, Aeneas? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Thereto the Tyrrhenian, as he came to himself and gazing up drank the air of heaven:''Bitter foe, why these taunts and menaces of death? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | This only was left in his strait, to kindle them to valour, now by entreaties, now by taunts:''Whither flee you, comrades? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | This thou didst promise: why, O father, is thy decree reversed? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Thoughtest thou my feet, O father, could retire and abandon thee? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Thus Phoebus; and mingled outcries of great gladness uprose; all ask, what is that city? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Thus at last she opens out upon Aeneas:''And thou didst hope, traitor, to mask the crime, and slip away in silence from my land? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Thus he ended, and the soothsayer thus began:''Whence, O Palinurus, this fierce longing of thine? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | To this Turnus, with eyes fixed on the terrible maiden:''O maiden flower of Italy, how may I essay to express, how to prove my gratitude? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | To what god is power so great given? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | To what is little Iülus and thy father, to what am I left who once was called thy wife?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | To whom Juno beseechingly:''Why, fair my lord, vexest thou one sick at heart and trembling at thy bitter words? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | To whom Palinurus, scarcely lifting his eyes, returns:''Wouldst thou have me ignorant what the calm face of the brine means, and the waves at rest? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Troy blazed in fire? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Was it in my guidance the[ 92- 125]adulterous Dardanian broke into Sparta? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Was it this thy pyre, ah me, this thine altar fires meant? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Was it well that a deity should be sullied by a mortal''s wound? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Was it well, O God, that nations destined to everlasting peace should clash in so vast a shock? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Was my summons a snare? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Were it not better to have[ 59- 91]clung to the last ashes of their country, and the ground where once was Troy? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What art of mine can lengthen out thy day? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What do I talk? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What do I? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What god, O Muses, guarded the Trojans from the rage of the fire? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What god, what madness, hath driven you to Italy? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What god, what potent cruelty of ours, hath driven him on his hurt? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What guest unknown is this who hath entered our dwelling? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What happy ages bore thee? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What hath availed me Syrtes or Scylla, what desolate Charybdis? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What indignity hath marred thy serene visage? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What is this strife that so spreads and swells? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What is your kin, whence your habitation? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What man or god did I spare in frantic reproaches? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What of that array of men who followed me to arms? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What race of men, what land how barbarous soever, allows such a custom for its own? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What shall he do? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What terror hath bidden one or another run after arms and tempt the sword? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | What then were thy thoughts, O Dido, as thou sawest it? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Whence is this sudden sheen of weather? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Where is Juno in this, or Iris sped down the clouds? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Where is thy plighted faith? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Where now prithee is divine Eryx, thy master of fruitless fame? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Where thine ancient care for thy people, and the hand Turnus thy kinsman hath so often clasped? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Where, where shall I begin? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Whither am I borne? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Whither does he run? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Whither shall I follow? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Whither whirl you me all breathless, O Fabii? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Whither, O goddess, is thy trust in me gone? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Who can be ignorant of the race of Aeneas''people, who of Troy town and her men and deeds, or of the great war''s consuming fire? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Who may unfold in speech that night''s horror and death- agony, or measure its woes in weeping? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Who might leave thee, lordly Cato, or thee, Cossus, to silence? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Whom first, whom last, fierce maiden, does thy dart strike down? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Whom follow[ 88- 121]we? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why again and again hurlest thou these unhappy citizens on peril so evident, O source and spring of Latium''s woes? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why do I linger? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why does a shudder seize our limbs before the trumpet sound? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why fall I away again and again? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why hesitate? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why is it forbidden to clasp hand in hand, to hear and utter true speech?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why linger? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why mockest thou thy son so often in feigned likeness? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why ravest thou? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why should I recall the fleets burned on the coast of Eryx? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why should I relate the horrible murders, the savage deeds of the monarch? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why speak of the war gathering from Tyre, and thy brother''s menaces? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why tell of the Lapithae, of Ixion and Pirithoüs? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why wear we steel? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Why, were thy quest not of alien fields and unknown dwellings, did thine ancient Troy remain, should Troy be sought in voyages over tossing seas? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Will they not issue in armed pursuit from all the city, and some launch ships from the dockyards? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Will thy bravery ever be in that windy tongue and those timorous feet of thine? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Wilt thou never then let our leaguer be raised? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Wilt thou see also the Tarquin kings, and the haughty soul of Brutus the Avenger, and the fasces regained? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | With what device or in what hope hangest thou chill in cloudland? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | Yet hath the child affection for his lost mother? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | [ 369- 400]Hath our weeping cost him a sigh, or a lowered glance? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | [ 93- 126]Thus her son in answer, who wheels the starry worlds:''O mother, whither callest thou fate? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | after such an husband, what fate receives thy fall? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | ah hapless race, for what destruction does Fortune hold thee back? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | and Fabricius potent in poverty, or[ 844- 875]thee, Serranus, sowing in the furrow? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | and Priam have fallen under the sword? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | and because fate forbids me? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | and fell so unnatural words from a parent''s lips? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | and hast thou no compassion on[ 361- 392]thy daughter and on thyself? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | and may Aeneas traverse perils secure in insecurity? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | and slain with the sword his comrades and his dear Ascanius, and served him for the banquet at his father''s table? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | and stoop to sue for a Numidian marriage among those whom already over and over I have disdained for husbands? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | are we unequal in numbers or bravery? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | art thou ignorant, ah me, even in ruin, and knowest not yet the forsworn race of Laomedon? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | because it is good to think they were once raised up by my[ 539- 570]succour, or the grace of mine old kindness is fresh in their remembrance? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | by what passage hurl the imprisoned Trojans from the rampart and fling them on the plain? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | can I contend with this ominous thing? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | cries Aeneas;''whither so fast away? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | declare, O maiden; or what the punishment that pursues them, and all this upsurging wail?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | for what are these idle weapons in our hands? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | for what do I, or what fortune yet gives promise of safety? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | from beneath the mound is heard a pitiable moan, and a voice is uttered to my ears:"Woe''s me, why rendest thou me, Aeneas? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | from what borders comest thou, Hector our desire? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | he cried,"what land now, what seas may receive me? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | how his Trojans? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | how long is it seemly to keep me? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | how may vows or shrines help her madness? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | how venture to smooth the tale to the frenzied queen? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | how, that they choose their brides and tear plighted bosom from bosom? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | if I am ready to take them into alliance after Turnus''destruction, why do I not rather bar the strife while he lives? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | is he roused to the valour of old and the spirit of manhood by his father Aeneas, by his uncle Hector?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | is it this I have followed by land and sea? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | is it thus we know Ulysses? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | is this my strong assurance? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | lingerest thou? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | livest thou? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | lord Neptune, what wilt thou?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | no compassion on her mother, whom with the first northern wind the treacherous rover will abandon, steering to sea with his maiden prize? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | nor does it cross thy mind whose are these fields about thy dwelling? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | nor hearest the breezes blowing fair? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | nor when sent into such danger was one last word of thee allowed thine unhappy mother? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | of what are the souls so fain? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | on what ground have I left thee? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or did I send the shafts of passion that kindled war? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or do we shudder vainly when our father hurls the thunderbolt, and do blind fires in the clouds and idle rumblings appal our soul? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or does fatal passion become a proper god to each? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or he who brought the Achaeans down on the hapless Trojans? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or how may earth ever yawn for me deep enough? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or if sweet light is fled, ah, where is Hector?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or in what guidance may I overcome these sore labours?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or of the Locrians who dwell on the Libyan beach? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or plunge forth girt with all my Tyrian train? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or shall he rush on his doom amid their swords, and find in their wounds a speedy and glorious death? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or take the odious woman on their haughty ships? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or that the lost sword-- for what without thee could Juturna avail?--should be restored to Turnus and swell the force of the vanquished? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or think you any Grecian gift is free of treachery? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what crueller sight met me in our city''s overthrow? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what difference makes these retire from the banks, those go with sweeping oars over the leaden waterways?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what dost thou seek for these of thine? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what fortune keeps thee from rest, that thou shouldst draw nigh these sad sunless dwellings, this disordered land?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what is the last doom that yet awaits my misery? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what is this cry that fleets so loud from the distant town?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what land now holds thy mangled corpse, thy body torn limb from limb? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what more is there if I break not under this? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what their aim? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or what worthier fortune revisits thee? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or where am I? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or where shall I follow, again unwinding all the entanglement of the treacherous woodland way?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or whither do you steer? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or whither dost thou bid us go, where fix our seat? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or whither dost thou run? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or whither hold you your way?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or whither is thy care for us fled? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or who withholds thee from our embrace?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or whom might Cassandra then move by prophecy? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or whose divinity landed thee all unwitting on our coasts? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or why all this contest now? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or why discern I these wounds?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | or why, Turnus, dost thou yet shrink away? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | others plunder and harry the burning citadel; are you but now on your march from the tall ships?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | shall I accompany the triumphant sailors, a lonely fugitive? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | shall I nowhere see a Xanthus and a Simoïs, the rivers of Hector? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | shall I send thee alone into so great perils? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | shall I turn my back, and this land see Turnus a fugitive? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | shall an alien make mock of our realm? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | shall there never be a Trojan town to tell of? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | shall we set one life in the breach for so many such as these? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | she cries,''shall he go? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | sister of Phoebus perchance, or one of the nymphs''blood? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | so hardly severed from Sidon city, shall I again drive them seaward, and bid them spread their sails to the tempest? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | son, or other of his children''s princely race? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | that Trojans subjugate and plunder fields not their own? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | that their gestures plead for peace, and their ships are lined with arms? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | the shore of Dardania so often soaked with blood? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | thou wilt see thy son cruelly slain; is this our triumphal return awaited? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | till Pygmalion overthrow his sister''s city, or Gaetulian Iarbas lead me to captivity? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | to give the issue of war and the charge of his ramparts to a child? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | to stir the loyalty of Tyrrhenia or throw peaceful nations into tumult? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | was it that thou mightest see thy hapless brother cruelly slain? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | we? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what agony shakes the city? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what flight is this, or in what guise do I return? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what good is his gift of life for ever? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what height of madness hath seized thy mind? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what mad change is on my purpose? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what madness bends my purpose? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what mighty parents gave thy virtue birth? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what of the boy Ascanius? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what other walls, what farther city have you yet? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what prologue shall he find? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what propitiation, or what engine of war is this?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what remains at the last? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what shape guards the threshold? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what stronghold are we to occupy?" |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what the cause or whereof the need that hath borne you over all these blue waterways to the Ausonian shore? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | what violence lands thee on this monstrous coast? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | whence came I? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | where thy renown over all Sicily, and those spoils hanging in thine house?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | whether, torn by fate from her unhappy husband, she stood still, or did she mistake the way, or sink down outwearied? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | whither calls Phoebus our wandering, and bids us return? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | who is claimed of Apollo? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | who is their counsellor? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | who made Europe and Asia bristle up in arms, and whose theft shattered the alliance? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | who repelled the fierce flame from their ships? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | who the Gracchan family, or these two sons of the Scipios, a double thunderbolt of war, Libya''s bale? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | who was allowed to use thee thus? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | whom did I fear[ 604- 635]with my death upon me? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | why have I forfeited a mortal''s lot? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | why on the march, or how are you in arms? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | why stand you?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | why the king of storms, and the raging winds roused from Aeolia, or Iris driven down the clouds? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | why this their strange sad longing for the light?'' |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | will aught of mine be sweet to me without thee, my brother? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | with what device or in what hope loiters he among a hostile race, and casts not a glance on his Ausonian children and the fields of Lavinium? |
virgil-aeneid-1203 | with what force, what arms dare his rescue? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | ''Certainly,''he will answer,''for is not health the greatest good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | ''What is the use of coming to you, Gorgias?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | ), with the making of garments? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | All this is a hindrance to them; there are the clothes of the judges and the clothes of the judged.--What is to be done? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Am I not right Callicles? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Am I not right in my recollection? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Am I not right? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And I am going to ask-- what is this power of persuasion which is given by rhetoric, and about what? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And I would have you observe, that I am right in asking this further question: If I asked,''What sort of a painter is Zeuxis?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And I would still ask, whether you say that pleasure and good are the same, or whether there is some pleasure which is not a good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And do you consider wealth to be the greatest good of man? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And do you mean to say also that if he meets with retribution and punishment he will still be happy? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And if he asked again:''What is the art of calculation?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And if he further said,''Concerned with what?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And is not the soul which has an order of her own better than that which has no order? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And is not the virtue of each thing dependent on order or arrangement? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And is the pleasant to be pursued for the sake of the good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And must he not be courageous? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And of harp- playing and dithyrambic poetry in general, what would you say? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And suppose, again, I were to say that astronomy is only words-- he would ask,''Words about what, Socrates?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And that is pleasant at the presence of which we are pleased, and that is good at the presence of which we are good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And that which is orderly is temperate? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And that which makes a thing good is the proper order inhering in each thing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And the soul which has order is orderly? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And the temperate soul is good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And then he will be sure to go on and ask,''What good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And then he would proceed to ask:''Words about what?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And we are good, and all good things whatever are good when some virtue is present in us or them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And what do you say of that other rhetoric which addresses the Athenian assembly and the assemblies of freemen in other states? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And what is my sort? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And what knowledge can be nobler? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And when I ask, Who are you? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And who are you? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And will not the temperate man do what is proper, both in relation to the gods and to men;--for he would not be temperate if he did not? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And yet, on your principle, what justice or reason is there in your refusal? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | And you would admit that to drink, when you are thirsty, is pleasant? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Are the superior and better and stronger the same or different? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | At your age, Socrates, are you not ashamed to be catching at words and chuckling over some verbal slip? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Both the wise man and the brave man we allow to be good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | But I shall not tell him whether rhetoric is a fine thing or not, until I have first answered,''What is rhetoric?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | But do you really suppose that I or any other human being denies that some pleasures are good and others bad? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | But if we, Polus, are right, do you see what follows, or shall we draw out the consequences in form? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | But please to refresh my memory a little; did you say--''in an unjust attempt to make himself a tyrant''? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | But to return to our argument:--Does not a man cease from thirsting and from the pleasure of drinking at the same moment? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | But why, if I have a suspicion, do I ask instead of telling you? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | But, my good friend, where is the refutation? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: And do you think, Socrates, that a man who is thus defenceless is in a good position? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: And is not that just the provoking thing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: And what difference does that make? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: And what does our friend Socrates, of Foxton, say-- does he assent to this, or not? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: And you are the man who can not speak unless there is some one to answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Are you not ashamed, Socrates, of introducing such topics into the argument? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Can not you finish without my help, either talking straight on, or questioning and answering yourself? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Do you want me to agree with you? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: I suppose that you mean health and strength? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Quite so, Socrates; and they are really fools, for how can a man be happy who is the servant of anything? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Tell me, Chaerephon, is Socrates in earnest, or is he joking? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Well, but how does that prove Pericles''badness? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: What do you mean by his''ruling over himself''? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: What do you mean? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: What do you mean? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: What is the matter, Chaerephon-- does Socrates want to hear Gorgias? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: What is your meaning, Socrates? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Why not give the name yourself, Socrates? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Why? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Yes, I do; but what is the inference? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Yes, but why talk of men who are good for nothing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CALLICLES: Yes, certainly; but what is your drift? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CHAEREPHON: And do you, Polus, think that you can answer better than Gorgias? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CHAEREPHON: And if he had the skill of Aristophon the son of Aglaophon, or of his brother Polygnotus, what ought we to call him? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CHAEREPHON: Then we should be right in calling him a physician? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CHAEREPHON: What do you mean? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | CHAEREPHON: What shall I ask him? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Can anything be more irrational, my friends, than this? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Consider:--You would say that to suffer punishment is another name for being justly corrected when you do wrong? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Could he be said to regard even their pleasure? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Did he perform with any view to the good of his hearers? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Did not the very persons whom he was serving ostracize him, in order that they might not hear his voice for ten years? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Did you not say, that suffering wrong was more evil, and doing wrong more disgraceful? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Do I make any impression on you, and are you coming over to the opinion that the orderly are happier than the intemperate? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Do I not convince you that the opposite is the truth? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Do you know any other effect of rhetoric over and above that of producing persuasion? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Do you laugh, Polus? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Do you mean that your art produces the greatest good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Do you not agree? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Do you say''Yes''or''No''to that? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Do you understand? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Does not that appear to be an art which seeks only pleasure, Callicles, and thinks of nothing else? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Does not the art of making money? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Does not the art of medicine? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | For on what principle of justice did Xerxes invade Hellas, or his father the Scythians? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | For that would not be right, Polus; but I shall be happy to answer, if you will ask me, What part of flattery is rhetoric? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | For will any one ever acknowledge that he does not know, or can not teach, the nature of justice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | For you were saying just now that the courageous and the wise are the good-- would you not say so? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | GORGIAS: A part of what, Socrates? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | GORGIAS: Then why not ask him yourself? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | GORGIAS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | GORGIAS: What is coming, Socrates? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | GORGIAS: What matter? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | GORGIAS: Yes, I know the song; but what is your drift? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Have they not been invented wholly for the sake of pleasure? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Have they not very great power in states? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Have we not already admitted many times over that such is the duty of a public man? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | How then can pleasure be the same as good, or pain as evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | How will you answer them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | I mean to ask whether a man will escape injustice if he has only the will to escape, or must he have provided himself with the power? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | I mean to say-- Does he who teaches anything persuade men of that which he teaches or not? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | I mean, for example, that if a man strikes, there must be something which is stricken? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | I was saying that to do is worse than to suffer injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | If we admit what has been just now said, every man ought in every way to guard himself against doing wrong, for he will thereby suffer great evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | In the first place, what say you of flute- playing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is not suffering injustice a greater evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is not that true? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is not this a fact? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is not this true? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is not this, as they say, to begin with the big jar when you are learning the potter''s art; which is a foolish thing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is that the paradox which, as you say, can not be refuted? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is the final result, that he gets rid of them both together? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is there any comparison between him and the pleader? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Is this true? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Look at the matter in this way:--In respect of a man''s estate, do you see any greater evil than poverty? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | May I ask then whether you will answer in turn and have your words put to the proof? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | May I assume this to be your opinion? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Must not the defence be one which will avert the greatest of human evils? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Must not the very opposite be true,--if he is to be like the tyrant in his injustice, and to have influence with him? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Must we not try and make them as good as possible? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | No other answer can I give, Callicles dear; have you any? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Or do I fail to persuade you, and, however many tales I rehearse to you, do you continue of the same opinion still? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Or must the pupil know these things and come to you knowing them before he can acquire the art of rhetoric? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Or will you be unable to teach him rhetoric at all, unless he knows the truth of these things first? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Or would you venture to say, that they too are happy, if they only get enough of what they want? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Ought he not to have the name which is given to his brother? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: An experience in what? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And I should say neither I, nor any man: would you yourself, for example, suffer rather than do injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And are the good rhetoricians meanly regarded in states, under the idea that they are flatterers? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And are those of whom I spoke wretches? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And can not you tell at once, and without having an acquaintance with him, whether a man is happy? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And do even you, Socrates, seriously believe what you are now saying about rhetoric? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And do you think that he is happy or miserable? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And if able to gratify others, must not rhetoric be a fine thing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And is not that a great power? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And noble or ignoble? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: And so you think that he who slays any one whom he pleases, and justly slays him, is pitiable and wretched? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Ask:-- CHAEREPHON: My question is this: If Gorgias had the skill of his brother Herodicus, what ought we to call him? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: At any rate you will allow that he who is unjustly put to death is wretched, and to be pitied? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: But do you not think, Socrates, that you have been sufficiently refuted, when you say that which no human being will allow? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: But is it the greatest? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: But they do what they think best? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Did I not hear you say that rhetoric was a sort of experience? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Does rhetoric seem to you to be an experience? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: How can that be, Socrates? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: How not regarded? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: How two questions? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: I will ask and do you answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: I will ask; and do you answer me, Socrates, the same question which Gorgias, as you suppose, is unable to answer: What is rhetoric? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: In either case is he not equally to be envied? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: In what? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Of what profession? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Then are cookery and rhetoric the same? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Then clearly, Socrates, you would say that you did not even know whether the great king was a happy man? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Then surely they do as they will? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Then what, in your opinion, is rhetoric? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Then would you rather suffer than do injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Then you would not wish to be a tyrant? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Then, according to your doctrine, the said Archelaus is miserable? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Were you not saying just now that he is wretched? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: What do you mean? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: What do you mean? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: What does that matter if I answer well enough for you? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: What makes you say so, Socrates? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: What sort of an art is cookery? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: What then? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: What thing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Why''forbear''? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Why, did I not say that it was the noblest of arts? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Why, have you not already said that they do as they think best? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: Will you enumerate them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: You are hard of refutation, Socrates, but might not a child refute that statement? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | POLUS: You see, I presume, that Archelaus the son of Perdiccas is now the ruler of Macedonia? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Perhaps, however, you do not even now understand what I mean? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: A useful thing, then? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: About that you and I may be supposed to agree? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Again, if we take the arts of which we were just now speaking:--do not arithmetic and the arithmeticians teach us the properties of number? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Again, in a man''s bodily frame, you would say that the evil is weakness and disease and deformity? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Although he is not a physician:--is he? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And I affirm that he is most miserable, and that those who are punished are less miserable-- are you going to refute this proposition also? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And a foolish man too? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And according to the argument the rhetorician must be a just man? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And are not all things either good or evil, or intermediate and indifferent? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And are not just men gentle, as Homer says?--or are you of another mind? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And are not these pleasures or goods present to those who rejoice-- if they do rejoice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And are only the cowards pained at the approach of their enemies, or are the brave also pained? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And are they equally pained? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And are they not better pleased at the enemy''s departure? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And are we late for a feast? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And are we to say that you are able to make other men rhetoricians? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And as for the Muse of Tragedy, that solemn and august personage-- what are her aspirations? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And deformity or disgrace may be equally measured by the opposite standard of pain and evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And did you ever see a sensible man rejoicing or sorrowing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And did you never see a foolish child rejoicing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And do not the poets in the theatres seem to you to be rhetoricians? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And do not those who rightly punish others, punish them in accordance with a certain rule of justice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And do you call the fools and cowards good men? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And do you mean by the better the same as the superior? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And do you not imagine that the soul likewise has some evil of her own? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And do you, Callicles, seriously maintain what you are saying? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And does he have and not have good and happiness, and their opposites, evil and misery, in a similar alternation? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And does not gymnastic also treat of discourse concerning the good or evil condition of the body? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And does not the same argument hold of the soul, my good sir? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And does not the same hold in all other cases? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And further, that to suffer punishment is the way to be released from this evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he has the second place, who is delivered from vice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he is to be thirsting and drinking? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he may have strength and weakness in the same way, by fits? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he who has joy is good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he who has learned medicine is a physician, in like manner? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he who has learned music a musician? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he who is in pain is evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he who is just may be supposed to do what is just? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And he who punishes rightly, punishes justly? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if a man burns, there is something which is burned? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if he burns in excess or so as to cause pain, the thing burned will be burned in the same way? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if he cuts, the same argument holds-- there will be something cut? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if he is hungry, or has any other desire, does he not cease from the desire and the pleasure at the same moment? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if pleasantly, then also happily? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if the cutting be great or deep or such as will cause pain, the cut will be of the same nature? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if the most disgraceful, then also the worst? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if the striker strikes violently or quickly, that which is struck will be struck violently or quickly? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if they were more savage, must they not have been more unjust and inferior? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And if what is honourable, then what is good, for the honourable is either pleasant or useful? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And in pain? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And in the same way there are good pains and there are evil pains? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And in the same way, he who has learned what is just is just? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And in the sentence which you have just uttered, the word''thirsty''implies pain? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And in this way he will have accomplished, as you and your friends would say, the end of becoming a great man and not suffering injury? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And is he not then delivered from the greatest evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And is not that the sort of thing, Callicles, which we were just now describing as flattery? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And is not the same true of all similar arts, as, for example, the art of playing the lyre at festivals? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And is not this universally true? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And is the''having learned''the same as''having believed,''and are learning and belief the same things? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And is this notion true of one soul, or of two or more? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And it has been proved to be true? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And justice punishes us, and makes us more just, and is the medicine of our vice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And justice, if the best, gives the greatest pleasure or advantage or both? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And may not the same be said of the beauty of knowledge? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And most disgraceful either because most painful and causing excessive pain, or most hurtful, or both? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And music is concerned with the composition of melodies? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And must not the just man always desire to do what is just? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And must we not have the same end in view in the treatment of our city and citizens? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And not to suffer, is to perpetuate the evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And now injustice and all evil in the soul has been admitted by us to be most disgraceful? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And now let us have from you, Gorgias, the truth about rhetoric: which you would admit( would you not?) |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And now, which will you do, ask or answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And of two deformed things, that which exceeds in deformity or disgrace, exceeds either in pain or evil-- must it not be so? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And ought not the better to have a larger share? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And ought we not to choose and use the good pleasures and pains? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And punishment is an evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And since they are superior, the laws which are made by them are by nature good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And suffering implies an agent? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And that is now discovered to be more evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And that which exceeds most in hurtfulness will be the greatest of evils? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And that which is just has been admitted to be honourable? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the beneficial are those which do some good, and the hurtful are those which do some evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the foolish man and the coward to be evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the foolish; so it would seem? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the greater disgrace is the greater evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the one which had pleasure in view was just a vulgar flattery:--was not that another of our conclusions? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the other had in view the greatest improvement of that which was ministered to, whether body or soul? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the reason for asking this second question would be, that there are other painters besides, who paint many other figures? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the same is true of a ship? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the same may be said of the human body? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the suffering to him who is stricken is of the same nature as the act of him who strikes? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And the word''drinking''is expressive of pleasure, and of the satisfaction of the want? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And there is also''having believed''? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And therefore he acts justly? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And therefore persuade us of them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And therefore to be unjust and intemperate, and cowardly and ignorant, is more painful than to be poor and sick? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And thirst, too, is painful? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And this speech is addressed to a crowd of people? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And this you would call injustice and ignorance and cowardice, and the like? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And those who are in pain have evil or sorrow present with them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And to restrain her from her appetites is to chastise her? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And to understand that about which they speak? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And to whom do we go with the unjust and intemperate? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And was not Pericles a shepherd of men? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And was not punishment said by us to be a deliverance from the greatest of evils, which is vice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And were you not saying just now, that some courage implied knowledge? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And what art frees us from disease? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And what art will protect us from suffering injustice, if not wholly, yet as far as possible? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And what do you say of doing injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And what do you say of his father, Meles the harp- player? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And what do you say of the choral art and of dithyrambic poetry?--are not they of the same nature? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And what from vice and injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And what would you consider this to be? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And what would you say of the soul? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And when he has got rid of his ophthalmia, has he got rid of the health of his eyes too? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And when we kill a man we kill him or exile him or despoil him of his goods, because, as we think, it will conduce to our good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And which of the evils is the most disgraceful?--Is not the most disgraceful of them injustice, and in general the evil of the soul? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And which rejoiced most at the departure of the enemy, the coward or the brave? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And why? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And will not the patient suffer that which the agent does, and will not the suffering have the quality of the action? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And will therefore never be willing to do injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And will you also do me the favour of saying whether man is an animal? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And would he be the happier man in his bodily condition, who is healed, or who never was out of health? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And would you maintain that if a fool does what he thinks best, this is a good, and would you call this great power? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And would you not allow that all just things are honourable in so far as they are just? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And would you prefer a greater evil or a greater dishonour to a less one? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And would you say that courage differed from pleasure? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And would you say that pleasure and knowledge are the same, or not the same? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And would you still say that the evil are evil by reason of the presence of evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And yet rhetoric makes men able to speak? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And yet those who have learned as well as those who have believed are persuaded? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And you said the opposite? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And you were speaking of courage and knowledge as two things different from one another? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And you would call sounds and music beautiful for the same reason? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And you, like him, invite any one to ask you about anything which he pleases, and you will know how to answer him? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: And, therefore, when Pericles first began to speak in the assembly, the Athenians were not so good as when he spoke last? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Are these indifferent things done for the sake of the good, or the good for the sake of the indifferent? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But can every man choose what pleasures are good and what are evil, or must he have art or knowledge of them in detail? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But can you tell me why you disapprove of such a power? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But does he do what he wills if he does what is evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But does not the art of medicine, which we were just now mentioning, also make men able to understand and speak about the sick? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But have not you and the world already agreed that to do injustice is more disgraceful than to suffer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But he does not cease from good and evil at the same moment, as you have admitted: do you still adhere to what you said? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But he surely can not have the same eyes well and sound at the same time? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But if he is to have more power of persuasion than the physician, he will have greater power than he who knows? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But if not in pain, then not in both? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But if there had been no one but Zeuxis who painted them, then you would have answered very well? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But if they were good, then clearly each of them must have made the citizens better instead of worse? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But is the being healed a pleasant thing, and are those who are being healed pleased? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But not the evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But now we are affirming that the aforesaid rhetorician will never have done injustice at all? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But surely the wise and brave are the good, and the foolish and the cowardly are the bad? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But then again, what was the observation which you just now made, about doing and suffering wrong? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But what if the itching is not confined to the head? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But whether rulers or subjects will they or will they not have more than themselves, my friend? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But will he also escape from doing injury? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But will you answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: But you admitted, that when in pain a man might also have pleasure? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Consider again:--Where there is an agent, must there not also be a patient? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Do I understand you to mean what I mean by the term''benefited''? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Do men appear to you to will that which they do, or to will that further end for the sake of which they do a thing? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Do you mean that you will teach him to gain the ears of the multitude on any subject, and this not by instruction but by persuasion? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Do you mean what sort of an art? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Do you never hear our professors of education speaking in this inconsistent manner? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Do you see the inference:--that pleasure and pain are simultaneous, when you say that being thirsty, you drink? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Does not a man cease from his thirst and from his pleasure in drinking at the same time? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Enough: And did you ever see a coward in battle? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: For in my opinion there is no profit in a man''s life if his body is in an evil plight-- in that case his life also is evil: am I not right? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Go back now to our former admissions.--Did you say that to hunger, I mean the mere state of hunger, was pleasant or painful? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Have the wise man and the fool, the brave and the coward, joy and pain in nearly equal degrees? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: I am glad to hear it; answer me in like manner about rhetoric: with what is rhetoric concerned? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: I know; but still the actual hunger is painful: am I not right? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: I said also that the wicked are miserable, and you refuted me? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: I suppose that he is affected by them, and gets rid of them in turns? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: I understand you to say, if I am not mistaken, that the honourable is not the same as the good, or the disgraceful as the evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: If then there be anything which a man has and has not at the same time, clearly that can not be good and evil-- do we agree? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Is it not a fact that injustice, and the doing of injustice, is the greatest of evils? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Is not this the conclusion, if the premises are not disproven? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Is that a question or the beginning of a speech? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Justly or unjustly, do you mean? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Laws and institutions also have no beauty in them except in so far as they are useful or pleasant or both? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Listen to me, then, while I recapitulate the argument:--Is the pleasant the same as the good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Men who do any of these things do them for the sake of the good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Must I then say with Epicharmus,''Two men spoke before, but now one shall be enough''? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Nay, I said a part of flattery; if at your age, Polus, you can not remember, what will you do by- and- by, when you get older? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Need I adduce any more instances, or would you agree that all wants or desires are painful? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: No matter; then the cowards, and not only the brave, rejoice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Now I want to know about rhetoric in the same way;--is rhetoric the only art which brings persuasion, or do other arts have the same effect? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Now, what art is there which delivers us from poverty? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Of discourse concerning diseases? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: On the other hand, if the unjust be not punished, then, according to you, he will be happy? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Or swiftness and slowness? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Say rather, Polus, impossible; for who can refute the truth? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Shall we then assume two sorts of persuasion,--one which is the source of belief without knowledge, as the other is of knowledge? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: So then, in mind, body, and estate, which are three, you have pointed out three corresponding evils-- injustice, disease, poverty? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Such treatment will be better for the soul herself? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Surely, then, the just man will never consent to do injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Take the case of any bodily affection:--a man may have the complaint in his eyes which is called ophthalmia? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Tell me, then, when do you say that they are good and when that they are evil-- what principle do you lay down? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: That again, Gorgias is ambiguous; I am still in the dark: for which are the greatest and best of human things? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: That is to say, he who receives admonition and rebuke and punishment? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: That is to say, in evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: That would surely be marvellous and absurd? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: The beneficial are good, and the hurtful are evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: The degrees of good and evil vary with the degrees of pleasure and of pain? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: The flatterer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: The good and evil both have joy and pain, but, perhaps, the evil has more of them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then I am to call you a rhetorician? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then I was right in saying that a man may do what seems good to him in a state, and not have great power, and not do what he wills? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then a man may delight a whole assembly, and yet have no regard for their true interests? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then are the good and bad good and bad in a nearly equal degree, or have the bad the advantage both in good and evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then arithmetic as well as rhetoric is an artificer of persuasion? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then doing injustice will have an excess of evil, and will therefore be a greater evil than suffering injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then he ceases from pain and pleasure at the same moment? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then he is benefited? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then he lives worst, who, having been unjust, has no deliverance from injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then he who is punished and suffers retribution, suffers justly? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then he who is punished is delivered from the evil of his soul? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then he who is punished suffers what is good? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then if great power is a good as you allow, will such a one have great power in a state? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then injustice and intemperance, and in general the depravity of the soul, are the greatest of evils? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then let me raise another question; there is such a thing as''having learned''? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then medicine also treats of discourse? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then pleasure is not the same as good fortune, or pain the same as evil fortune, and therefore the good is not the same as the pleasant? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then poetry is a sort of rhetoric? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then restraint or chastisement is better for the soul than intemperance or the absence of control, which you were just now preferring? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then rhetoric does not treat of all kinds of discourse? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then rhetoric is not the only artificer of persuasion? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then the art of money- making frees a man from poverty; medicine from disease; and justice from intemperance and injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then the good and the bad are pleased and pained in a nearly equal degree? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then the house in which order and regularity prevail is good; that in which there is disorder, evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then the laws of the many are the laws of the superior? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then the many are by nature superior to the one, against whom, as you were saying, they make the laws? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then the punisher does what is honourable, and the punished suffers what is honourable? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then they are the laws of the better; for the superior class are far better, as you were saying? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then they can only exceed in the other? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then they do not exceed in pain? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then those who rejoice are good when goods are present with them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then those who rejoice are good, and those who are in pain evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then those who want nothing are not truly said to be happy? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then to which service of the State do you invite me? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then upon this view, Pericles was not a good statesman? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then we have found the reason why there is no dishonour in a man receiving pay who is called in to advise about building or any other art? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then, as this is admitted, let me ask whether being punished is suffering or acting? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then, as would appear, power and art have to be provided in order that we may do no injustice? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then, as you are in earnest, shall we proceed with the argument? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Then, if you approve the question, Gorgias, what is the answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: There is pleasure in drinking? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: To do wrong, then, is second only in the scale of evils; but to do wrong and not to be punished, is first and greatest of all? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Very good, Callicles; but will he answer our questions? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Well now, suppose that we strip all poetry of song and rhythm and metre, there will remain speech? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Well, Polus, but if this is true, where is the great use of rhetoric? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Well, and is not he who has learned carpentering a carpenter? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Well, and was not this the point in dispute, my friend? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Well, but do you admit that the wiser is the better? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Well, but is there a false knowledge as well as a true? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Well, if you are willing to proceed, determine this question for me:--There is something, I presume, which you would call knowledge? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Well, my friend, but what do you think of swimming; is that an art of any great pretensions? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: What are we to do, then? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: What are you saying, Polus? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: What events? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: What is the name which is given to the effect of harmony and order in the body? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: What sort of discourse, Gorgias?--such discourse as would teach the sick under what treatment they might get well? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: When you are thirsty? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Which condition may not be really good, but good only in appearance? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Which rejoice and sorrow most-- the wise or the foolish? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Which, then, is the best of these three? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Why then? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Why, did you not say just now that the rhetoricians are like tyrants, and that they kill and despoil or exile any one whom they please? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Will you ask me, what sort of an art is cookery? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Will you understand my answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Will you, who are so desirous to gratify others, afford a slight gratification to me? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Wisdom and health and wealth and the like you would call goods, and their opposites evils? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Words which do what? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Would any other man prefer a greater to a less evil? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Would he not be utterly at a loss for a reply? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Yes, I do; and what is the name which you would give to the effect of harmony and order in the soul? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: Yes, because the patient is delivered from a great evil; and this is the advantage of enduring the pain-- that you get well? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: You further said that the wrong- doer is happy if he be unpunished? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: You said also, that no man could have good and evil fortune at the same time? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: You were saying, in fact, that the rhetorician will have greater powers of persuasion than the physician even in a matter of health? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES: You would further admit that there is a good condition of either of them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | SOCRATES:--Who are to punish them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Shall I pursue the question? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Shall I tell you why I anticipate this? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Shall I tell you why I think so? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Shall we break off in the middle? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Shall we say that? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Such are their respective lives:--And now would you say that the life of the intemperate is happier than that of the temperate? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Tell me, Callicles, if a person were to ask these questions of you, what would you answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Tell me, Socrates, are you in earnest, or only in jest? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Tell me, then, Callicles, how about making any of the citizens better? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Then these are the points at issue between us-- are they not? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | This is what I believe that you mean( and you must not suppose that I am word- catching), if you allow that the one is superior to the ten thousand? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | To him again I shall say, Who are you, honest friend, and what is your business? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | To what class of things do the words which rhetoric uses relate? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Was not this said? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Was there ever a man who was once vicious, or unjust, or intemperate, or foolish, and became by the help of Callicles good and noble? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Was there ever such a man, whether citizen or stranger, slave or freeman? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | We may assume the existence of bodies and of souls? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Well, you and I say to him, and are you a creator of wealth? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What do you mean? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What do you say? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What do you say? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What do you suppose that the physician would be able to reply when he found himself in such a predicament? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What greater good can men have, Socrates?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What is to be said about all this? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What nonsense are you talking? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What part of flattery is rhetoric? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | What right have you to despise the engine- maker, and the others whom I was just now mentioning? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | When the assembly meets to elect a physician or a shipwright or any other craftsman, will the rhetorician be taken into counsel? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Whom would you say that you had improved by your conversation? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Why are you silent, Polus? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Why do I say this? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Why do you ask me whether rhetoric is a fine thing or not, when I have not as yet told you what rhetoric is? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Why do you not answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Why will you not answer? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Will he not rather contrive to do as much wrong as possible, and not be punished? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Will the good soul be that in which disorder is prevalent, or that in which there is harmony and order? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Will you keep your promise, and answer shortly the questions which are asked of you? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | Would he not be a bad manager of any animals who received them gentle, and made them fiercer than they were when he received them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | You say that you can make any man, who will learn of you, a rhetorician? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | You will admit, I suppose, that good and evil fortune are opposed to each other? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | and does all happiness consist in this? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | and was any one else ever known to be cured by him, whether slave or freeman? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | and you said,''The painter of figures,''should I not be right in asking,''What kind of figures, and where do you find them?'' |
plato-gorgias-1228 | are they not like tyrants? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | did you never hear that Themistocles was a good man, and Cimon and Miltiades and Pericles, who is just lately dead, and whom you heard yourself? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | do you mean that I may not use as many words as I please? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | do you think that rhetoric is flattery? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | must he have the power, or only the will to obtain them? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | my philosopher, is that your line? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | or the good for the sake of the pleasant? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | or what ignorance more disgraceful than this? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | or would you say that the coward has more? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | to be one of those arts which act always and fulfil all their ends through the medium of words? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | will you ask him, Chaerephon--? |
plato-gorgias-1228 | you mean those fools,--the temperate? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is that it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | No,they say;"What then? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What ails us? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then? augustine-confessions-2111 What then?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What will ye say then, O ye gainsayers? augustine-confessions-2111 What?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where art thou now, my tongue? augustine-confessions-2111 are they to be esteemed righteous who had many wives at once, and did kill men, and sacrifice living creatures?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | is God bounded by a bodily shape, and has hairs and nails? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | that it was idly said, and without meaning? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | ( for to such creatures, is this food due;) what is it that feeds thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | A man hath murdered another; why? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Again, if he asked had I rather be such as he was, or what I then was? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Am I not then myself, O Lord my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Am I then doubtful of myself in this matter? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Ambition, what seeks it, but honours and glory? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Ambrose has no leisure; we have no leisure to read; where shall we find even the books? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And I am admonished,"Truly the things of God knoweth no one, but the Spirit of God: how then do we also know, what things are given us of God?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And I said,"Is Truth therefore nothing because it is not diffused through space finite or infinite?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And I said,"Lord, is not this Thy Scripture true, since Thou art true, and being Truth, hast set it forth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And I turned myself unto myself, and said to myself,"Who art thou?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And doth not a soul, sighing after such fictions, commit fornication against Thee, trust in things unreal, and feed the wind? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And from Thee, O Lord, unto whose eyes the abyss of man''s conscience is naked, what could be hidden in me though I would not confess it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And how have they injured Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And how shall I call upon my God, my God and Lord, since, when I call for Him, I shall be calling Him to myself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And how shall I find Thee, if I remember Thee not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And if any should ask me,"How knowest thou?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man''s, who shall give you that which is your own? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And is this the innocence of boyhood? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And is, then one part of Thee greater, another less? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And she smiled on me with a persuasive mockery, as would she say,"Canst not thou what these youths, what these maidens can? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And that very long one do I measure as present, seeing I measure it not till it be ended? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And the prophet cries out, How long, slow of heart? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And then mark how he excites himself to lust as by celestial authority:"And what God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And this changeableness, what is it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And to what end? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And to what purpose? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what can be unlooked- for by Thee, Who knowest all things? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what could I so ill endure, or, when I detected it, upbraided I so fiercely, as that I was doing to others? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what had I now said, my God, my life, my holy joy? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what have we, that we have not received of Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what is it to have silence there, but to have no sound there? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what is like unto Thy Word, our Lord, who endureth in Himself without becoming old, and maketh all things new? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what is this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what man can teach man to understand this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what more monstrous than to affirm things to become better by losing all their good? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what should we more say,"why that substance which God is should not be corruptible,"seeing if it were so, it should not be God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what was it that I delighted in, but to love, and be loved? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what was it which they suggested in that I said,"this or that,"what did they suggest, O my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what, O Lord, was she with so many tears asking of Thee, but that Thou wouldest not suffer me to sail? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And what, among all parts of the world can be found nearer to an absolute formlessness, than earth and deep? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And when shall I have time to rehearse all Thy great benefits towards us at that time, especially when hasting on to yet greater mercies? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And when shall that be? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And whence does that present itself, but out of the memory itself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And whence is it that often even in sleep we resist, and mindful of our purpose, and abiding most chastely in it, yield no assent to such enticements? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And whence should he be able to do this, unless Thou hadst made that mind? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And whence should they be, hadst not Thou appointed them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And where do I recognise it, but in the memory itself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And where shall I find Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And where should that be, which it containeth not of itself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And where would have been those her so strong and unceasing prayers, unintermitting to Thee alone? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And whither, when the heaven and the earth are filled, pourest Thou forth the remainder of Thyself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who but Thou could be the workmaster of such wonders? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who denies past things to be now no longer? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who denieth the present time hath no space, because it passeth away in a moment? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who has any right to speak against it, if just punishment follow the sinner? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who is He but our God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who is he, O Lord, who is not some whit transported beyond the limits of necessity? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who is sufficient for these things? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who is this but our God, the God that made heaven and earth, and filleth them, because by filling them He created them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who leaveth Thee, whither goeth or whither teeth he, but from Thee well- pleased, to Thee displeased? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And who there knew him not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And whose but Thine were these words which by my mother, Thy faithful one, Thou sangest in my ears? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And why seek I now in what place thereof Thou dwellest, as if there were places therein? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And yet whence was this too, but from the sin and vanity of this life, because I was flesh, and a breath that passeth away and cometh not again? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | And, not indeed in these words, yet to this purpose, spake I much unto Thee: and Thou, O Lord, how long? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Anger seeks revenge: who revenges more justly than Thou? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Are an hundred years, when present, a long time? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Are griefs then too loved? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Are these things false?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Are we ashamed to follow, because others are gone before, and not ashamed not even to follow?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | As if He had been in place, Who is not in place, of Whom only it is written, that He is Thy gift? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | As then we remember joy? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | As we remember eloquence then? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | As we remember numbers then? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | BOOK VI O Thou, my hope from my youth, where wert Thou to me, and whither wert Thou gone? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | BOOK XI Lord, since eternity is Thine, art Thou ignorant of what I say to Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Because none doth ordinarily laugh alone? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Before them what more foul than I was already, displeasing even such as myself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Behold, I too say, O my God, Where art Thou? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But I would not be asked,"Why then doth God err?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But Thou who fillest all things, fillest Thou them with Thy whole self? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But again I said, Who made me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But art thou any thing, that thus I speak to thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But didst Thou fail me even by that old man, or forbear to heal my soul? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But do I depart any whither? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But do I perceive it, or seem to perceive it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But for what fruit would they hear this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But hast not Thou, O most merciful Lord, pardoned and remitted this sin also, with my other most horrible and deadly sins, in the holy water? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But how didst Thou make the heaven and the earth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But how didst Thou speak? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But how dost Thou make them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But how is that future diminished or consumed, which as yet is not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But how know we this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But if before heaven and earth there was no time, why is it demanded, what Thou then didst? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But if the will of God has been from eternity that the creature should be, why was not the creature also from eternity?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But in these things is no place of repose; they abide not, they flee; and who can follow them with the senses of the flesh? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But in what sense is that long or short, which is not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But is it also in grief for a thing lost, and the sorrow wherewith I was then overwhelmed? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But is it so, as one remembers Carthage who hath seen it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But now when I hear that there be three kinds of questions,"Whether the thing be? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But should any ask me, had I rather be merry or fearful? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But time present how do we measure, seeing it hath no space? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But was not either the Father, or the Son, borne above the waters? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But we measure times as they are passing, by perceiving them; but past, which now are not, or the future, which are not yet, who can measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what availed the utmost neatness of the cup- bearer to my thirst for a more precious draught? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what did this further me, imagining that Thou, O Lord God, the Truth, wert a vast and bright body, and I a fragment of that body? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what do I love, when I love Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what foul offences can there be against Thee, who canst not be defiled? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what in discourse do we mention more familiarly and knowingly, than time? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what is forgetfulness, but the privation of memory? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what is nearer to me than myself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what is this, and what kind of mystery? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what pain? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what prouder, than for me with a strange madness to maintain myself to be that by nature which Thou art? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what sort of compassion is this for feigned and scenical passions? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what sort of man is any man, seeing he is but a man? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what speak I of these things? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what was the cause, O true- speaking Light? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But what when the memory itself loses any thing, as falls out when we forget and seek that we may recollect? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But when it was present, how did it write its image in the memory, seeing that forgetfulness by its presence effaces even what it finds already noted? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But when then pay we court to our great friends, whose favour we need? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But whence had it this degree of being, but from Thee, from Whom are all things, so far forth as they are? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But whence should I know, whether he spake truth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But whence, by what way, and whither passes it while it is a measuring? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But where in my memory residest Thou, O Lord, where residest Thou there? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But where shall it be sought or when? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But where was I, when I was seeking Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But wherefore was it not meet that the knowledge of Him should be conveyed otherwise, than as being borne above? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But whether by images or no, who can readily say? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But whither ascend ye, when ye are on high, and set your mouth against the heavens? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But whither goes that vein? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But who shall cleanse it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But whosoever reckons up his real merits to Thee, what reckons he up to Thee but Thine own gifts? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But why did I so much hate the Greek, which I studied as a boy? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But why doth"truth generate hatred,"and the man of Thine, preaching the truth, become an enemy to them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But yet what was it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But yet who bade that Manichaeus write on these things also, skill in which was no element of piety? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | But yet, O my God, Who madest us, what comparison is there betwixt that honour that I paid to her, and her slavery for me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | By remembrance, as though I had forgotten it, remembering that I had forgotten it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | By what Word then didst Thou speak, that a body might be made, whereby these words again might be made? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | By what way dost Thou, to whom nothing is to come, teach things to come; or rather of the future, dost teach things present? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | By which of these ought I to seek my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Can it at any time or place be unjust to love God with all his heart, with all his soul, and with all his mind; and his neighbour as himself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Can my hand do this, or the hand of my mouth by speech bring about a thing so great? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Can our hopes in court rise higher than to be the Emperor''s favourites? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Could it be measured the rather, for that? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Did not I read in thee of Jove the thunderer and the adulterer? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Did not my God, Who is not only good, but goodness itself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Did the whole tumult of my soul, for which neither time nor utterance sufficed, reach them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Didst Thou then indeed hold Thy peace to me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Do I then love in a man, what I hate to be, who am a man? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Do I then measure, O my God, and know not what I measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Do not divers wills distract the mind, while he deliberates which he should rather choose? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Do the heaven and earth then contain Thee, since Thou fillest them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Do they desire to joy with me, when they hear how near, by Thy gift, I approach unto Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Does not my soul most truly confess unto Thee, that I do measure times? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Does the memory perchance not belong to the mind? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Dost Thou bid me assent, if any define time to be"motion of a body?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Dost Thou mock me for asking this, and bid me praise Thee and acknowledge Thee, for that I do know? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Doth then, O Lord God of truth, whoso knoweth these things, therefore please Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Doth this sweeten it, that we hope Thou hearest? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Envy disputes for excellency: what more excellent than Thou? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Even now, after the descent of Life to you, will ye not ascend and live? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For I ask any one, had he rather joy in truth, or in falsehood? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For I ask them, is it good to take pleasure in reading the Apostle? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For had I then parted hence, whither had I departed, but into fire and torments, such as my misdeeds deserved in the truth of Thy appointment? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For had there been light, where should it have been but by being over all, aloft, and enlightening? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For his presence did not lessen my privacy; or how could he forsake me so disturbed? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For how much better are the fables of poets and grammarians than these snares? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For how should He, by the crucifixion of a phantasm, which I believed Him to be? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For how should there be a blessed life where life itself is not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For if He made, what did He make but a creature? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For if Thine ears be not with us in the depths also, whither shall we go? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For if they be comprised in this word earth; how then can formless matter be meant in that name of earth, when we see the waters so beautiful? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For if( say they) He were unemployed and wrought not, why does He not also henceforth, and for ever, as He did heretofore? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For that past time which was long, was it long when it was now past, or when it was yet present? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For then I ask myself how much more or less troublesome it is to me not to have them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what am I to myself without Thee, but a guide to mine own downfall? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what did heaven and earth, which Thou madest in the Beginning, deserve of Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what else is it to feed the wind, but to feed them, that is by going astray to become their pleasure and derision? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what is it to hear from Thee of themselves, but to know themselves? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what is nearer to Thine ears than a confessing heart, and a life of faith? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what is time? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what is, but because Thou art? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of a man, which is in him? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what mortal can? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what other place is there for such a soul? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what pleasure hath it, to see in a mangled carcase what will make you shudder? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what profited me good abilities, not employed to good uses? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what shall I say, when it is clear to me that I remember forgetfulness? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what thief will abide a thief? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what would I say, O Lord my God, but that I know not whence I came into this dying life( shall I call it?) |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For what, I beseech Thee, O my God, do I measure, when I say, either indefinitely"this is a longer time than that,"or definitely"this is double that"? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For when a body is moved, I by time measure, how long it moveth, from the time it began to move until it left off? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For when it was found, whence should she know whether it were the same, unless she remembered it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For whence could innumerable ages pass by, which Thou madest not, Thou the Author and Creator of all ages? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For whence else is this hesitation between conflicting wills? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For whence shouldest Thou have this, which Thou hadst not made, thereof to make any thing? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For where did they, who foretold things to come, see them, if as yet they be not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For where doth he not find Thy law in his own punishment? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For where was that charity building upon the foundation of humility, which is Christ Jesus? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For whither fled they, when they fled from Thy presence? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For whither should my heart flee from my heart? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For who discerneth us, but Thou? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For who is Lord but the Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For who would willingly speak thereof, if so oft as we name grief or fear, we should be compelled to be sad or fearful? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For why should not the motions of all bodies rather be times? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For with a wounded heart have I beheld Thy brightness, and stricken back I said,"Who can attain thither? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | For, what was that which was thence through my tongue distilled into the ears of my most familiar friends? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Grant me, Lord, to know and understand which is first, to call on Thee or to praise Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Had He no might to turn and change the whole, so that no evil should remain in it, seeing He is All- mighty? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Hadst not Thou created me, and separated me from the beasts of the field, and fowls of the air? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Hast Thou, although present every where, cast away our misery far from Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Hast not Thou, O Lord, taught his soul, which confesseth unto Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Have I not confessed against myself my transgressions unto Thee, and Thou, my God, hast forgiven the iniquity of my heart? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | He cries out, How long? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Heal Thou all my bones, and let them say, O Lord, who is like unto Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How can I say that the image of forgetfulness is retained by my memory, not forgetfulness itself, when I remember it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How did I burn then, my God, how did I burn to re- mount from earthly things to Thee, nor knew I what Thou wouldest do with me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How did corporeal matter deserve of Thee, to be even invisible and without form? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How did they deserve of Thee, to be even without form, since they had not been even this, but from Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How may it then be measured? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How seek I it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How then do I seek Thee, O Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How then do I seek a happy life, seeing I have it not, until I can say, where I ought to say it,"It is enough"? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How then is it present that I remember it, since when present I can not remember? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How then know I this, seeing I know not what time is? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | How then should it be called, that it might be in some measure conveyed to those of duller mind, but by some ordinary word? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I beseech Thee, my God, I would fain know, if so Thou willest, for what purpose my baptism was then deferred? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I exclaim:"what is it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I loved then in it also the company of the accomplices, with whom I did it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I measure the motion of a body in time; and the time itself do I not measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I remember to have sought and found many a thing; and this I thereby know, that when I was seeking any of them, and was asked,"Is this it?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I sent up these sorrowful words: How long, how long,"to- morrow, and tomorrow?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I should choose to be myself, though worn with cares and fears; but out of wrong judgment; for, was it the truth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I should have desired verily, had I then been Moses( for we all come from the same lump, and what is man, saving that Thou art mindful of him? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | I will offer to Thee the sacrifice of Let my heart and my tongue praise Thee; yea, let all my bones say, O Lord, who is like unto Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | If God be for us, who can be against us? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | If in my praise I am moved with the good of my neighbour, why am I less moved if another be unjustly dispraised than if it be myself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | If not, why does it still echo in our ears on all sides,"Let him alone, let him do as he will, for he is not yet baptised?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | If the devil were the author, whence is that same devil? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | If, again, I should ask which might be forgotten with least detriment to the concerns of life, reading and writing or these poetic fictions? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | In so small a creature, what was not wonderful, not admirable? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | In the future, whence it passeth through? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | In the way that the voice came out of the cloud, saying, This is my beloved Son? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | In what space then do we measure time passing? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it also present to itself by its image, and not by itself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it body? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it clasped up with the eyes? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it false, that every nature already formed, or matter capable of form, is not, but from Him Who is supremely good, because He is supremely?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it not thus, as I recall it, O Lord my God, Thou judge of my conscience? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it soul? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it that the matter was without form, in which because there was no form, there was no order? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it that which constituteth soul or body? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it then a slight woe to love Thee not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it to come? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is it without it, and not within? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is justice therefore various or mutable? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is not the life of man upon earth all trial: without any interval? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is not the life of man upon earth all trial? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is not this corporeal figure apparent to all whose senses are perfect? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is the comparison unlike in this, because not in all respects like? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is the thing different, because they are but small creatures? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Is this their allotted measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Know I not this also? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Known therefore it is to all, for they with one voice be asked,"would they be happy?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Lastly, why would He make any thing at all of it, and not rather by the same All- mightiness cause it not to be at all? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Let him also rejoice and say, What thing is this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Let my bones be bedewed with Thy love, and let them say unto Thee, Who is like unto Thee, O Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Life is vain, death uncertain; if it steals upon us on a sudden, in what state shall we depart hence? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Lo, are they not full of their old leaven, who say to us,"What was God doing before He made heaven and earth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | May I learn from Thee, who art Truth, and approach the ear of my heart unto Thy mouth, that Thou mayest tell me why weeping is sweet to the miserable? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | My God hath done this for me more abundantly, that I should now see thee withal, despising earthly happiness, become His servant: what do I here?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | My God, my Mercy, with how much gall didst Thou out of Thy great goodness besprinkle for me that sweetness? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | My life being such, was it life, O my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | No man sings there, Shall not my soul be submitted unto God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Nor did that depart,-( for whither went it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Notwithstanding, in how many most petty and contemptible things is our curiosity daily tempted, and how often we give way, who can recount? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | O my Lord, my Light, shall not here also Thy Truth mock at man? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | O ye sons of men, how long so slow of heart? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Oh that they were wearied out with their famine, and said, Who will show us good things? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | One is commended, and, unseen, he is loved: doth this love enter the heart of the hearer from the mouth of the commender? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or hath it no being? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or how shall we obtain salvation, but from Thy hand, re- making what it made? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or if it were from eternity, why suffered He it so to be for infinite spaces of times past, and was pleased so long after to make something out of it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or in the present, by which it passes? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or is weeping indeed a bitter thing, and for very loathing of the things which we before enjoyed, does it then, when we shrink from them, please us? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or was it then good, even for a while, to cry for what, if given, would hurt? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or what am I to Thee that Thou demandest my love, and, if I give it not, art wroth with me, and threatenest me with grievous woes? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or where but with Thee is unshaken safety? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or whereas no man likes to be miserable, is he yet pleased to be merciful? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or who, except Thou, our God, made for us that firmament of authority over us in Thy Divine Scripture? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or, could it then be against His will? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or, desiring to learn it as a thing unknown, either never having known, or so forgotten it, as not even to remember that I had forgotten it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or, is it rather, that we call on Thee that we may know Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or, should there in our words be some syllables short, others long, but because those sounded in a shorter time, these in a longer? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or, was there some evil matter of which He made, and formed, and ordered it, yet left something in it which He did not convert into good? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or, while we were saying this, should we not also be speaking in time? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Or,"How came it into His mind to make any thing, having never before made any thing?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Rejoiceth he for that? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Say, Lord, to me, Thy suppliant; say, all- pitying, to me, Thy pitiable one; say, did my infancy succeed another age of mine that died before it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | See, I answer him that asketh,"What did God before He made heaven and earth?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | See, it is no great matter now to obtain some station, and then what should we more wish for? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Seeing then Thou art the Creator of all times, if any time was before Thou madest heaven and earth, why say they that Thou didst forego working? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Shall I say that that is not in my memory, which I remember? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Shall any be his own artificer? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Shall compassion then be put away? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Since, then, I too exist, why do I seek that Thou shouldest enter into me, who were not, wert Thou not in me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | The cruelty of the great would fain be feared; but who is to be feared but God alone, out of whose power what can be wrested or withdrawn? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | The forenoons our scholars take up; what do we during the rest? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | The heaven of heavens are the Lord''s; but the earth hath He given to the children of men? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | The other, in banter, replied,"Do walls then make Christians?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Therefore I contend not in judgment with Thee; for if Thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall abide it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Therefore didst Thou command it to be written, that darkness was upon the face of the deep; what else than the absence of light? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | These be Thine own promises: and who need fear to be deceived, when the Truth promiseth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | These things being safe and immovably settled in my mind, I sought anxiously"whence was evil?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | This same time then, how do I measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | This then that He is said"never to have made"; what else is it to say, than"in''no have made?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Those two times then, past and to come, how are they, seeing the past now is not, and that to come is not yet? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Thou receivest over and above, that Thou mayest owe; and who hath aught that is not Thine? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Thou then, Ruler of Thy creation, by what way dost Thou teach souls things to come? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Thou, by whose gift she was such? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Times passing, not past? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | To Thy grace I ascribe also whatsoever I have not done of evil; for what might I not have done, who even loved a sin for its own sake? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | To what end then would ye still and still walk these difficult and toilsome ways? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | To whom shall I speak this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | To whom tell I this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | To wish, namely, to be feared and loved of men, for no other end, but that we may have a joy therein which is no joy? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Unto it speaks my faith which Thou hast kindled to enlighten my feet in the night, Why art thou sad, O my soul, and why dost thou trouble me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Was it for his own necessities, because he said, Ye sent unto my necessity? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | We hold the promise, who shall make it null? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What am I then, O my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What art Thou then, my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What art Thou to me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What can be more, and yet what less like? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What did all this further me, seeing it even hindered me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What diddest Thou then, my God, and how unsearchable is the abyss of Thy judgments? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What evil have not been either my deeds, or if not my deeds, my words, or if not my words, my will? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What glory, Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What greater madness can be said or thought of? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is it that attracts and wins us to the things we love? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is it to me, O my true life, my God, that my declamation was applauded above so many of my own age and class? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is it to me, though any comprehend not this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is it which hath come into my mind to enquire, and discuss, and consider? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is its root, and what its seed? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is that which gleams through me, and strikes my heart without hurting it; and I shudder and kindle? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is this but a miserable madness? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is worthy of dispraise but vice? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What is, in truth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What marvel that an unhappy sheep, straying from Thy flock, and impatient of Thy keeping, I became infected with a foul disease? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What means this, O Lord my God, whereas Thou art everlastingly joy to Thyself, and some things around Thee evermore rejoice in Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What means this, that this portion of things thus ebbs and flows alternately displeased and reconciled? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What middle place is there betwixt these two, where the life of man is not all trial? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What nature am I? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What said I not against myself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What sayest Thou to me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What shall I do then, O Thou my true life, my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What shall I render unto the Lord, that, whilst my memory recalls these things, my soul is not affrighted at them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What shall wretched man do? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What strength of ours, yea what ages would suffice for all Thy books in this manner? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then could they be more truly called than"Subverters"? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then did I love in that theft? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then did wretched I so love in thee, thou theft of mine, thou deed of darkness, in that sixteenth year of my age? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then do I confess unto Thee in this kind of temptation, O Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then do I love, when I love my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then do I measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then if all give equal pleasure, and all at once? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then if one of us should deliberate, and amid the strife of his two wills be in a strait, whether he should go to the theatre or to our church? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then is it I measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then is the beautiful? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then is time? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then shall I say, O Truth my Light? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then takes place in the soul, when it is more delighted at finding or recovering the things it loves, than if it had ever had them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then was my sin? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What then was this feeling? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What third way is there? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What when we measure silence, and say that this silence hath held as long time as did that voice? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What wilt thou answer me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What, but that I am delighted with praise, but with truth itself, more than with praise? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What, if death itself cut off and end all care and feeling? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What, when I name forgetfulness, and withal recognise what I name? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | What, when sitting at home, a lizard catching flies, or a spider entangling them rushing into her nets, oft- times takes my attention? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | When compose what we may sell to scholars? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | When refresh ourselves, unbending our minds from this intenseness of care? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | When shall I recall all which passed in those holy- days? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | When therefore will it be? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | When we shall all rise again, though we shall not all be changed? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence and how entered these things into my memory? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence and whither hast Thou thus led my remembrance, that I should confess these things also unto Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence could such a being be, save from Thee, Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence is evil? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence is it then? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence is this monstrousness? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence is this monstrousness? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence it seemed to me, that time is nothing else than protraction; but of what, I know not; and I marvel, if it be not of the mind itself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence then came I to will evil and nill good, so that I am thus justly punished? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence then is sweet fruit gathered from the bitterness of life, from groaning, tears, sighs, and complaints? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence then so many thorns, if the earth be fruitful? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence this monstrousness? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence was this, but that Thine ears were towards her heart? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whence, or when procure them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where in the end do we search, but in the memory itself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where is evil then, and whence, and how crept it in hither? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where is reason then, which, awake, resisteth such suggestions? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where is that heaven which we see not, to which all this which we see is earth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where now are the impulses to such various and divers kinds of loves laid up in one soul? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where then and when did I experience my happy life, that I should remember, and love, and long for it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where then did I find Thee, that I might learn Thee, but in Thee above me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where then did I find Thee, that I might learn Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where then did they know this happy life, save where they know the truth also? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where then is the time, which we may call long? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where then light was not, what was the presence of darkness, but the absence of light? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where then wert Thou then to me, and how far from me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where then? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Where was then that discreet old woman, and that her earnest countermanding? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whereat then rejoicest thou, O great Paul? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Wherefore delay then to abandon worldly hopes, and give ourselves wholly to seek after God and the blessed life? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Which images, how they are formed, who can tell, though it doth plainly appear by which sense each hath been brought in and stored up? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Which of us comprehendeth the Almighty Trinity? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Which way, but through the present? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whither do I call Thee, since I am in Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whither go ye in rough ways? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whither go ye? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whither not follow myself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whither should I flee from myself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who am I, and what am I? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who can disentangle that twisted and intricate knottiness? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who can even in thought comprehend it, so as to utter a word about it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who can readily and briefly explain this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who can recount all Thy praises, which he hath felt in his one self? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who can understand his errors? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who declare it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who gathered the embittered together into one society? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who knows not this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who now shall search out this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who now teacheth us, but the unchangeable Truth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who remindeth me of the sins of my infancy? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who remindeth me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who repay Him the price wherewith He bought us, and so take us from Him? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who shall comprehend? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who shall restore to Him the innocent blood? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who shall stand against thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who then should deliver me thus wretched from the body of this death, but Thy grace only, through Jesus Christ our Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who therefore denieth, that things to come are not as yet? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who will say so? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who wishes for troubles and difficulties? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Who, Lord, but Thou, saidst, Let the waters be gathered together into one place, and let the dry land appear, which thirsteth after Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whom could I find to reconcile me to Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whom shall I enquire of concerning these things? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Whom so soon as Alypius remembered, he told the architect: and he showing the hatchet to the boy, asked him"Whose that was?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why am I more stung by reproach cast upon myself, than at that cast upon another, with the same injustice, before me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why is it, that man desires to be made sad, beholding doleful and tragical things, which yet himself would no means suffer? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why not now? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why not this? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why say more? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why seek they to hear from me what I am; who will not hear from Thee what themselves are? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why should he trouble me, as if I could enlighten any man that cometh into this world? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why so then? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why standest thou in thyself, and so standest not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why that? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why then be perverted and follow thy flesh? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why then did I hate the Greek classics, which have the like tales? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why then do I lay in order before Thee so many relations? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why then does not the disputer, thus recollecting, taste in the mouth of his musing the sweetness of joy, or the bitterness of sorrow? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why then fear we and avoid what is not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why then is this said of Thy Spirit only, why is it said only of Him? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why then joy they not in it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why then was my delight of such sort that I did it not alone? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why, I beseech Thee, O Lord my God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why, since we are equally men, do I love in another what, if I did not hate, I should not spurn and cast from myself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Why? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Wilt Thou hold Thy peace for ever? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Would any commit murder upon no cause, delighted simply in murdering? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Would aught avail against a secret disease, if Thy healing hand, O Lord, watched not over us? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Yea, and if I knew this also, should I know it from him? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Yea, sloth would fain be at rest; but what stable rest besides the Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | Yet what do we measure, if not time in some space? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and all at once the same part? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and by how many perils arrive we at a greater peril? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and dare I say that Thou heldest Thy peace, O my God, while I wandered further from Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and from that moment shall not this or that be lawful for thee for ever?" |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and from that moment shall we no more be with thee for ever? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and in this, what is there not brittle, and full of perils? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and shall we not rather suffer the punishment of this negligence? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and to pray for me, when they shall hear how much I am held back by my own weight? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and to what end? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and to what end? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and to what end? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and was there nothing else whereon to exercise my wit and tongue? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and what Thy days, but Thy eternity, as Thy years which fail not, because Thou art ever the same? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and what before that life again, O God my joy, was I any where or any body? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and what else did he who beat me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and what is beauty? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and what room is there within me, whither my God can come into me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and what the engine of Thy so mighty fabric? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and when arrive we thither? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and where shall we learn what here we have neglected? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and wherein did I even corruptly and pervertedly imitate my Lord? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and who knoweth and saith,"It is false,"unless himself lieth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and yet which speaks not of It, if indeed it be It? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | and, again, to know Thee or to call on Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | bitterly to resent, that persons free, and its own elders, yea, the very authors of its birth, served it not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | but how shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | but no space, we do not measure: or in the past, to which it passes? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | by what prayers? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | by what sacraments? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | could I like what I might not, only because I might not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | do then heaven and earth, which Thou hast made, and wherein Thou hast made me, contain Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | do we by a shorter time measure a longer, as by the space of a cubit, the space of a rood? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | doth not each little infant, in whom I see what of myself I remember not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | for of that I have heard somewhat, and have myself seen women with child? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | for who can call on Thee, not knowing Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | from whom borrow them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how didst Thou cure her? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how heal her? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how long roll the sons of Eve into that huge and hideous ocean, which even they scarcely overpass who climb the cross? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how long shalt thou not be dried up? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how long, Lord, wilt Thou be angry for ever? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how speak it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how speak of the weight of evil desires, downwards to the steep abyss; and how charity raises up again by Thy Spirit which was borne above the waters? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how then doth it not comprehend itself? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | how, O God, didst Thou make heaven and earth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | if she now seeks of Thee one thing, and desireth it, that she may dwell in Thy house all the days of her life( and what is her life, but Thou? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | in those things, of the remembrance whereof I am now ashamed? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | is it lulled asleep with the senses of the body? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | is not a happy life what all will, and no one altogether wills it not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | is not all this smoke and wind? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | is there, indeed, O Lord my God, aught in me that can contain Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | of what kind it is? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or can there elsewhere be derived any vein, which may stream essence and life into us, save from thee, O Lord, in whom essence and life are one? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or can they either in themselves, and not rather in the Lord their God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or dost Thou fill them and yet overflow, since they do not contain Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or dost Thou see in time, what passeth in time? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or each its own part, the greater more, the smaller less? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or good to discourse on the Gospel? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or good to take pleasure in a sober Psalm? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or hast Thou no need that aught contain Thee, who containest all things, since what Thou fillest Thou fillest by containing it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or how have they disgraced Thy government, which, from the heaven to this lowest earth, is just and perfect? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or how shall they believe without a preacher? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or how should they pass by, if they never were? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or how that past increased, which is now no longer, save that in the mind which enacteth this, there be three things done? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or how went it away? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or is it at last that I deceive myself, and do not the truth before Thee in my heart and tongue? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or is it perchance that I know not how to express what I know? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or shall I say that forgetfulness is for this purpose in my memory, that I might not forget? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or to whom should I cry, save Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or was it not laid loose? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or what Angel, a man? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or what Angel, an Angel? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or what acts of violence against Thee, who canst not be harmed? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or what am I even at the best, but an infant sucking the milk Thou givest, and feeding upon Thee, the food that perisheth not? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or what saith any man when he speaks of Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or what times should there be, which were not made by Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or when should these books teach me it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or whence canst Thou enter into me? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or where dost not Thou find them? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or who is God save our God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or, art Thou wholly every where, while nothing contains Thee wholly? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or, because nothing which exists could exist without Thee, doth therefore whatever exists contain Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | or, since all things can not contain Thee wholly, do they contain part of Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | that many besides, wiser than it, obeyed not the nod of its good pleasure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | that period I pass by; and what have I now to do with that, of which I can recall no vestige? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | to do its best to strike and hurt, because commands were not obeyed, which had been obeyed to its hurt? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | to whom shall I speak it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | was I to have recourse to Angels? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | was it for my good that the rein was laid loose, as it were, upon me, for me to sin? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | was it that I hung upon the breast and cried? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | was it that which I spent within my mother''s womb? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | what aim we at? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | what heardest thou? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | what it is? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | what manner of lodging hast Thou framed for Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | what manner of sanctuary hast Thou builded for Thee? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | what serve we for? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | what, but the Lord God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | when, or where, or whither, or by whom? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | whence should I recognise it, did I not remember it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | whence, but from the future? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | where have they known it, that they so will it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | where is the short syllable by which I measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | where seen it, that they so love it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | where the long which I measure? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | whereat rejoicest thou? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | which because it can not be without passion, for this reason alone are passions loved? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | whither can God come into me, God who made heaven and earth? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | whither cry? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | whither flows it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | whither, but into the past? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who can teach me, save He that enlighteneth my heart, and discovereth its dark corners? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who could any ways express it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who does not foresee what all must answer who have not wholly forgotten themselves? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who ever sounded the bottom thereof? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who is He above the head of my soul? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who set this in me, and ingrated into me this plant of bitterness, seeing I was wholly formed by my most sweet God? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who shall comprehend how it is? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who would believe it? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who would, any way, pronounce thereon rashly? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | who, if worsted in some trifling discussion with his fellow- tutor, was more embittered and jealous than I when beaten at ball by a play- fellow? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | why are they not happy? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | why do ye love vanity, and seek after leasing? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | why do ye love vanity, and seek after leasing? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | why not is there this hour an end to my uncleanness? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | why then speaks it not the same to all? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | would not these Manichees also be in a strait what to answer? |
augustine-confessions-2111 | yea, who can grasp them, when they are hard by? |
plato-laws-919 | ''And do not things which move move in a place, and are not the things which are at rest at rest in a place?'' |
plato-laws-919 | ''And some move or rest in one place and some in more places than one?'' |
plato-laws-919 | ''And when are all things created and how?'' |
plato-laws-919 | ( ATHENIAN: My good sir, what do you mean?) |
plato-laws-919 | --how shall we answer the divine men? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Again; might there not be a judge over these brethren, of whom we were speaking? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Also that they go of their own accord for the sake of the subsequent benefit? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And all the other artists just now mentioned, if they were bidden to offer up each their special prayer, would do so? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And an evil life too? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And are not all the Gods the chiefest of all guardians, and do they not guard our highest interests? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And are perception and memory, and opinion and prudence, heightened and increased? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And are there harbours on the seaboard? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And are they to consider only, and to be unable to set forth what they think? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And as the soul orders and inhabits all things that move, however moving, must we not say that she orders also the heavens? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And can he who does not know what the exact object is which is imitated, ever know whether the resemblance is truthfully executed? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And did any one ever see this sort of convivial meeting rightly ordered? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And do not all these seem to you to be commensurable with themselves? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And do we not further observe that the first shoot of every living thing is by far the greatest and fullest? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And do you admit also that they have all power which mortals and immortals can have? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And does not the legislator and every one who is good for anything, hold this fear in the greatest honour? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And has the place a fair proportion of hill, and plain, and wood? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And have not thousands and thousands of cities come into being during this period and as many perished? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And if they were extended to the other Hellenes, would it be an improvement on the present state of things? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And in the village will there be the same war of family against family, and of individual against individual? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And is any harm done to the lover of vicious dances or songs, or any good done to the approver of the opposite sort of pleasure? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And is not the aim of the legislator similar? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And is not this what you and I have to do at the present moment? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And is there any neighbouring State? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And is what you say applicable only to states, or also to villages? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And may we not now further confirm what was then mentioned? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And may we suppose this immoderate spirit to be more fatal when found among kings than when among peoples? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And must not that of which we are in need be the one to which we were just now alluding? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And nothing can be plainer than that the fairest bodies are those which grow up from infancy in the best and straightest manner? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And now do we still hold to our former assertion, that rhythms and music in general are imitations of good and evil characters in men? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And now let me proceed to another question: Who are to be the colonists? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And now, I beseech you, reflect-- you would admit that we have a threefold knowledge of things? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And now, what is to be the next step? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And now, what will this city be? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And of cities or governments or legislation, about which we are now talking, do you suppose that they could have any recollection at all? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And one part of this subject has been already discussed by us, and there still remains another to be discussed? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And ought not the legislator to determine these classes? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And should each man conceive himself to be his own enemy:--what shall we say? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And surely justice does not grow apart from temperance? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And surely they are not like charioteers who are bribed to give up the victory to other chariots? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And surely we three and they two-- five in all-- have acknowledged that they are good and perfect? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And that of things in motion some were moving in one place, and others in more than one? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And the body should have the most exercise when it receives most nourishment? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And the chorus is made up of two parts, dance and song? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And the legislator would do likewise? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And the one is honourable, and the other dishonourable? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And the one, like other meaner things, is a human quality, but the Gods have no part in anything of the sort? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And the same view may be taken of the pastime of drinking wine, if we are right in supposing that the same good effect follows? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And the uneducated is he who has not been trained in the chorus, and the educated is he who has been well trained? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And their opposites, therefore, would fall under the opposite class? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And to what earthly rulers can they be compared, or who to them? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And to which of the above- mentioned classes of guardians would any man compare the Gods without absurdity? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And we acknowledge that all mortal creatures are the property of the Gods, to whom also the whole of heaven belongs? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And we may conceive this to be true in the same way of other practices? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And we must suppose this event to have taken place many ages after the deluge? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And we ought, if possible, to provide them with a quiet ruler? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And we were saying just now, that when men are at war the leader ought to be a brave man? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what are the principles on which men rule and obey in cities, whether great or small; and similarly in families? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what arrangement of life to be found anywhere is preferable to this community which we are now assigning to them? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what breadth is? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what comes third, and what fourth? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what has it been the object of our argument to show? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what if besides being a coward he has no skill? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what is beauty of figure, or beautiful melody? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what is the definition of that which is named''soul''? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what is the reason that dances and contests of this sort hardly ever exist in states, at least not to any extent worth speaking of? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what strain is suitable for heroes? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what strain will they sing, and what muse will they hymn? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what would you say about the body, my friend? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what would you say of the commander of an army? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And what would you say of the state? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And when rejoicing in our good fortune, we are unable to be still? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And when we see soul in anything, must we not do the same-- must we not admit that this is life? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And which may be supposed to be the truer judgment-- that of the inferior or of the better soul? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And which of these ten motions ought we to prefer as being the mightiest and most efficient? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And will he not be in a most wretched plight? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And will he who does not know what is true be able to distinguish what is good and bad? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And would not every one always make laws for the sake of the best? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And would not that also be the desire of the legislator? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And yet I have repeated what I am saying a good many times; but I suppose that you have never seen a city which is under a tyranny? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And you know that these are two distinct things, and that there is a third thing called depth? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And, according to the true order, the laws relating to marriage should be those which are first determined in every state? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: And, fourthly, that slaves should be ruled, and their masters rule? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Are we agreed thus far? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Are we assured that there are two things which lead men to believe in the Gods, as we have already stated? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Are you speaking of the soul? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But are sure that it must be vast and incalculable? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But can a kingship be destroyed, or was any other form of government ever destroyed, by any but the rulers themselves? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But can a man who does not know a thing, as we were saying, know that the thing is right? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But do we imagine carelessness and idleness and luxury to be virtues? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But how can I in one word rightly comprehend all of them? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But may we not also say that the soul of the slave is utterly corrupt, and that no man of sense ought to trust them? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But then, my good friends, why did the settlement and legislation of their country turn out so badly? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But what form of polity are we going to give the city? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But what shall be our next musical law or type? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But what was the ruin of this glorious confederacy? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: But, if they are such as we conceive them to be, can we possibly suppose that they ever act in the spirit of carelessness and indolence? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Can any of us imagine a better mode of effecting this object than that of the Egyptians? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Can any one who makes such laws escape ridicule? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Do not all human things partake of the nature of soul? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Do we not consider each of ourselves to be one? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Do we not regard all music as representative and imitative? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Do you believe that there is any truth in ancient traditions? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Do you imagine that I delay because I am in a perplexity? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Do you remember our old admission, that if the soul was prior to the body the things of the soul were also prior to those of the body? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Does a captain require only to have nautical knowledge in order to be a good captain, whether he is sea- sick or not? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Does he not return to the state of soul in which he was when a young child? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Does not a little word extinguish all pleasures of that sort? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Does not the discontented and ungracious nature appear to you to be full of lamentations and sorrows more than a good man ought to be? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Does not the general aim at victory and superiority in war, and do not the physician and his assistants aim at producing health in the body? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Does not this kind of fear preserve us in many important ways? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Fifthly, if I am not mistaken, comes the principle that the stronger shall rule, and the weaker be ruled? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Good; and what measures ought the legislator to have then taken in order to avert this calamity? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Have you forgotten, Cleinias, the name of a friend who is really of yesterday? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: He sings well and dances well; now must we add that he sings what is good and dances what is good? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: How would you prove it? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: How, then, shall we reassure him, and get him to sing? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: How, then, was this advantage lost under Cambyses, and again recovered under Darius? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: I mean this: when one thing changes another, and that another, of such will there be any primary changing element? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: I should like to know whether temperance without the other virtues, existing alone in the soul of man, is rightly to be praised or blamed? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: I suppose that courage is a part of virtue? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: I suppose that our enquiry has reference to the soul? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: I suppose that there must be rulers and subjects in states? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: I think that I have clearly stated in the former part of the discussion, but if I did not, let me now state-- CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: I will:--''Surely,''they say,''the governing power makes whatever laws have authority in any state''? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: I will; or rather I will show you my meaning by a question, and do you please to answer me: You know, I suppose, what length is? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: If the soul carries round the sun and moon, and the other stars, does she not carry round each individual of them? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: If we were to see this power existing in any earthy, watery, or fiery substance, simple or compound-- how should we describe it? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: If, then, drinking and amusement were regulated in this way, would not the companions of our revels be improved? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: In all states the birth of children goes back to the connexion of marriage? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: In how many generations would this be attained? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: In the first place, then, the revellers as well as the soldiers will require a ruler? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: In what respect? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: In which, then, of the parts or institutions of the state is any such guardian power to be found? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Is not the effect of this quite the opposite of the effect of the other? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Is there any argument which will prove to us that we ought to encourage the taste for drinking instead of doing all we can to avoid it? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Let us see; what are we saying? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: May I still make use of fable to some extent, in the hope that I may be better able to answer your question: shall I? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: May we not fairly make answer to him on behalf of the poets? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Must not they be truly unfortunate whose souls are compelled to pass through life always hungering? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Must we not appoint a sober man and a wise to be our master of the revels? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Must we not, then, try in every possible way to prevent our youth from even desiring to imitate new modes either in dance or song? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Next follows the principle that the noble should rule over the ignoble; and, thirdly, that the elder should rule and the younger obey? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: No; but, if there had been, might not such a draught have been of use to the legislator as a test of courage? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Now, which is in the truest sense inferior, the man who is overcome by pleasure or by pain? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Of what nature is the movement of mind? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Once more, are all of us equally delighted with every sort of dance? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: One soul or more? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Or an artist, who was clever in his profession, but a rogue? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Reflect; may not banqueters and banquets be said to constitute a kind of meeting? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Shall we say then that it is the soul which controls heaven and earth, and the whole world? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Shall we, then, take this as the next point to which our attention should be directed? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Should you like to see an example of the double and single method in legislation? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Some one might say to us, What is the drift of all this? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Suppose that we give this puppet of ours drink,--what will be the effect on him? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Surely God must not be supposed to have a nature which He Himself hates? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Tell me, Strangers, is a God or some man supposed to be the author of your laws? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: That is to say, length is naturally commensurable with length, and breadth with breadth, and depth in like manner with depth? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: The brave man is less likely than the coward to be disturbed by fears? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: The case is the same? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then I suppose that we must consider this subject? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then at that time he will have the least control over himself? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then half the subject may now be considered to have been discussed; shall we proceed to the consideration of the other half? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then he who is well educated will be able to sing and dance well? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then how can we carry out our purpose with decorum? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then not only an old man but also a drunkard becomes a second time a child? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then now I may proceed? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then the unjust life must not only be more base and depraved, but also more unpleasant than the just and holy life? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Then what life is agreeable to God, and becoming in His followers? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: There are ten thousand likenesses of objects of sight? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: There is surely no difficulty in seeing, Cleinias, what is in accordance with the order of nature? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: They rank under the opposite class? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: This, then, has been said for the sake-- MEGILLUS: Of what? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: True, Cleinias; but then what should the lawgiver do when this evil is of long standing? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Very good; but may I make one or two corrections in what I have been saying? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, and about the good and the honourable, are we to take the same view? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, and is not rapid growth without proper and abundant exercise the source endless evils in the body? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, but let me ask, how is the country supplied with timber for ship- building? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, but ought we not to desire to see it, and to see where it is to be found? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, now, and does not the argument show that there is one common desire of all mankind? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, then, by the Gods themselves I conjure you to tell me-- if they are to be propitiated, how are they to be propitiated? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, then, if I tell you what are my notions of education, will you consider whether they satisfy you? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, then, if neither of you can answer, shall I answer this question which you deem so absurd? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, then, must we do as we said? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Well, then; what shall we say or do? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Were we not a little while ago quite convinced that no silver or golden Plutus should dwell in our state? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: What else can he say who declares that the Gods are always lenient to the doers of unjust acts, if they divide the spoil with them? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: What laws are more worthy of our attention than those which have regulated such cities? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: What will be our first law? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: What, then, leads us astray? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Which of you will first tell me to which of these classes his own government is to be referred? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Why, do you think that you can reckon the time which has elapsed since cities first existed and men were citizens of them? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Will he not live painfully and to his own disadvantage? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: Yes; and courage is a part of virtue, and cowardice of vice? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: You mean to say that there is more rock than plain? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN: You will surely remember our saying that all things were either at rest or in motion? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN:''And whoever transgresses these laws is punished as an evil- doer by the legislator, who calls the laws just''? |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN:''And you would rather have a touchstone in which there is no risk and no great danger than the reverse?'' |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN:''Come, legislator,''we will say to him;''what are the conditions which you require in a state before you can organize it?'' |
plato-laws-919 | ATHENIAN:''Did we not hear you just now saying, that the legislator ought not to allow the poets to do what they liked? |
plato-laws-919 | Again, when any one prefers beauty to virtue, what is this but the real and utter dishonour of the soul? |
plato-laws-919 | Am I not right in maintaining that a good education is that which tends most to the improvement of mind and body? |
plato-laws-919 | Am I not right? |
plato-laws-919 | And has not each of them had every form of government many times over, now growing larger, now smaller, and again improving or declining? |
plato-laws-919 | And having spoken well, may I add that you have been well answered? |
plato-laws-919 | And how will they be best distributed? |
plato-laws-919 | And if this be true, are not the just and the honourable at one time all the same, and at another time in the most diametrical opposition? |
plato-laws-919 | And is not man the most religious of all animals? |
plato-laws-919 | And is the surrounding country productive, or in need of importations? |
plato-laws-919 | And let me ask you a question:--Do we not distinguish two kinds of fear, which are very different? |
plato-laws-919 | And now let us pass under review the examiners themselves; what will their examination be, and how conducted? |
plato-laws-919 | And now, Megillus and Cleinias, how can we put to the proof the value of our words? |
plato-laws-919 | And now, how shall we proceed? |
plato-laws-919 | And now, who is to have the superintendence of the country, and what shall be the arrangement? |
plato-laws-919 | And thinkest thou, bold man, that thou needest not to know this? |
plato-laws-919 | And to that I rejoin:--O my father, did you not wish me to live as happily as possible? |
plato-laws-919 | And what greater good or evil can any destiny ever make us undergo? |
plato-laws-919 | And what is the right way of living? |
plato-laws-919 | And what shall be the punishment suited to him who has thrown away his weapons of defence? |
plato-laws-919 | And what shall he suffer who slays him who of all men, as they say, is his own best friend? |
plato-laws-919 | And what, then, is to be regarded as the origin of government? |
plato-laws-919 | And who would ever think of establishing such a practice by law? |
plato-laws-919 | And yet, why am I disquieted, for I believe that the same principle applies equally to all human things? |
plato-laws-919 | And, further, may we not suppose that the fear of impiety will enable them to master that which other inferior people have mastered? |
plato-laws-919 | Any one may easily imagine the questions which have to be asked in all such cases: What did he wound, or whom, or how, or when? |
plato-laws-919 | Are beautiful things not the same to us all, or are they the same in themselves, but not in our opinion of them? |
plato-laws-919 | Are not those who train in gymnasia, at first beginning reduced to a state of weakness? |
plato-laws-919 | Are our guardians only to know that each of them is many, or also how and in what way they are one? |
plato-laws-919 | Are they charioteers of contending pairs of steeds, or pilots of vessels? |
plato-laws-919 | Are they not competitors in the greatest of all contests, and have they not innumerable rivals? |
plato-laws-919 | Are we likely ever to be in a virtuous condition, if we can not tell whether virtue is many, or four, or one? |
plato-laws-919 | Are we to live in sports always? |
plato-laws-919 | Are you not surprised at any one of his own accord bringing upon himself deformity, leanness, ugliness, decrepitude? |
plato-laws-919 | As far as we can guess at this distance of time, what happened was as follows:-- MEGILLUS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | But admitting all this, what follows? |
plato-laws-919 | But how can a state be in a right condition which can not justly award honour? |
plato-laws-919 | But how can we take precautions against the unnatural loves of either sex, from which innumerable evils have come upon individuals and cities? |
plato-laws-919 | But how ought we to define courage? |
plato-laws-919 | But is there any potion which might serve as a test of overboldness and excessive and indiscreet boasting? |
plato-laws-919 | But shall this new word of ours, like an oracle of God, be only spoken, and get away without giving any explanation or verification of itself? |
plato-laws-919 | But what do I mean? |
plato-laws-919 | But what is a true taste? |
plato-laws-919 | But what weapons shall we use, and how shall we direct them? |
plato-laws-919 | But who, Cleinias and Megillus, will order for us in the colony all this matter of the magistrates, and the scrutinies of them? |
plato-laws-919 | But why have I said all this? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: About what thing? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: About what? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: About what? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And can you show that what you have been saying is true? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And how, Stranger, can we act most fairly under the circumstances? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And that mind was the leader of the four, and that to her the three other virtues and all other things ought to have regard? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And we said that virtue was of four kinds? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And what are the laws about music and dancing in Egypt? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And what do you call the true mode of service? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And what is the inference? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And what law would you advise them to pass if this one failed? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And what necessities of knowledge are there, Stranger, which are divine and not human? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And what ought the legislator to decide, and what ought he to leave to the courts of law? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And who is this God? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: And would he not be right? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Assuredly: but may we not now, Stranger, prescribe these studies as necessary, and so fill up the lacunae of our laws? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: But do you really imagine, Stranger, that this is the way in which poets generally compose in States at the present day? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: But has such a draught, Stranger, ever really been known among men? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: But how will an old man be able to attend to such great charges? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: But is there any difficulty in proving the existence of the Gods? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: But what is the fact? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: But why is the word''nature''wrong? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: But why, Stranger, do not you and Megillus take a part in our new city? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: But, Stranger, are we to impose this great amount of exercise upon newly- born infants? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: By what possible arguments, Stranger, can any man persuade himself of such a monstrous doctrine? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Consistent in what? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: For example, where? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Having what in view do you ask that question? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How can I possibly say so? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How can there be anything greater? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How can they have any other? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How can they, when the very colours of their faces differ? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How can they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How can we have an examination and also a good one? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How does that bear upon any of the matters of which we have been speaking? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How is that arranged? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How is that? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How is that? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How is that? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How shall we proceed, Stranger? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How so? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How so? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How so? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How so? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How two? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How would that be? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How would you advise the guardian of the law to act? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: How? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: I suppose, Megillus, that this companion virtue of which the Stranger speaks, must be temperance? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: In what respect? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: In what respect? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: In what respect? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: In what way do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: In what way? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: In what way? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Is not that true? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Lies of what nature? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Of what are you speaking? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Of what victory are you speaking? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Once more, what do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Once more, what do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Such as what? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Then what are we to do in our own country, Stranger, seeing that there are such differences in the treatment of slaves by their owners? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Then what is to be the inference? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Then why was there any need to speak of the matter at all? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: To what are you referring? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: To what are you referring? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: To what are you referring? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: To what do you refer in this instance? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: To what do you refer? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: To what do you refer? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: To what? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: True; but what is this study which you describe as wonderful and fitting for youth to learn, but of which we are ignorant? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Very good, Stranger; and what shall we say in answer to these objections? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Very good: And now what, according to you, is to be the salvation of our government and of our laws, and how is it to be effected? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Well, Stranger, and may he not very fairly say so? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Well, Stranger, and what is the reason of this? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Well, and have we not already opposed the popular voice in many important enactments? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What answer shall we make to him? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are the inconsistencies which you observe in us? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are the two kinds? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are we to observe about it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What are you going to ask? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What consolation will you offer him? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What direction? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you bid us keep in mind? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean, Stranger, by this remark? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean, Stranger? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean, and what new thing is this? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean, my good sir? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What doctrine do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What had you in your mind when you said that? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What have we to do? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What have you got to say? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What have you to say, Stranger? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is that story? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is that? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is that? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is that? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is that? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is the cause, Stranger, of this extreme hesitation? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is the other half, and how do you divide the subject? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is their method? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What is this, Stranger, that you are saying? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What jests? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What kind of ignorance do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What makes you say so? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What method can we devise of electing them? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What more have you to say? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What ought we to say then? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What penalty? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What question? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What shall we say or do to these persons? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What terms? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What then are we to do, Stranger, under these circumstances? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What traditions? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What troubles you, Stranger? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What was the error? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What would you expect? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What, Stranger, is the drift of your comparison? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Which are they? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Which do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Which will you take? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Who are those who compose the third choir, Stranger? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Why so? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Why, Stranger, what other reason is there? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Will you try to be a little plainer? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: You are speaking of harmless pleasure, are you not? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: You mean that in each of them there is a principle of superiority or inferiority to self? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: You mean the evil of blaming antiquity in states? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: You mean to ask whether we should call such a self- moving power life? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: You mean to say that the essence which is defined as the self- moved is the same with that which has the name soul? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: You mean, I suppose, their serious and noble pursuit? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: You would assume, as you say, a tyrant who was young, temperate, quick at learning, having a good memory, courageous, of a noble nature? |
plato-laws-919 | CLEINIAS: Your words are reasonable enough; but shall we find any good or true notion about the stars? |
plato-laws-919 | Can he who is good for anything be ignorant of all this without discredit where great and glorious truths are concerned? |
plato-laws-919 | Can we conceive of any other than that which has been already given-- the motion which can move itself? |
plato-laws-919 | Can we say? |
plato-laws-919 | Did we not arrive at the conclusion that parents ought to govern their children, and the elder the younger, and the noble the ignoble? |
plato-laws-919 | Did we not imply that the poets are not always quite capable of knowing what is good or evil? |
plato-laws-919 | Do not these qualities entirely desert a man if he becomes saturated with drink? |
plato-laws-919 | Do you agree with me thus far? |
plato-laws-919 | Do you mean some form of democracy, or oligarchy, or aristocracy, or monarchy? |
plato-laws-919 | Do you not see that a drunken pilot or a drunken ruler of any sort will ruin ship, chariot, army-- anything, in short, of which he has the direction? |
plato-laws-919 | Do you remember the image in which I likened the men for whom laws are now made to slaves who are doctored by slaves? |
plato-laws-919 | For boys and girls ought to learn to dance and practise gymnastic exercises-- ought they not? |
plato-laws-919 | For there is a thing which has occurred times without number in states-- CLEINIAS: What thing? |
plato-laws-919 | For what good can the just man have which is separated from pleasure? |
plato-laws-919 | For, O my friends, how can there be the least shadow of wisdom when there is no harmony? |
plato-laws-919 | Have we already forgotten what was said a little while ago? |
plato-laws-919 | Have we ever determined in what respect these two classes of actions differ from one another? |
plato-laws-919 | Have we not mentioned all motions that there are, and comprehended them under their kinds and numbered them with the exception, my friends, of two? |
plato-laws-919 | How can a thing which is moved by another ever be the beginning of change? |
plato-laws-919 | How can a word not understood be the basis of legislation? |
plato-laws-919 | How can we prove that what I am saying is true? |
plato-laws-919 | How could he have? |
plato-laws-919 | How in the less can we find an image of the greater? |
plato-laws-919 | How ought he to answer this question? |
plato-laws-919 | How shall we devise a remedy and way of escape out of so great a danger? |
plato-laws-919 | How then can the advocate of justice be other than noble? |
plato-laws-919 | How then can we rightly order the distribution of the land? |
plato-laws-919 | I should like to know whether you and Megillus would agree with me in what I am about to say; for my opinion is-- CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | I will simply ask once more whether we shall lay down as one of our principles of song-- CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | If so, in what kind of sports? |
plato-laws-919 | In a ship, when the pilot and the sailors unite their perceptions with the piloting mind, do they not save both themselves and their craft? |
plato-laws-919 | In the first place, let us-- CLEINIAS: Do what? |
plato-laws-919 | In the process of gestation? |
plato-laws-919 | In what other manner could we ever study the art of self- defence? |
plato-laws-919 | Is he the better who accomplishes his ends in a double way, or he who works in one way, and that the ruder and inferior? |
plato-laws-919 | Is not justice noble, which has been the civiliser of humanity? |
plato-laws-919 | Is not this the fact? |
plato-laws-919 | Is the poet to train his choruses as he pleases, without reference to virtue or vice? |
plato-laws-919 | Is there any other way in which his neglect can be explained? |
plato-laws-919 | Is there not one claim of authority which is always just,--that of fathers and mothers and in general of progenitors to rule over their offspring? |
plato-laws-919 | Is this due to the ignorance of mankind and their legislators? |
plato-laws-919 | Let me ask again, Are you and I agreed about this? |
plato-laws-919 | Let us then once more ask the question, To what end has all this been said? |
plato-laws-919 | Looking at these and the like examples, what ought we to do concerning property in slaves? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: And would he not be justified? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: But were you not right and wise in speaking as you did, and we in assenting to you? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: How do you mean; and why do you blame them? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: How do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: Ought I to answer first, since I am the elder? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: To what are you referring, and what do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What advantage? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What do you mean, Stranger? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What is it? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What laws do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What security? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What shall we do, Cleinias? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: What word? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: When do you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: When the son is young and foolish, you mean? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: Why, my good friend, how could any Lacedaemonian say anything else? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: Yes; but will he ever succeed in making all mankind use the same language about them? |
plato-laws-919 | MEGILLUS: You are speaking of temperance? |
plato-laws-919 | May any one come out of all Crete; and is the idea that the population in the several states is too numerous for the means of subsistence? |
plato-laws-919 | May we not suppose that this was the intention with which the men of those days framed the constitutions of their states? |
plato-laws-919 | May we not suppose the colonists to have arrived, and proceed to make our speech to them? |
plato-laws-919 | May we say that they are? |
plato-laws-919 | Must not he who maintains that the Gods can be propitiated argue thus? |
plato-laws-919 | Must they not be at least rulers who have to order unceasingly the whole heaven? |
plato-laws-919 | Now is this a true way of speaking or of acting? |
plato-laws-919 | Now which is the better way of proceeding in a physician and in a trainer? |
plato-laws-919 | Now, ought we not to forbid such strains as these? |
plato-laws-919 | Now, what will be the form of such prefaces? |
plato-laws-919 | Once more then, as I have asked more than once, shall this be our third law, and type, and model-- What do you say? |
plato-laws-919 | Or can we give our guardians a more precise knowledge of virtue in speech and action than the many have? |
plato-laws-919 | Or if we had no adversary at all, animate or inanimate, should we not venture in the dearth of antagonists to spar by ourselves? |
plato-laws-919 | Or would you abstain from using the potion altogether, although you have no reason for abstaining?'' |
plato-laws-919 | Ought not prayers to be offered up to the Gods when we sacrifice? |
plato-laws-919 | Pol.)? |
plato-laws-919 | Seeing then that there are these three sorts of love, ought the law to prohibit and forbid them all to exist among us? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall I give his answer? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall I tell you why? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall I tell you? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall I try to divine? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall these be our rules, and shall we impose a penalty for the neglect of them? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall they sing a choric strain? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we allow a stranger to run down Sparta in this fashion? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we assume so much, or do we still entertain doubts? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we be so foolish as to let them off who would give us the most beautiful and also the most useful of songs? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we begin, then, with the acknowledgment that education is first given through Apollo and the Muses? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we make a defence of ourselves? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we proceed to the other half or not? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we propose this? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we say that glory and fame, coming from Gods and men, though good and noble, are nevertheless unpleasant, and infamy pleasant? |
plato-laws-919 | Shall we then propose as one of our laws and models relating to the Muses-- CLEINIAS: What? |
plato-laws-919 | Some one will ask, why not? |
plato-laws-919 | Suppose that we make answer as follows: CLEINIAS: How would you answer? |
plato-laws-919 | Suppose these competitors to meet, and not these only, but innumerable others as well-- can you tell me who ought to be the victor? |
plato-laws-919 | Surely we should say that to be temperate and to possess mind belongs to virtue, and the contrary to vice? |
plato-laws-919 | Tell me whether you assent to my words? |
plato-laws-919 | Tell me, then, whence do you draw your recruits in the present enterprise? |
plato-laws-919 | Tell me,--were not first the syssitia, and secondly the gymnasia, invented by your legislator with a view to war? |
plato-laws-919 | The legislator may be supposed to argue the question in his own mind: Who are my citizens for whom I have set in order the city? |
plato-laws-919 | Was it because they did not know how wisely Hesiod spoke when he said that the half is often more than the whole? |
plato-laws-919 | What are they, and how many in number? |
plato-laws-919 | What do you say, friend Megillus? |
plato-laws-919 | What do you say? |
plato-laws-919 | What do you say? |
plato-laws-919 | What do you think? |
plato-laws-919 | What inference is to be drawn from all this? |
plato-laws-919 | What is he to do? |
plato-laws-919 | What is there cheaper, or more innocent? |
plato-laws-919 | What is there which so surely gives victory and safety in war? |
plato-laws-919 | What other aim would they have had? |
plato-laws-919 | What remedy can a city of sense find against this disease? |
plato-laws-919 | What say you? |
plato-laws-919 | What would you like? |
plato-laws-919 | What would you say then to leaving these matters for the present, and passing on to some other question of law? |
plato-laws-919 | Where is an ordinance about pleasure similar to that about pain to be found in your laws? |
plato-laws-919 | Wherefore, also, the legislator ought often to impress upon himself the question--''What do I want?'' |
plato-laws-919 | Wherefore, seeing that human things are thus ordered, what should a wise man do or think, or not do or think''? |
plato-laws-919 | Which is the doubtful kind, and how are the two to be distinguished? |
plato-laws-919 | Who are they, and what is their nature? |
plato-laws-919 | Who can be calm when he is called upon to prove the existence of the Gods? |
plato-laws-919 | Who knows but we may be aiming at the greater, and fail of attaining the lesser? |
plato-laws-919 | Who will ever believe this? |
plato-laws-919 | Why do I mention this? |
plato-laws-919 | Why have I made this remark? |
plato-laws-919 | Will he be able to command merely because he has military skill if he be a coward, who, when danger comes, is sick and drunk with fear? |
plato-laws-919 | Will not a man be able to judge of it best from a point of view in which he may behold the progress of states and their transitions to good or evil? |
plato-laws-919 | Will not all men censure as womanly him who imitates the woman? |
plato-laws-919 | Will not poets and spectators and actors all agree in this? |
plato-laws-919 | Will not the legislator, observing the order of nature, begin by making regulations for states about births? |
plato-laws-919 | Will such passions implant in the soul of him who is seduced the habit of courage, or in the soul of the seducer the principle of temperance? |
plato-laws-919 | Will this be the way? |
plato-laws-919 | Will you allow me then to explain how I should have liked to have heard you expound the matter? |
plato-laws-919 | Will you hear me tell how great I deem the evil to be? |
plato-laws-919 | Would not this have been the way? |
plato-laws-919 | You are aware that there are these two classes of doctors? |
plato-laws-919 | You will surely grant so much? |
plato-laws-919 | You would agree? |
plato-laws-919 | and should not other writings either agree with them, or if they disagree, be deemed ridiculous? |
plato-laws-919 | and why are you so perplexed in your mind? |
plato-laws-919 | and''Do I attain my aim, or do I miss the mark?'' |
plato-laws-919 | or how can the lawgiver rightly direct you about them? |
plato-laws-919 | or is there any way in which our city can be made to resemble the head and senses of rational beings because possessing such a guardian power? |
plato-laws-919 | or rather, who will not blame the effeminacy of him who yields to pleasures and is unable to hold out against them? |
plato-laws-919 | or shall we give heed to them above all? |
plato-laws-919 | or shall we leave them and return to our laws, lest the prelude should become longer than the law? |
plato-laws-919 | or shall we make the punishment of all to be alike, under the idea that there is no such thing as voluntary crime? |
plato-laws-919 | or what settlements of states are greater or more famous? |
plato-laws-919 | or when wealth, beauty, strength, and all the intoxicating workings of pleasure madden us? |
plato-laws-919 | that it is a principle of wisdom and virtue, or a principle which has neither wisdom nor virtue? |
plato-laws-919 | will you explain the law more precisely? |
melville-moby-2778 | ''Are you through?'' melville-moby-2778 ''Aye? |
melville-moby-2778 | ''Better turn to, now?'' melville-moby-2778 ''How? |
melville-moby-2778 | ''Is that a friar passing?'' melville-moby-2778 ''Is there a copy of the Holy Evangelists in the Golden Inn, gentlemen?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | ''Say ye so? melville-moby-2778 ''Shall we?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | ''Sink the ship?'' melville-moby-2778 ''Then I entreat you, tell me if to the best of your own convictions, this your story is in substance really true? |
melville-moby-2778 | ''What are you making there?'' melville-moby-2778 ''What do you think? |
melville-moby-2778 | ''What do you want of me?'' melville-moby-2778 ''Where are you bound? |
melville-moby-2778 | ''Who''s there?'' melville-moby-2778 ''Why not? |
melville-moby-2778 | ''Will you be so good as to bring the priest also, Don?'' melville-moby-2778 ''Will you promise not to touch us, if we do?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | A clam for supper? melville-moby-2778 A wooden rose- bud, eh?" |
melville-moby-2778 | ALL about it, eh-- sure you do?--all? |
melville-moby-2778 | About what? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ai n''t going aboard, then? |
melville-moby-2778 | All ready there? melville-moby-2778 Am I a cannon- ball, Stubb,"said Ahab,"that thou wouldst wad me that fashion? |
melville-moby-2778 | Am I the same man that helped kill this whale? melville-moby-2778 And I suppose thou can''st smoothe almost any seams and dents; never mind how hard the metal, blacksmith?" |
melville-moby-2778 | And can''st thou make it all smooth again, blacksmith, after such hard usage as it had? |
melville-moby-2778 | And did none of ye see it before? |
melville-moby-2778 | And has he a curious spout, too,said Daggoo,"very bushy, even for a parmacetty, and mighty quick, Captain Ahab?" |
melville-moby-2778 | And he took that arm off, did he? |
melville-moby-2778 | And pray, sir, what in the world is equal to it? |
melville-moby-2778 | And shall I caulk the seams, sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | And shall I nail down the lid, sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | And shall I then pay over the same with pitch, sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what do ye next, men? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what dost thou want of Captain Ahab? melville-moby-2778 And what tune is it ye pull to, men?" |
melville-moby-2778 | And what was that saying about thyself? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what will you do with the tail, Stubb? |
melville-moby-2778 | And when thou art so gone before-- if that ever befall-- then ere I can follow, thou must still appear to me, to pilot me still?--Was it not so? melville-moby-2778 And who are hearsed that die on the sea?" |
melville-moby-2778 | And who art thou, boy? melville-moby-2778 And you have lived in this world hard upon one hundred years, cook, and do n''t know yet how to cook a whale- steak?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Anything down there about your souls? |
melville-moby-2778 | Are these thy Mother Carey''s chickens, Perth? melville-moby-2778 Are they overboard? |
melville-moby-2778 | Art not thou the leg- maker? melville-moby-2778 Aye, aye, steward,"cried Stubb,"we''ll teach you to drug it harpooneer; none of your apothecary''s medicine here; you want to poison us, do ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | Aye, aye, ye are going in her, be ye? melville-moby-2778 Aye, he was the cause of it, at least; and that leg, too?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Aye, priests-- well, how long do ye make him, then? |
melville-moby-2778 | Aye? melville-moby-2778 Bargain?--about what?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Bildad,cried Captain Peleg,"at it again, Bildad, eh? |
melville-moby-2778 | Broke it? |
melville-moby-2778 | Broke,said I--"BROKE, do you mean?" |
melville-moby-2778 | But avast,he added, tapping his forehead,"you haint no objections to sharing a harpooneer''s blanket, have ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | But could not fasten? |
melville-moby-2778 | But look, Queequeg, ai n''t that a live eel in your bowl? melville-moby-2778 But the duke had nothing to do with taking this fish?" |
melville-moby-2778 | But what are you holding YOURS for? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what takes thee a- whaling? melville-moby-2778 Ca n''t sell his head?--What sort of a bamboozingly story is this you are telling me?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Ca n''t you twist that smaller? |
melville-moby-2778 | Can''st not read it? |
melville-moby-2778 | Captain Ahab, I have heard of Moby Dick-- but it was not Moby Dick that took off thy leg? |
melville-moby-2778 | Captain Peleg,said I,"I have a friend with me who wants to ship too-- shall I bring him down to- morrow?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Cherries? melville-moby-2778 Clam or Cod?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Come back here, cook;--here, hand me those tongs;--now take that bit of steak there, and tell me if you think that steak cooked as it should be? melville-moby-2778 Cook, cook!--where''s that old Fleece?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Cook,said Stubb, rapidly lifting a rather reddish morsel to his mouth,"do n''t you think this steak is rather overdone? |
melville-moby-2778 | Cook,said Stubb, squaring himself once more;"do you belong to the church?" |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye mark him, Flask? |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye see him? |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye see him? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did n''t I say de Roanoke country? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did n''t I tell you so? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did n''t want to try to: ai n''t one limb enough? melville-moby-2778 Did''st thou cross his wake again?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Do I suppose it? melville-moby-2778 Do tell, now,"cried Bildad,"is this Philistine a regular member of Deacon Deuteronomy''s meeting? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do with it? melville-moby-2778 Do ye know the white whale then, Tash?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Do you see that mainmast there? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do you suppose Fedallah wants to kidnap Captain Ahab? |
melville-moby-2778 | Does he fan- tail a little curious, sir, before he goes down? |
melville-moby-2778 | Dost know nothing at all about whaling, I dare say-- eh? melville-moby-2778 Dost thee?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Faith, sir, I''ve--"Faith? melville-moby-2778 Fetch him? |
melville-moby-2778 | Find who? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ginger? melville-moby-2778 Going aboard?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Hallo,_ you_ sir,cried the Captain, a gaunt rib of the sea, stalking up to Queequeg,"what in thunder do you mean by that? |
melville-moby-2778 | Has he ever whaled it any? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hast killed him? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hast seen the White Whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hast seen the White Whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hast seen the White Whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hast thou seen the White Whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Have ye shipped in her? |
melville-moby-2778 | He hain''t been a sittin''so all day, has he? |
melville-moby-2778 | He sleeps in his boots, do n''t he? melville-moby-2778 He smites his chest,"whispered Stubb,"what''s that for? |
melville-moby-2778 | Heading East at this hour in the morning, and the sun astern? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hold on, hold on, wo n''t ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | Horse- shoe stubbs, sir? melville-moby-2778 How far off?" |
melville-moby-2778 | How heading when last seen? |
melville-moby-2778 | How long hath he been a member? |
melville-moby-2778 | How old do you suppose Fedallah is, Stubb? |
melville-moby-2778 | How was it? |
melville-moby-2778 | I believe it did, sir; does the ferrule stand, sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | I do n''t half understand ye: what''s in the wind? |
melville-moby-2778 | I own thy speechless, placeless power; said I not so? melville-moby-2778 I was about to say, sir, that--""Art thou a silk- worm? |
melville-moby-2778 | In the Isle of Man, hey? melville-moby-2778 Is that the way they heave in the marchant service?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Is the Duke so very poor as to be forced to this desperate mode of getting a livelihood? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is this the Captain of the Pequod? |
melville-moby-2778 | Knife? melville-moby-2778 Landlord,"I whispered,"that ai nt the harpooneer is it?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Lay it before me;--any missing men? |
melville-moby-2778 | Lower away then; d''ye hear? |
melville-moby-2778 | Moby Dick? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now, do you mean what you say, and have been saying all along, Stubb? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now,said Queequeg,"what you tink now?--Didn''t our people laugh?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Of the hearses? melville-moby-2778 Omen? |
melville-moby-2778 | Pip? melville-moby-2778 Queequeg,"said I, going up to him,"Queequeg, what''s the matter with you?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Queequeg,said I,"do you think that we can make out a supper for us both on one clam?" |
melville-moby-2778 | See you this? |
melville-moby-2778 | Shipmates, have ye shipped in that ship? |
melville-moby-2778 | Shipped men,answered I,"when does she sail?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Sing, sir? melville-moby-2778 Sir!--in God''s name!--sir?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Sir? melville-moby-2778 Sir?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | So, then, you expect to go up into our main- top, do you, cook, when you are dead? melville-moby-2778 Spin me the yarn,"said Ahab;"how was it?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Stop your grinning,shouted I,"and why did n''t you tell me that that infernal harpooneer was a cannibal?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Suppose he should take it into his head to duck you, though-- yes, and drown you-- what then? |
melville-moby-2778 | Supposing it be the captain of the Pequod, what dost thou want of him? |
melville-moby-2778 | Swim away from me, do ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | Take the bucket, will ye, Archy? melville-moby-2778 That lively cry upon this deadly calm might almost convert a better man.--Where away?" |
melville-moby-2778 | The WHITE Whale-- a Sperm Whale-- Moby Dick, have ye seen him? melville-moby-2778 The harpoon,"said Ahab, half way rising, and draggingly leaning on one bended arm--"is it safe?" |
melville-moby-2778 | The ship? melville-moby-2778 Those sailors we saw, Queequeg, where can they have gone to?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Thou wast, wast thou? melville-moby-2778 Three Spaniards? |
melville-moby-2778 | Up Burtons and break out? melville-moby-2778 WHAT whale?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Want to see what whaling is, eh? melville-moby-2778 Wants with it?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Well then, cook, you see this whale- steak of yours was so very bad, that I have put it out of sight as soon as possible; you see that, do n''t you? melville-moby-2778 Well, suppose I did? |
melville-moby-2778 | Well, then, my Bouton- de- Rose- bud, have you seen the White Whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Well, what does thou think then of seeing the world? melville-moby-2778 Well, what''s the report?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What Captain?--Ahab? |
melville-moby-2778 | What ails ye, man? |
melville-moby-2778 | What are you jabbering about, shipmate? |
melville-moby-2778 | What became of the White Whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | What breaks in me? melville-moby-2778 What d''ye see?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What did they TELL you about him? melville-moby-2778 What do ye think of him, Bildad?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What do you know about him? |
melville-moby-2778 | What do you mean by that, Captain Peleg? |
melville-moby-2778 | What do you mean, sir? melville-moby-2778 What do you think of that now, Flask? |
melville-moby-2778 | What has he in his hand there? |
melville-moby-2778 | What him say? |
melville-moby-2778 | What in the devil''s name do you want here? |
melville-moby-2778 | What lay does he want? |
melville-moby-2778 | What now? |
melville-moby-2778 | What now? |
melville-moby-2778 | What shall I say to him first? |
melville-moby-2778 | What soulless thing is this that laughs before a wreck? melville-moby-2778 What was it, Sir?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What will the owners say, sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that about Cods, ma''am? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that bunch of lucifers dodging about there for? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that for, Queequeg? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that? melville-moby-2778 What''s the matter with you, young man?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s the matter with you? melville-moby-2778 What''s the matter with your nose, there?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s the matter? melville-moby-2778 What''s the old man have so much to do with him for?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s this? melville-moby-2778 Where away?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Where do you expect to go to, cook? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where is that harpooneer? melville-moby-2778 Where were you born, cook?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Where- away? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who but him indeed? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who dat? melville-moby-2778 Who is Captain Ahab, sir?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Who told thee that? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s Old Thunder? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s got some paregoric? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s there? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s there? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who- e debel you? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why do n''t you break your backbones, my boys? melville-moby-2778 Why not? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why not? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why sing ye not out for him, if ye see him? |
melville-moby-2778 | With heads to be sure; ai n''t there too many heads in the world? |
melville-moby-2778 | With what? |
melville-moby-2778 | Wo n''t the Duke be content with a quarter or a half? |
melville-moby-2778 | Would''st thou brand me, Perth? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ye be, be ye? melville-moby-2778 Ye said true-- ye hav''n''t seen Old Thunder yet, have ye?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Yes, we are,said I,"but what business is that of yours? |
melville-moby-2778 | You said up there, did n''t you? melville-moby-2778 ''And what business is that of yours, I should like to know, Mr. Humpback? melville-moby-2778 ''Halloa,''says I,''what''s the matter now, old fellow?'' melville-moby-2778 ''I seek a passage in this ship to Tarshish; how soon sail ye, sir?'' melville-moby-2778 ''No sooner, sir?'' melville-moby-2778 ''Very good,''says he--''he used his ivory leg, did n''t he?'' melville-moby-2778 ''Well then,''says he,''wise Stubb, what have you to complain of? melville-moby-2778 ''What am I about?'' melville-moby-2778 ''What are you''bout?'' melville-moby-2778 ''What for?'' melville-moby-2778 ''What is thine occupation? melville-moby-2778 ''Why,''thinks I,''what''s the row? melville-moby-2778 --the same way that whalers hail--How many barrels?" |
melville-moby-2778 | A brave stave that-- who calls? |
melville-moby-2778 | A problem? |
melville-moby-2778 | A white whale-- did ye mark that, man? |
melville-moby-2778 | Adventures of those three bloody- minded soladoes? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ai n''t I a crow? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ai n''t that queer, now? |
melville-moby-2778 | Air rather gardenny, I should say; throw us a bunch of posies, will ye, Bouton- de- Rose?" |
melville-moby-2778 | All ready the boats there? |
melville-moby-2778 | Am I cut off from the last fond pride of meanest shipwrecked captains? |
melville-moby-2778 | And as for Pirates, when they chance to cross each other''s cross- bones, the first hail is--"How many skulls?" |
melville-moby-2778 | And concerning all these, is not Possession the whole of the law? |
melville-moby-2778 | And did n''t I tell Cabaco here of it? |
melville-moby-2778 | And fetch him where?" |
melville-moby-2778 | And how long ago is it since you said the very contrary? |
melville-moby-2778 | And if the devil has a latch- key to get into the admiral''s cabin, do n''t you suppose he can crawl into a porthole? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what are you, reader, but a Loose- Fish and a Fast- Fish, too? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what do I wish that this Queequeg would do to me? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what do you pick your teeth with, after devouring that fat goose? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what is it? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what was that, shipmates? |
melville-moby-2778 | And what''s the horse- shoe sign? |
melville-moby-2778 | And when? |
melville-moby-2778 | And where is Cadiz, shipmates? |
melville-moby-2778 | And where''s the scare- crow? |
melville-moby-2778 | And who composed the first narrative of a whaling- voyage? |
melville-moby-2778 | And who pronounced our glowing eulogy in Parliament? |
melville-moby-2778 | And with what quill did the Secretary of the Society for the Suppression of Cruelty to Ganders formally indite his circulars? |
melville-moby-2778 | And yet you come here, and tell me such a dreadful lie as you did just now, eh?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Are all my pains to go for nothing with that coffin? |
melville-moby-2778 | Are the green fields gone? |
melville-moby-2778 | Are these last throwing out oblique hints touching Tophet? |
melville-moby-2778 | Are they not one and all with Ahab, in this matter of the whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Are ye going to let that rascal beat ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | Are you a believer in ghosts, my friend? |
melville-moby-2778 | Are you not the precious image of each and all of us men in this whaling world? |
melville-moby-2778 | As for the sign- painters''whales seen in the streets hanging over the shops of oil- dealers, what shall be said of them? |
melville-moby-2778 | At length one of them, after long scratching about for his ideas, made bold to speak,"Please, sir, who is the Lord Warden?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Aye, aye, it''s but a dim scrawl;--what''s this?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Believe ye, men, in the things called omens? |
melville-moby-2778 | Bethink thee of the albatross, whence come those clouds of spiritual wonderment and pale dread, in which that white phantom sails in all imaginations? |
melville-moby-2778 | But BEING PAID,--what will compare with it? |
melville-moby-2778 | But Stubb, he eats the whale by its own light, does he? |
melville-moby-2778 | But WHAT is this lesson that the book of Jonah teaches? |
melville-moby-2778 | But art thou not also the undertaker?" |
melville-moby-2778 | But aye, old mast, we both grow old together; sound in our hulls, though, are we not, my ship? |
melville-moby-2778 | But clear Truth is a thing for salamander giants only to encounter; how small the chances for the provincials then? |
melville-moby-2778 | But could it be possible that any sober harpooneer would get into a door mat, and parade the streets of any Christian town in that sort of guise? |
melville-moby-2778 | But do I look very old, so very, very old, Starbuck? |
melville-moby-2778 | But do n''t you know the higher you climb, the colder it gets? |
melville-moby-2778 | But do they only have mercy on long faces?--have they no bowels for a laugh? |
melville-moby-2778 | But go on, Ishmael, said I at last; do n''t you hear? |
melville-moby-2778 | But had Stubb really abandoned the poor little negro to his fate? |
melville-moby-2778 | But how did so clumsy and weighty a mass as that same hook get fixed in that hole? |
melville-moby-2778 | But how fair? |
melville-moby-2778 | But how had the mystic thing been caught? |
melville-moby-2778 | But how now, Ishmael? |
melville-moby-2778 | But how now? |
melville-moby-2778 | But how''s that? |
melville-moby-2778 | But how? |
melville-moby-2778 | But if I know not even the tail of this whale, how understand his head? |
melville-moby-2778 | But if the currents carry ye to those sweet Antilles where the beaches are only beat with water- lilies, will ye do one little errand for me? |
melville-moby-2778 | But is the Queen a mermaid, to be presented with a tail? |
melville-moby-2778 | But joking aside, though; do you know, Rose- bud, that it''s all nonsense trying to get any oil out of such whales? |
melville-moby-2778 | But look sharp-- ain''t you all ready there? |
melville-moby-2778 | But now, tell me, Stubb, do you suppose that that devil you was speaking of just now, was the same you say is now on board the Pequod?" |
melville-moby-2778 | But stop, tell me your name, will you?" |
melville-moby-2778 | But stop; does it not bear a faint resemblance to a gigantic fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | But the chowder; clam or cod to- morrow for breakfast, men?" |
melville-moby-2778 | But the only thing to be considered here, is this-- what kind of oil is used at coronations? |
melville-moby-2778 | But then again, what has the whale to say? |
melville-moby-2778 | But though without dissent this point be fixed, how is mortal man to account for it? |
melville-moby-2778 | But was there no other way for the whale to land the prophet within that short distance of Nineveh? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what does he want of them? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what is a GAM? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what is this on the chest? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what is worship? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what the devil are you hurrying about? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what then? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what thinks Lazarus? |
melville-moby-2778 | But what''s this long face about, Mr. Starbuck; wilt thou not chase the white whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | But where? |
melville-moby-2778 | But who could show a cheek like Queequeg? |
melville-moby-2778 | But why pester one with all this reasoning on the subject? |
melville-moby-2778 | But why say more? |
melville-moby-2778 | But why should the King have the head, and the Queen the tail? |
melville-moby-2778 | But will any whaleman believe these stories? |
melville-moby-2778 | But"The Crossed Harpoons,"and"The Sword- Fish?" |
melville-moby-2778 | But, peradventure, it may be sagaciously urged, how is this? |
melville-moby-2778 | But, unscrew your navel, and what''s the consequence? |
melville-moby-2778 | By the Lord, I must have been dreaming, though-- How? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ca n''t ye see the world where you stand?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Can Herr Alexander perform a feat like that? |
melville-moby-2778 | Can he warm his blue hands by holding them up to the grand northern lights? |
melville-moby-2778 | Can it be, though, that they anoint it with a view of making its interior run well, as they anoint machinery? |
melville-moby-2778 | Can you catch the expression of the Sperm Whale''s there? |
melville-moby-2778 | Can you land a full- grown whale on your deck for examination, as a cook dishes a roast- pig? |
melville-moby-2778 | Can''st thou smoothe this seam?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Cannibals? |
melville-moby-2778 | Canst thou not drive that old Adam away? |
melville-moby-2778 | Cape of Good Hope, do they call ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | Captain Ahab is all ready-- just spoke to him-- nothing more to be got from shore, eh? |
melville-moby-2778 | Captain Ahab kicked ye, did n''t he?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | Carpenter? |
melville-moby-2778 | Cold, cold-- I shiver!--How now? |
melville-moby-2778 | Come, why do n''t some of ye burst a blood- vessel? |
melville-moby-2778 | Coming back afore breakfast?" |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye feel brave men, brave?" |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye hear? |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye see Ahab standing there, sideways looking over the stern? |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye see him? |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye see him?" |
melville-moby-2778 | D''ye see it? |
melville-moby-2778 | Damn me, wo n''t you dance? |
melville-moby-2778 | Damn the devil, Flask; so you suppose I''m afraid of the devil? |
melville-moby-2778 | Death and the Judgment then? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did I say we had flip? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did n''t I hear''em in the hold? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did n''t he kick with right good will? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did n''t the people laugh?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Did n''t ye hear a word about them matters and something more, eh? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did ye read it there, Flask? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did you ever notice how that tusk of his is a sort of carved into a snake''s head, Stubb?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Did you ever see any parson a wearing mourning for the devil? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did you get it from an unquestionable source? |
melville-moby-2778 | Did you hear that noise, Cabaco?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Disdain the task? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do I sing? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do I smell ginger?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Do YOU want a kick?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | Do n''t I always say that to be good, a whale- steak must be tough? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do n''t ye love sperm? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do n''t you know you might have killed that chap?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Do n''t you see that pyramid?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | Do n''t you see, then, that for these extra risks the Marine Insurance companies have extra guarantees? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do n''t you see, you timber- head, that no harm can come to the holder of the rod, unless the mast is first struck? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do the heavens yet hate thee, that thou can''st not go mad?--What wert thou making there?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Do ye hear? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do ye love brandy? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do ye wish to go round Cape Horn to see any more of it, eh? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do you believe that cock and bull story about his having been stowed away on board ship? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do you know, Mr. Elijah, that I consider you a little impertinent?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Do you not marvel, then, at Stubb''s boast, that he demanded but ten minutes to behead a sperm whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Do you see that whale now?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Do you think he wo n''t do me a turn, when it''s to help himself in the end, shipmate?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | Do you want to sink the ship, by knocking off at a time like this? |
melville-moby-2778 | Does he not say he will not strike his spars to any gale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Does it go further? |
melville-moby-2778 | Does n''t the devil live for ever; who ever heard that the devil was dead? |
melville-moby-2778 | Does not that sight take a tooth out of the cannibal''s jaw? |
melville-moby-2778 | Does not this whole head seem to speak of an enormous practical resolution in facing death? |
melville-moby-2778 | Does the Whale''s Magnitude Diminish?--Will He Perish? |
melville-moby-2778 | Dost thou hear me? |
melville-moby-2778 | Dost thou never?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Dost thou spin thy own shroud out of thyself? |
melville-moby-2778 | Dry heat upon my brow? |
melville-moby-2778 | Eh, Pagan? |
melville-moby-2778 | Fear him, O Jonah? |
melville-moby-2778 | Feel thy heart,--beats it yet? |
melville-moby-2778 | Fine day, ai n''t it? |
melville-moby-2778 | First: What is a Fast- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | Fits? |
melville-moby-2778 | Flask?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Flip? |
melville-moby-2778 | Form, now, Indian- file, and gallop into the double- shuffle? |
melville-moby-2778 | From this one poor hunt, then, the best lance out of all Nantucket, surely he will not hang back, when every foremast- hand has clutched a whetstone? |
melville-moby-2778 | Genius in the Sperm Whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ginger!--what the devil is ginger? |
melville-moby-2778 | Gone?--gone? |
melville-moby-2778 | Great God forbid!--But is there no other way? |
melville-moby-2778 | Great God, where art Thou? |
melville-moby-2778 | Great God, where is the ship?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Ha, Pip? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hark ye, dost thou not ever sing working about a coffin? |
melville-moby-2778 | Has he not dashed his heavenly quadrant? |
melville-moby-2778 | Has the Sperm Whale ever written a book, spoken a speech? |
melville-moby-2778 | Has the poor lad a sister? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hast lost any men?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Hast seen the White Whale?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Hast thou ever helped carry a bier, and heard the coffin knock against the churchyard gate, going in? |
melville-moby-2778 | Have I not said, old man, that neither hearse nor coffin can be thine?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Have ye clapped eye on Captain Ahab?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Have ye seen a whale- boat adrift?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Have ye seen the White Whale?" |
melville-moby-2778 | He was heading east, I think.--Is your Captain crazy?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Here''s a man from Man; a man born in once independent Man, and now unmanned of Man; which is sucked in-- by what? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ho, where''s his harpoon? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hold the steak in one hand, and show a live coal to it with the other; that done, dish it; d''ye hear? |
melville-moby-2778 | How can the prisoner reach outside except by thrusting through the wall? |
melville-moby-2778 | How can''st thou endure without being mad? |
melville-moby-2778 | How comes all this, if there be not something puissant in whaling? |
melville-moby-2778 | How could one look at Ahab then, seated on that tripod of bones, without bethinking him of the royalty it symbolized? |
melville-moby-2778 | How did it get there? |
melville-moby-2778 | How far ye got, Bildad?" |
melville-moby-2778 | How is it, that you, a mere oarsman in the fishery, pretend to know aught about the subterranean parts of the whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | How is it, then, with the whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | How is that? |
melville-moby-2778 | How is this? |
melville-moby-2778 | How long since thou saw''st him last? |
melville-moby-2778 | How many barrels will thy vengeance yield thee even if thou gettest it, Captain Ahab? |
melville-moby-2778 | How many, think ye, have likewise fallen into Plato''s honey head, and sweetly perished there? |
melville-moby-2778 | How old are you, cook?" |
melville-moby-2778 | How then could I unite with this wild idolator in worshipping his piece of wood? |
melville-moby-2778 | How then is this? |
melville-moby-2778 | How then, if so be transplanted to yon sky? |
melville-moby-2778 | How then? |
melville-moby-2778 | How they use the salt, precisely-- who knows? |
melville-moby-2778 | How will that help him; jamming that iron- bound bucket on top of his head? |
melville-moby-2778 | How you tink to hear, spose you keep up such a dam slappin''and bitin''dare?" |
melville-moby-2778 | How, got the start? |
melville-moby-2778 | How, then, with me, writing of this Leviathan? |
melville-moby-2778 | How? |
melville-moby-2778 | Hussey?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Hussey?" |
melville-moby-2778 | I go for it; but are you well advised? |
melville-moby-2778 | I guess ye did?" |
melville-moby-2778 | I have given thee a hint about what whaling is; do ye yet feel inclined for it?" |
melville-moby-2778 | I say, Quohog, or whatever your name is, did you ever stand in the head of a whale- boat? |
melville-moby-2778 | I say, just wring out my jacket skirts, will ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | I say, tell Quohog there-- what''s that you call him? |
melville-moby-2778 | I see thou art no Nantucketer-- ever been in a stove boat?" |
melville-moby-2778 | I suppose then, that going plump on a flying whale with your sail set in a foggy squall is the height of a whaleman''s discretion?" |
melville-moby-2778 | I take back the coat and watch-- what says Ahab? |
melville-moby-2778 | I was going to warn ye against-- but never mind, never mind-- it''s all one, all in the family too;--sharp frost this morning, ai n''t it? |
melville-moby-2778 | I''ll have me-- let''s see-- how many in the ship''s company, all told? |
melville-moby-2778 | I''ve part changed my flesh since that time, why not my mind? |
melville-moby-2778 | If I claim the demigod then, why not the prophet? |
melville-moby-2778 | If he cuts off one of his own toes, or one of his assistants'', would you be very much astonished? |
melville-moby-2778 | In a coach and four, as they fetched Elijah? |
melville-moby-2778 | In fact, did you ever hear what might be called regular news direct or indirect from New Guinea? |
melville-moby-2778 | In the first place, how old are you, cook?" |
melville-moby-2778 | In thy most solitary hours, then, dost thou not fear eavesdroppers? |
melville-moby-2778 | In what rapt ether sails the world, of which the weariest will never weary? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is Ahab, Ahab? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is he here?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Is it I, God, or who, that lifts this arm? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is it not a saying in every one''s mouth, Possession is half of the law: that is, regardless of how the thing came into possession? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is not one shark dood right as toder to dat whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is not the main- truck higher than the kelson is low? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is not this harpoon for the White Whale?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Is the steward an apothecary, sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is this the creature of whom it was once so triumphantly said--"Canst thou fill his skin with barbed irons? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is this the end of all my bursting prayers? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is this the still militant old man, standing at the corners of the three kingdoms, on all hands coercing alms of beggars? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is''t a riddle? |
melville-moby-2778 | Is''t night?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Is, then, the crown too heavy that I wear? |
melville-moby-2778 | It seemed not a whale; and yet is this Moby Dick? |
melville-moby-2778 | It''s the first foul wind I ever knew to blow from astern; but look, did ever whale yaw so before? |
melville-moby-2778 | Jollies? |
melville-moby-2778 | Jumped from a whale- boat once;--seen him? |
melville-moby-2778 | Kill? |
melville-moby-2778 | King of Japan, whose lofty jet they say at times assumed the semblance of a snow- white cross against the sky? |
melville-moby-2778 | Know ye now, Bulkington? |
melville-moby-2778 | Loaded? |
melville-moby-2778 | Long heat and wet, have they spoiled thee? |
melville-moby-2778 | Look ye, carpenter, I dare say thou callest thyself a right good workmanlike workman, eh? |
melville-moby-2778 | Look ye, pudding- heads should never grant premises.--How long before the leg is done? |
melville-moby-2778 | Look, did not this stump come from thy shop?" |
melville-moby-2778 | MY line? |
melville-moby-2778 | Main- top, eh?" |
melville-moby-2778 | May I humbly ask if it be really so, sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | Me too; where''s your girls? |
melville-moby-2778 | Mend it, eh? |
melville-moby-2778 | Mr. Chace, what is the matter?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Mr. Starbuck? |
melville-moby-2778 | NO DIGNITY IN WHALING? |
melville-moby-2778 | NO GOOD BLOOD IN THEIR VEINS? |
melville-moby-2778 | Names down on the papers? |
melville-moby-2778 | Nay; what thing, for example, is there in the Greenland whale''s anatomy more striking than his baleen? |
melville-moby-2778 | Next: how shall we define the whale, by his obvious externals, so as conspicuously to label him for all time to come? |
melville-moby-2778 | No, I do n''t think ye did; how could ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | No? |
melville-moby-2778 | Not at all.--Why then do you try to"enlarge"your mind? |
melville-moby-2778 | Nothing about the silver calabash he spat into? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now how did this odious stigma originate? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now that the incorruption of this most fragrant ambergris should be found in the heart of such decay; is this nothing? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now that we are nearing Japan; heave- to here for a week to tinker a parcel of old hoops?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Now then, my young man, Ishmael''s thy name, did n''t ye say? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now then, thou not only wantest to go a- whaling, to find out by experience what whaling is, but ye also want to go in order to see the world? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now what''s your answer?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Now, art thou the man to pitch a harpoon down a live whale''s throat, and then jump after it? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now, how had this noble rescue been accomplished? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now, in what sign will the sun then be? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now, what do you think of that dream, Flask?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Now, what''s he speaking about, and who''s he speaking to, I should like to know? |
melville-moby-2778 | Now, why should the whale thus insist upon having his spoutings out, unless it be to replenish his reservoir of air, ere descending for good? |
melville-moby-2778 | Of course, he never had the benefit of a whaling voyage( such men seldom have), but whence he derived that picture, who can tell? |
melville-moby-2778 | Oh, Death, why canst thou not sometimes be timely? |
melville-moby-2778 | Once more we quitted him; but once more he came softly after us; and touching my shoulder again, said,"See if you can find''em now, will ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | Or canst thou tell where some other thing besides me is this moment living? |
melville-moby-2778 | Owners, owners? |
melville-moby-2778 | Pardon: who and what are they?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | Pray, what is a Lakeman, and where is Buffalo?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | Pull, will ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | Queequeg, look here-- you sabbee me, I sabbee-- you this man sleepe you-- you sabbee?" |
melville-moby-2778 | SURE, ye''ve been to sea before now; sure of that?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Said I not all seams and dents but one?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Sea- coal? |
melville-moby-2778 | See ye not then, shipmates, that Jonah sought to flee world- wide from God? |
melville-moby-2778 | Sell it for an ox whip when we get home;--what else?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Shall I get them inboard?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Shall I keep standing here? |
melville-moby-2778 | Shall I strike it, sir?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Shall I strike that? |
melville-moby-2778 | Shall I? |
melville-moby-2778 | Shall we be dragged by him to the bottom of the sea? |
melville-moby-2778 | Shall we be towed by him to the infernal world? |
melville-moby-2778 | Shall we not understand each other better than hitherto, Captain Ahab?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Shipmate, I have n''t enough twine,--have you any?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | Signs and wonders, eh? |
melville-moby-2778 | Sir sailor, but do whales have christenings? |
melville-moby-2778 | Sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | Sir?--Clay? |
melville-moby-2778 | Sleep? |
melville-moby-2778 | Sleeping? |
melville-moby-2778 | Sleeping? |
melville-moby-2778 | Snatching the boat- knife from its sheath, he suspended its sharp edge over the line, and turning towards Stubb, exclaimed interrogatively,"Cut?" |
melville-moby-2778 | So, what''s all this staring been about? |
melville-moby-2778 | Some hot Cognac? |
melville-moby-2778 | Son of darkness,"he added, turning to Queequeg,"art thou at present in communion with any Christian church?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Stop, Stubb; somehow, now, I do n''t well know whether to go back and strike him, or-- what''s that?--down here on my knees and pray for him? |
melville-moby-2778 | Stop, now; did n''t you say so?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Strangest problems of life seem clearing; but clouds sweep between-- Is my journey''s end coming? |
melville-moby-2778 | Stubb, you are skylarking; how can Fedallah do that?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Supper?--you want supper? |
melville-moby-2778 | Suppose now, he should tumble in upon me at midnight-- how could I tell from what vile hole he had been coming? |
melville-moby-2778 | Suspended? |
melville-moby-2778 | Swerve me? |
melville-moby-2778 | Swerve me? |
melville-moby-2778 | THE WHALE NEVER FIGURED IN ANY GRAND IMPOSING WAY? |
melville-moby-2778 | THE WHALE NO FAMOUS AUTHOR, AND WHALING NO FAMOUS CHRONICLER? |
melville-moby-2778 | Tell me, does the magnetic virtue of the needles of the compasses of all those ships attract them thither? |
melville-moby-2778 | That''s it, hey? |
melville-moby-2778 | The bank of England!--Oh, DO, DO, DO!--What''s that Yarman about now?" |
melville-moby-2778 | The hatchway? |
melville-moby-2778 | The javelins cease; open eyes; see, or not? |
melville-moby-2778 | The question is, what and where is the skin of the whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | The short and long of it is, men, will ye spit fire or not?" |
melville-moby-2778 | The subterranean miner that works in us all, how can one tell whither leads his shaft by the ever shifting, muffled sound of his pick? |
melville-moby-2778 | Then standing as if incredulous for a while, he calmly walked towards the astonished steward slowly saying,"Ginger? |
melville-moby-2778 | Then turning to his crew--"Are ye ready there? |
melville-moby-2778 | There are those sharks now over the side, do n''t you see they prefer it tough and rare? |
melville-moby-2778 | There is much in that sound to inspire proud feelings; but whereto does all that circumnavigation conduct? |
melville-moby-2778 | There was Queequeg, now, certainly entertaining the most absurd notions about Yojo and his Ramadan;--but what of that? |
melville-moby-2778 | These are your iron fists, hey? |
melville-moby-2778 | Think of Death and the Judgment then? |
melville-moby-2778 | Think of that; by that sweet girl that old man has a child: hold ye then there can be any utter, hopeless harm in Ahab? |
melville-moby-2778 | Think you I let that chance go, without using my boat- hatchet and jack- knife, and breaking the seal and reading all the contents of that young cub? |
melville-moby-2778 | Think you not then that brains, like yoked cattle, should be put to this leviathan, to make him at all budge to any landsman''s imagination? |
melville-moby-2778 | This the creature? |
melville-moby-2778 | Those chaps in yonder boat? |
melville-moby-2778 | Thou should''st go mad, blacksmith; say, why dost thou not go mad? |
melville-moby-2778 | Thy country? |
melville-moby-2778 | Under all these circumstances, would it be unreasonable to survey and map out the whale''s spine phrenologically? |
melville-moby-2778 | Vehemently pausing, he cried:--"What do ye do when ye see a whale, men?" |
melville-moby-2778 | WHALING NOT RESPECTABLE? |
melville-moby-2778 | Was not Saul of Tarsus converted from unbelief by a similar fright? |
melville-moby-2778 | Was not that what ye said? |
melville-moby-2778 | Was not this Vishnoo a whaleman, then? |
melville-moby-2778 | Was the other one lost by a whale?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Was there ever such unconsciousness? |
melville-moby-2778 | We resumed business; and while plying our spoons in the bowl, thinks I to myself, I wonder now if this here has any effect on the head? |
melville-moby-2778 | Well, Stubb, WISE Stubb-- that''s my title-- well, Stubb, what of it, Stubb? |
melville-moby-2778 | Were Niagara but a cataract of sand, would you travel your thousand miles to see it? |
melville-moby-2778 | Were ever such things done before with a coffin? |
melville-moby-2778 | What Greece to the Turk? |
melville-moby-2778 | What India to England? |
melville-moby-2778 | What all men''s minds and opinions but Loose- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What are the Duke of Dunder''s hereditary towns and hamlets but Fast- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What are the Rights of Man and the Liberties of the World but Loose- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What are the sinews and souls of Russian serfs and Republican slaves but Fast- Fish, whereof possession is the whole of the law? |
melville-moby-2778 | What are you talking about, then? |
melville-moby-2778 | What art thou sneezing about? |
melville-moby-2778 | What art thou thrusting that thief- catcher into my face for, man? |
melville-moby-2778 | What at last will Mexico be to the United States? |
melville-moby-2778 | What befell the weakling youth lifting the dread goddess''s veil at Lais? |
melville-moby-2778 | What business have I with this pipe? |
melville-moby-2778 | What cares Ahab? |
melville-moby-2778 | What church dost thee mean? |
melville-moby-2778 | What club but the whaleman''s can head off like that? |
melville-moby-2778 | What d''ye say, Tashtego; are you the man to snap your spine in two- and- twenty pieces for the honour of old Gayhead? |
melville-moby-2778 | What d''ye say?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What d''ye see?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What do they here? |
melville-moby-2778 | What does he say, with that look of his? |
melville-moby-2778 | What does that indignity amount to, weighed, I mean, in the scales of the New Testament? |
melville-moby-2778 | What does the whaler do when she meets another whaler in any sort of decent weather? |
melville-moby-2778 | What doom was his own father''s? |
melville-moby-2778 | What is it more? |
melville-moby-2778 | What is it you stare at? |
melville-moby-2778 | What is the chief element he employs? |
melville-moby-2778 | What is the great globe itself but a Loose- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What is the principle of religious belief in them but a Loose- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What is yonder undetected villain''s marble mansion with a door- plate for a waif; what is that but a Fast- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What of it, if some old hunks of a sea- captain orders me to get a broom and sweep down the decks? |
melville-moby-2778 | What of that? |
melville-moby-2778 | What people? |
melville-moby-2778 | What say ye, Cabaco? |
melville-moby-2778 | What say ye, men, will ye splice hands on it, now? |
melville-moby-2778 | What say ye, men?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | What say ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | What says the Cannibal? |
melville-moby-2778 | What shall be said of these? |
melville-moby-2778 | What should I do without this other arm? |
melville-moby-2778 | What skiff in tow of a seventy- four can stand still? |
melville-moby-2778 | What the devil''s the matter with me? |
melville-moby-2778 | What then can it possibly be, but sperm oil in its unmanufactured, unpolluted state, the sweetest of all oils? |
melville-moby-2778 | What then is the whale, which I include in the second species of my Folios? |
melville-moby-2778 | What then remained? |
melville-moby-2778 | What then remains? |
melville-moby-2778 | What then shall I liken the Sperm Whale to for fragrance, considering his magnitude? |
melville-moby-2778 | What then should there be in this doubloon of the Equator that is so killing wonderful? |
melville-moby-2778 | What then? |
melville-moby-2778 | What things real are there, but imponderable thoughts? |
melville-moby-2778 | What to that apostolic lancer, Brother Jonathan, is Texas but a Fast- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What to that redoubted harpooneer, John Bull, is poor Ireland, but a Fast- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What to the ostentatious smuggling verbalists are the thoughts of thinkers but Loose- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What to the rapacious landlord is the widow''s last mite but a Fast- Fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | What was America in 1492 but a Loose- Fish, in which Columbus struck the Spanish standard by way of waifing it for his royal master and mistress? |
melville-moby-2778 | What was Poland to the Czar? |
melville-moby-2778 | What was that now about one leg standing in three places, and all three places standing in one hell-- how was that? |
melville-moby-2778 | What were you about saying, sir?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What would become of a Greenland whale, say, in those shuddering, icy seas of the North, if unsupplied with his cosy surtout? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s Prometheus about there?--the blacksmith, I mean-- what''s he about? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s here?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s my juicy little pear at home doing now? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that I saw-- lightning? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that he said? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that he shouts? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that noise there? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that stultifying saying about chowder- headed people? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s that?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s the matter with you, shipmate?" |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s the use of thunder? |
melville-moby-2778 | What''s this?--green? |
melville-moby-2778 | What, then, remains? |
melville-moby-2778 | What, when the great Pope washes the feet of beggars, using his tiara for ewer? |
melville-moby-2778 | What? |
melville-moby-2778 | What? |
melville-moby-2778 | When that wicked king was slain, the dogs, did they not lick his blood?" |
melville-moby-2778 | When two large, loaded Indiamen chance to crowd and crush towards each other in the docks, what do the sailors do? |
melville-moby-2778 | Whence came they? |
melville-moby-2778 | Whence comest thou? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where did Guido get the model of such a strange creature as that? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where did''st thou see the White Whale?--how long ago?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Where else but from Nantucket did those aboriginal whalemen, the Red- Men, first sally out in canoes to give chase to the Leviathan? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where is Moby Dick? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where is the foundling''s father hidden? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where is the second hearse? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where lies the final harbor, whence we unmoor no more? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where sayest thou Pip was, boy? |
melville-moby-2778 | Where wert thou born?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Where''s your harpoon?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Where, in the bottomless deeps, could he find the torn limbs of his brother? |
melville-moby-2778 | Wherefore this difference? |
melville-moby-2778 | Wherein differ the sea and the land, that a miracle upon one is not a miracle upon the other? |
melville-moby-2778 | Which way heading?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Which way heading?" |
melville-moby-2778 | White squalls? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who ai n''t a slave? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who art thou, boy?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Who but a fool would take his left hand by his right, and say to himself, how d''ye do? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who can show a pedigree like Leviathan? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who does not feel the irresistible arm drag? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who ever heard of two pious whale- ships cruising after one missing whale- boat in the height of the whaling season? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who ever helped Stubb, or kept Stubb awake, but Stubb''s own unwinking eye? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who had darted that stone lance? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who knows it? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who wrote the first account of our Leviathan? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''d go climbing after chestnuts now? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s made appointments with him in the hold? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s over me? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s seen Pip the coward?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s seen Pip? |
melville-moby-2778 | Who''s to doom, when the judge himself is dragged to the bar? |
melville-moby-2778 | Whom call you Moby Dick?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | Why did Britain between the years 1750 and 1788 pay to her whalemen in bounties upwards of L1,000,000? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why did the Dutch in De Witt''s time have admirals of their whaling fleets? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why did the Greeks give it a separate deity, and own brother of Jove? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why did the old Persians hold the sea holy? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why do n''t ye be sensible, Flask? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why do n''t you snap your oars, you rascals? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why is almost every robust healthy boy with a robust healthy soul in him, at some time or other crazy to go to sea? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why should this be so? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why so? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why tell the whole? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why then, God, mad''st thou the ring? |
melville-moby-2778 | Why this strife of the chase? |
melville-moby-2778 | Will I have eyes at the bottom of the sea, supposing I descend those endless stairs? |
melville-moby-2778 | Will he the( leviathan) make a covenant with thee? |
melville-moby-2778 | Will ye give me as much blood as will cover this barb?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Will ye never have done, Carpenter, with that accursed sound? |
melville-moby-2778 | Will ye not save my ship?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Will you mount?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Wonder ye then at the fiery hunt? |
melville-moby-2778 | Would not Lazarus rather be in Sumatra than here? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ye are not other men, but my arms and my legs; and so obey me.--Where''s the whale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Ye hav''n''t seen him yet, have ye?" |
melville-moby-2778 | Yet I do n''t stop to plug my leak; for who can find it in the deep- loaded hull; or how hope to plug it, even if found, in this life''s howling gale? |
melville-moby-2778 | Yet this is nothing: I leave eternity to Thee; for what is man that he should live out the lifetime of his God?" |
melville-moby-2778 | You have got out insurances on our lives and want to murder us all, and pocket the proceeds, do ye?" |
melville-moby-2778 | You have seen him spout; then declare what the spout is; can you not tell water from air? |
melville-moby-2778 | You hear? |
melville-moby-2778 | You see him? |
melville-moby-2778 | ai n''t there a small drop of something queer about that, eh? |
melville-moby-2778 | all my life- long fidelities? |
melville-moby-2778 | and for what are you bound?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | and in these same perilous seas, gropes he not his way by mere dead reckoning of the error- abounding log? |
melville-moby-2778 | and in this very Typhoon, did he not swear that he would have no lightning- rods? |
melville-moby-2778 | and may I ask whether this is the sort of bitters by which he blows back the life into a half- drowned man?" |
melville-moby-2778 | and that is adding insult to injury, is it? |
melville-moby-2778 | and to what? |
melville-moby-2778 | and will you have the goodness to tell me, Mr. Dough- Boy, where lies the virtue of ginger? |
melville-moby-2778 | are there any of you Bouton- de- Roses that speak English?" |
melville-moby-2778 | art not game for Moby Dick?" |
melville-moby-2778 | bitter, biting mockery of grey hairs, have I lived enough joy to wear ye; and seem and feel thus intolerably old? |
melville-moby-2778 | boy, come back? |
melville-moby-2778 | clay, sir? |
melville-moby-2778 | come to help; eh, Pip?" |
melville-moby-2778 | cried I,"which way to it? |
melville-moby-2778 | cries the Captain at his busy desk, hurriedly making out his papers for the Customs--''Who''s there?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | d''ye hear, bell- boy? |
melville-moby-2778 | d''ye see this Spanish ounce of gold?" |
melville-moby-2778 | did n''t he call me a dog? |
melville-moby-2778 | did you ever strike a fish?" |
melville-moby-2778 | did you hear that noise, Cabaco?" |
melville-moby-2778 | does his crew drink air? |
melville-moby-2778 | dost thou sign thy name or make thy mark?" |
melville-moby-2778 | even as a man who rides a horse is called a horseman? |
melville-moby-2778 | even the great leviathan himself? |
melville-moby-2778 | ginger? |
melville-moby-2778 | go down to the fiery pit itself, in order to keep out this frost? |
melville-moby-2778 | gone down again?" |
melville-moby-2778 | have done, shipmate, will ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | he breathed at last,"who be ye smokers?" |
melville-moby-2778 | he should still go before me, my pilot; and yet to be seen again? |
melville-moby-2778 | he soars away with it!--Where''s the old man now? |
melville-moby-2778 | hope to wrest this old man''s living power from his own living hands? |
melville-moby-2778 | how can you see better of a dark night than anybody else, never mind how foolish?" |
melville-moby-2778 | how planted upon this once scraggy scoria of a country? |
melville-moby-2778 | how the richer or better is Ahab now? |
melville-moby-2778 | how valiantly I seek to drive out of others''hearts what''s clinched so fast in mine!--The Parsee-- the Parsee!--gone, gone? |
melville-moby-2778 | how? |
melville-moby-2778 | how?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | in this zoned quest, does Ahab touch no land? |
melville-moby-2778 | is all this agony so vain? |
melville-moby-2778 | is ginger the sort of fuel you use, Dough- boy, to kindle a fire in this shivering cannibal? |
melville-moby-2778 | is he mad? |
melville-moby-2778 | is he muttering in his sleep? |
melville-moby-2778 | is it not hard, that with this weary load I bear, one poor leg should have been snatched from under me? |
melville-moby-2778 | is this the road that Jonah went? |
melville-moby-2778 | it was n''t a common pitch pine leg he kicked with, was it? |
melville-moby-2778 | it''s easy to be sensible; why do n''t ye, then? |
melville-moby-2778 | keep cool-- cool? |
melville-moby-2778 | know ye not the goblet end? |
melville-moby-2778 | much more, how comprehend his face, when face he has none? |
melville-moby-2778 | must ye then perish, and without me? |
melville-moby-2778 | no lawful way?--Make him a prisoner to be taken home? |
melville-moby-2778 | now mark his boat there; where is that stove? |
melville-moby-2778 | or his head with fish- spears? |
melville-moby-2778 | pull, ca n''t ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | pull, wo n''t ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | said I,"call that his face? |
melville-moby-2778 | said I,"what sort of a chap is he-- does he always keep such late hours?" |
melville-moby-2778 | said I;"every true whaleman sleeps with his harpoon-- but why not?" |
melville-moby-2778 | said Peleg when I came back;"what did ye see?" |
melville-moby-2778 | that worships in Deacon Deuteronomy Coleman''s meeting- house?" |
melville-moby-2778 | the captain of our ship, the Pequod?" |
melville-moby-2778 | the very course he swung to this day noon? |
melville-moby-2778 | this he? |
melville-moby-2778 | thou tellest me truly where I AM-- but canst thou cast the least hint where I SHALL be? |
melville-moby-2778 | thou terror of all cruisers that crossed their wakes in the vicinity of the Tattoo Land? |
melville-moby-2778 | thought I, ha, as the flying particles almost choked me, are these ashes from that destroyed city, Gomorrah? |
melville-moby-2778 | unseen weaver!--pause!--one word!--whither flows the fabric? |
melville-moby-2778 | was there ever such another Bunger in the watery world? |
melville-moby-2778 | what does it look like?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | what hast thou done with her? |
melville-moby-2778 | what is the matter with me? |
melville-moby-2778 | what noise d''ye mean?" |
melville-moby-2778 | what palace may it deck? |
melville-moby-2778 | what possesses thee to this? |
melville-moby-2778 | what''s that pump stopping for?'' |
melville-moby-2778 | what''s this? |
melville-moby-2778 | where go ye now? |
melville-moby-2778 | where''s Bulkington?" |
melville-moby-2778 | wherefore all these ceaseless toilings? |
melville-moby-2778 | which way?" |
melville-moby-2778 | who can tell it? |
melville-moby-2778 | who ever conquered it? |
melville-moby-2778 | who is not a cannibal? |
melville-moby-2778 | who put it into him to chase and fang that flying- fish? |
melville-moby-2778 | whom call ye Pip? |
melville-moby-2778 | why do n''t ye? |
melville-moby-2778 | why do n''t you pack those whales in ice while you''re working at''em? |
melville-moby-2778 | why do n''t you speak? |
melville-moby-2778 | why stay ye not when ye come? |
melville-moby-2778 | why weary, and palsy the arm at the oar, and the iron, and the lance? |
melville-moby-2778 | will ye never have done with all this weary roving? |
melville-moby-2778 | wincing for a moment with the pain;"have I been but forging my own branding- iron, then?" |
fielding-history-3755 | A young gentleman,cries Honour,"that came hither in company with that saucy rascal who is now in the kitchen?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Alack- a- day, sir,said she,"how can I flatter myself with such hopes when I know it is a thing impossible? |
fielding-history-3755 | Am I not now made amends? |
fielding-history-3755 | And are you not afraid to die, my little Betsy? |
fielding-history-3755 | And are you really then in earnest? |
fielding-history-3755 | And are you,said Allworthy to Partridge,"the servant of Mr Jones?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And can you really, madam, think me so fortunate,said Jones, sighing,"while I have incurred your displeasure?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And can you, after owning that,said Jones,"hesitate a moment?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And did this Mr Dowling,says Allworthy, with great astonishment in his countenance,"tell you that I would assist in the prosecution?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And did you really then know the lady at the masquerade? |
fielding-history-3755 | And did you really, sir, go to bed with that woman? |
fielding-history-3755 | And do you intend to make a secret of your going away? |
fielding-history-3755 | And do you really despair of ever seeing Miss Western again? |
fielding-history-3755 | And do you think then, madam,answered Mrs Western,"that there is no difference between my Lord Fellamar and Mr Blifil?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And dost thou imagine, then, Partridge,cries Jones,"that he was really frightened?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And have I suffered such a fellow as this,cries the doctor, in a passion,"to instruct me? |
fielding-history-3755 | And is Mr Jones,answered the maid,"such a perfidy man?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And is a wench having a bastard all your news, doctor? |
fielding-history-3755 | And is it possible then,said Jones,"you can think of deserting her?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And is it possible, sir,said Jones,"that you can have resided here from that day to this?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And is it possible,cried he,"that a young creature with such perfections should think of bestowing herself so unworthily?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And is it really no more than that? fielding-history-3755 And is this other, pray, an honourable mistress?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And is this the story which he hath told you? |
fielding-history-3755 | And pray who is this young gentleman of quality, this young Squire Allworthy? |
fielding-history-3755 | And so you would sacrifice your religion to your interest,cries the exciseman;"and are desirous to see popery brought in, are you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And was you in company with this lawyer and the two fellows? |
fielding-history-3755 | And what did you say to the lady concerning that matter? |
fielding-history-3755 | And who sent you to enquire about him? |
fielding-history-3755 | And will you take my maid away from me? |
fielding-history-3755 | And yet, as to that now, how much do you imagine your friend is to have? |
fielding-history-3755 | Are not you,said Cleostratus,"ashamed to admonish a drunken man?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Are your eggs new laid? fielding-history-3755 As to the meritorious part,"he said,"he readily agreed with the captain; for where could be the merit of barely discharging a duty? |
fielding-history-3755 | At Aldersgate? |
fielding-history-3755 | Base born? fielding-history-3755 Brother,"said she,"I am astonished at your behaviour; will you never learn any regard to decorum? |
fielding-history-3755 | But did not fortune send me an excellent dainty yesterday? fielding-history-3755 But how can he have any right to make us papishes?" |
fielding-history-3755 | But suppose,said Western,"she should run away with un in the meantime? |
fielding-history-3755 | But suppose,says Jones,"I should grow worse, and die of the consequences of my present wound?" |
fielding-history-3755 | But surely,says Blifil,"when she hears of this murder which he hath committed, if the law should spare his life----""What''s that?" |
fielding-history-3755 | But was it possible,says Allworthy,"that you should never discern any symptoms of love between them, when you have seen them so often together?" |
fielding-history-3755 | But, child, dear child,said the aunt,"be reasonable; can you invent a single objection?" |
fielding-history-3755 | But, dear sir,cries she,"what was the occasion of your quarrel?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Can I bear to hear this,cries Mrs Western,"from a girl who hath now a letter from a murderer in her pocket?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Can any pleasure compensate these evils? fielding-history-3755 Can it be possible?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Can you be so cruel to call it pretended? |
fielding-history-3755 | Could I have expected,proceeded Sophia,"such treatment from you? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did ever Tramontane make such an answer? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did ever mortal hear the like? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did not you find some of the nations among which you travelled less troublesome to you than others? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did your ladyship, indeed? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do n''t you remember putting your hands in my lady''s muff once? fielding-history-3755 Do you hear there,"quoth the squire,"what her ladyship says? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you mean to banter me, young gentleman? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you think, then,answered the waiting- gentlewoman,"that I have the stomach of a horse, to eat mutton at this time of night? |
fielding-history-3755 | Doth it become such a villain as you are,cries Jones,"to contaminate the name of honour by assuming it? |
fielding-history-3755 | Fie, brother,answered the lady,"is this language to a clergyman? |
fielding-history-3755 | For heaven''s sake, sir,says he,"do but consider; what can your honour do?--how is it possible you can live in this town without money? |
fielding-history-3755 | For what purpose should you so strongly deny a fact which I think it would be rather your interest to own? |
fielding-history-3755 | Hath anything happened to Sophia? |
fielding-history-3755 | Hath anything lately happened in which my Sophia is concerned? fielding-history-3755 Hath he got my daughter''s muff? |
fielding-history-3755 | Hath not your ladyship heard it, then? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I ever given any encouragement for these liberties? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I then,said Allworthy,"ignorantly punished an innocent man, in the person of him who hath just left us? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have not you? |
fielding-history-3755 | He did so? |
fielding-history-3755 | How can you possibly think you have offended me? |
fielding-history-3755 | How could you,cries Jones,"mention two words sufficient to drive me to distraction?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How else,said Jones,"should Mrs Miller be acquainted that there was any connexion between him and me? |
fielding-history-3755 | How is it possible you should know me? |
fielding-history-3755 | How often shall I tell thee,answered Jones,"that I have no home to return to? |
fielding-history-3755 | How often,said he,"am I to suffer for your folly, or rather for my own in keeping you? |
fielding-history-3755 | How, Jack? |
fielding-history-3755 | How, sir, have I deserved this want of confidence? |
fielding-history-3755 | How, sir,said Jones,"and was this lady of your providing?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How, sir,said the captain,"did you not tell me I lyed?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How, sir? |
fielding-history-3755 | How? fielding-history-3755 I do n''t care what anybody knows of me,"answered the squire;----"but when must he come to see her? |
fielding-history-3755 | I mean,said the captain,"Partridge the barber, the schoolmaster, what do you call him? |
fielding-history-3755 | I promise you, madam,answered he,"there are very few things I would not undertake for your charming cousin; but pray, who is this happy man?" |
fielding-history-3755 | I think we ought to encourage the recruiting those numbers which we are every day losing in the war.--But where is she? fielding-history-3755 I, sir?" |
fielding-history-3755 | If you have any pity, any compassion,cries Jones,"I beg you will instantly tell me what hath happened to Sophia?" |
fielding-history-3755 | If you think so kindly of me, madam,said he,"as she is a relation of yours, will you do me the honour to propose it to her father?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Indeed, child,answered she,"I never heard you, or did not understand you:--but what do you mean by this rude, vile manner?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Indeed, indeed, miss,cries the aunt,"you ought to be ashamed of owning you had received it at all; but where is the letter? |
fielding-history-3755 | Irritate him? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is his servant without? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is it possible,says Sophia,"that my aunt can have betrayed me already?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is it then possible, sir,answered Jones,"that you can guess my business?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is she here, then, madam? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is the misery of these poor wretches a subject of mirth? fielding-history-3755 Is there no way, madam, by which I could have a sight of him? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is there,answered he,"no way by which I can atone for madness? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is this usage to be borne, Mr Jones? |
fielding-history-3755 | It is no more than I expected,cries the doctor:"but pray what symptoms have appeared since I left you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Joe,says the mistress,"do n''t you hear the gentleman''s bell ring? |
fielding-history-3755 | La, madam,says Sophia, looking more foolishly than ever she did in her life,"I know not what to say-- why, madam, should you suspect?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Like whose, child? |
fielding-history-3755 | Marriage? |
fielding-history-3755 | Mr Western,said Allworthy,"shall I beg you will hear my full sentiments on this matter?" |
fielding-history-3755 | My lord who? |
fielding-history-3755 | No matter,says Jones, a little hastily;"I want to know if this be the road to Bristol?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Pray, dear sir,says she,"tell me what''s the matter; who is it that hath insulted you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Pray, sir, did he mention anything of the warrant? |
fielding-history-3755 | Pray, sir, where was the wound? |
fielding-history-3755 | Pray, sir,answered the old gentleman,"how comes it to be any concern of yours?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Prithee, Partridge, wast thou ever susceptible of love in thy life, or hath time worn away all the traces of it from thy memory? |
fielding-history-3755 | Prithee,cries the squire,"wout unt persuade me canst not ride in a coach, wouldst? |
fielding-history-3755 | Saw whom, madam? |
fielding-history-3755 | Shall I answer you as a surgeon, or a friend? |
fielding-history-3755 | She may take un up, if she pleases: who hinders her? |
fielding-history-3755 | So I must go and ask pardon for your fault, must I? |
fielding-history-3755 | So much the more inexcuseable,answered the lady;"for whom doth he ruin by his fondness but his own child?" |
fielding-history-3755 | So you do n''t know the street then where my Sophia is lodged? |
fielding-history-3755 | So, tonsor,says Jones,"I find you have more trades than one; how came you not to inform me of this last night?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Suppose, madam,said he,"you should recommend them to Mr Allworthy? |
fielding-history-3755 | Suppose,says he,"an action of false imprisonment should be brought against us, what defence could we make? |
fielding-history-3755 | Sure, sir,said he,"your servant gives you most excellent advice; for who would travel by night at this time of the year?" |
fielding-history-3755 | The Lady Bellaston? |
fielding-history-3755 | The matter, sir? fielding-history-3755 The name o''un?" |
fielding-history-3755 | The name, sir? fielding-history-3755 Then you have been at school, Mr Northerton?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Then,said Jones,"we must go back again?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Think of them? |
fielding-history-3755 | Very well,said he,"and in what cause do I venture my life? |
fielding-history-3755 | Was ever anything like it? |
fielding-history-3755 | Was your mistress unkind, then? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, Tom,said he,"any news from Lady Bellaston, after last night''s adventure?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, and how did you use the fellow? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, and what instructions did he then give you? fielding-history-3755 Well, and when we come back to the top of the hill, which way must we take?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, and where''s my niece? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, and will you consent to ha un to- morrow morning? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, but Black George? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, but consider,cried George,"what answer shall I make to madam?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, but what is your good news? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, but, ma''am,answered Honour,"how doth your la''ship think of making your escape? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, child,said Allworthy,"but what is this new instance? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, madam,continued Sophia,"and why may not I expect to have a second, perhaps, better than this? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, my dear, dear Sophy,cries the aunt,"what would you have me say?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, sir,said Allworthy,"and in what manner did the lawyer behave? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, well,says Jones,"let us avoid this subject; but pray what is your advice?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What am I to think of this matter? |
fielding-history-3755 | What but the sublime idea of virtue could inspire a human mind with the generous thought of giving liberty? fielding-history-3755 What can be the matter, Mr Western?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What do n''t you say? |
fielding-history-3755 | What do you mean by one woman, fellow? |
fielding-history-3755 | What do you mean by these words,replied Jones,"if I knew all?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What do you mean? |
fielding-history-3755 | What do you say, Mr George? |
fielding-history-3755 | What dost thou talk of a parish bastard, Robin? |
fielding-history-3755 | What fib, child? |
fielding-history-3755 | What fortune? |
fielding-history-3755 | What hast thou seen, Jack? |
fielding-history-3755 | What have I done, sir? |
fielding-history-3755 | What is it, pray? |
fielding-history-3755 | What is that? |
fielding-history-3755 | What is the matter, child? |
fielding-history-3755 | What is the name of the street? |
fielding-history-3755 | What is to be done? |
fielding-history-3755 | What lawyer, madam? fielding-history-3755 What misfortune?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What news, pray? |
fielding-history-3755 | What news? |
fielding-history-3755 | What reason, my dear Jack, have I ever given you,said Jones,"to stab me with so cruel a suspicion?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What saucy fellow,cries Honour,"told you anything of my lady?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What should it be, Sophy,answered the squire,"but about you, Sophy? |
fielding-history-3755 | What then? |
fielding-history-3755 | What think you of some eggs and bacon, madam? |
fielding-history-3755 | What would I ha thee do? |
fielding-history-3755 | What would my papa have me do? |
fielding-history-3755 | What''s the matter, neighbour? |
fielding-history-3755 | What, do you suppose,says Nightingale,"that we have been a- bed together?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What, dost thee open upon me? |
fielding-history-3755 | What, hath Mrs Miller given you warning too, my friend? |
fielding-history-3755 | What, the devil should she see? |
fielding-history-3755 | What? |
fielding-history-3755 | What?--What? |
fielding-history-3755 | Whence did you come? |
fielding-history-3755 | Where are they? |
fielding-history-3755 | Where, sir? |
fielding-history-3755 | Who could this woman be? |
fielding-history-3755 | Who is coming? |
fielding-history-3755 | Who taught him to laugh at whatever is virtuous and decent, and fit and right in the nature of things? fielding-history-3755 Who was it gave you authority to mention the story of the robbery, or that the man you saw here was the person?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Who, sir? fielding-history-3755 Who, who?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Who? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why do you beat me in this manner, mistress? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why should I confess, sir,says Sophia,"since it seems you are so well acquainted with my thoughts?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why should I not? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why sorry,cries the squire:"Where is the mighty matter o''t? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why there,says Susan,"I hope, madam, your ladyship wo n''t be offended; but pray, madam, is not your ladyship''s name Madam Sophia Western?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, Susan,cries the landlady,"is there a fire lit yet in the Wild- goose? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, husband,says she,"would any but such a blockhead as you not have enquired what place this was before he had accepted it? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, prithee, who art engaged to? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, then,said Sophia,"will you not suffer me to refuse this once?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, what can I do? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, what do they say? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, what is the matter? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, who,cries Jones,"dost thou take to be such a coward here besides thyself?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, would it not be better for her to be dead, than to be a beggar? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, zounds,cries Western,"who could have thought it? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will I? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will my papa be so kind,says she,"as to hear me speak?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you be blooded or no? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you be so kind as to allow that she is a b--? fielding-history-3755 Will you never learn a proper use of words?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you please, madam, to assist the gentleman''s memory? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you? |
fielding-history-3755 | With a gentleman from Squire Allworthy''s,repeated the lad;"the squire''s son, I think they call''un."--"Whither? |
fielding-history-3755 | With whom? |
fielding-history-3755 | Would not my sufferings, if they had been ten times greater, have been now richly repaid? fielding-history-3755 Yes, hussy,"answered the enraged mother,"so I was, and what was the mighty matter of that? |
fielding-history-3755 | Yes; and he is a very handsome fellow,said the lady:"do n''t you think so?" |
fielding-history-3755 | You are a human creature then? fielding-history-3755 You are always so bloodily wise,"quoth the husband:"it would have cost her more, would it? |
fielding-history-3755 | You have hit the nail_ ad unguem_cries Partridge;"how came I not to think of it? |
fielding-history-3755 | You have lost the hare, and I must draw every way to find her again? fielding-history-3755 You take her part then, you do? |
fielding-history-3755 | _ Quare non?_answered Partridge,"it is possible, and it is certain." |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And a little chicken broth too?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And can your ladyship,"cries he,"ask of me what I must part with my honour before I grant? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And did Mr Blifil order you to say so?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And did you not send him thither?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And have I then,"says she, with a smile,"so angry a countenance?--Have I really brought a chiding face with me?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And is this the dear good woman, the person,"cries she,"to whom all this discovery is owing?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And pray, sir,"says the serjeant,"no offence, I hope; but pray what sort of a gentleman is the devil? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And was my Sophia so good?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And who,"said Thwackum,"is that wicked slut with you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"And will not my dear papa allow me to have the least knowledge of what will make me so? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Ay, and do you love to cry then?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"But do you think him in danger?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"But how comes it, sir,"cries the landlord,"that such a great gentleman walks about the country afoot?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"But which is Mr John Bearnes''s?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Can no man,"said Sophia, in a very low and altered voice,"do you think, make a bad husband, who is not a fool?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Do you know anything of any lady?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Find her?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Hold your blasphemous tongue,"cries Sophia:"how dare you mention his name with disrespect before me? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"How much?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"How, the squire''s?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"How,"says Jones, starting up,"do you know my Sophia?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"I confidence in her?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"I pity your country ignorance from my heart,"cries the lady.--"Do you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"If it be so material,"says Square,"why do n''t you present it him of your own accord?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Is it possible,"says she,"you can have such a desire to make me miserable?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"May I be so bold,"says Partridge,"to offer my advice? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Mayn''t I make him some jellies too?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Nay, sir, if you wo n''t let me speak, I have done.--Here, sir, is a letter from my young lady-- what would some men give to have this? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"No offence, I hope, sir,"said the serjeant;"where, then, if I may venture to be so bold, may you and your friend be travelling?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"No, not I,"answered Western;"is anything the matter with the girl?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"O dear, ma''am,"answered the other,"who is this wicked man? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Perhaps you have had a friend, or a mistress?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Pursuit of whom?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Some people,"cries Partridge,"ought to have good memories; or did you find just money enough in your breeches to pay for the mutton- chop?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Then you have a master?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"To see whom?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Upon what business did you go thither, sir; and who sent you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Well reasoned, old boy,"answered Jones;"but why dost thou think that I should desire to expose thee? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Well, and is this thy story?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Well, and which way goes to Bristol?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Were these the words, sir?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What could you tell me, Honour?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What do you mean by running on in this manner to me?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What hast thou heard of?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What is it, for heaven''s sake?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What is that, my friend?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What lengths, sir?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What letter, madam?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What letter?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What neglect, madam, or what slight,"cries Jones,"have I been guilty of?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What the devil would you have me do?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What wife?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What, the squire who doth so much good all over the country?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"What,"says she,"must be the dreadful consequence of my disobedience? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Why do you conclude so?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Why do you repeat her impudence so often?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Why doth he not go by the name of his father?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Why should you think I would kill you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Why so?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Why wout ask, Sophy?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Why, sure he would not be angry with you,"said Jones,"for doing a common act of charity?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Won''t you allow him sack- whey?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Yes, marry, do I,"says she:"who in the country doth not?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"Yes,"cries she,"for this once; but will it be mended ever the more hereafter? |
fielding-history-3755 | --"You ca n''t live with Mr Blifil?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --"You have no sack, then?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ---"And wunt not ha un then to- morrow, nor next day?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ----"That''s a good girl,"cries he,"and dost consent then?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ----"What am I to conclude from thence, my lord?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ----"What blazing star, my lord?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ----"What do you mean, my lord?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ----"What expedient can that be?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ----"Why, what a pox is the matter now?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ----"Z-- ds and bl-- d, sister,"cries the squire,"what would you have me say? |
fielding-history-3755 | --Allworthy stood a minute silent, lifting up his eyes; and then, turning to Dowling, said,"How came you, sir, not to deliver me this message?" |
fielding-history-3755 | --But recollecting herself, she said,"Indeed I know one such; but can there be another?" |
fielding-history-3755 | After what is past, sir, can you expect I should take you upon your word?" |
fielding-history-3755 | After what past at Upton, so soon to engage in a new amour with another woman, while I fancied, and you pretended, your heart was bleeding for me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Again, what reader doth not know that philosophy and religion in time moderated, and at last extinguished, this grief? |
fielding-history-3755 | Allworthy looked shocked, and blessed himself; and then, turning to Mrs Miller, he cried,"Well, madam, what say you now?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Am I desiring her to do anything for me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Am I talking with a deist or an atheist?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And are your eyes opened to him at last? |
fielding-history-3755 | And can you be such a perjury man after all? |
fielding-history-3755 | And have you suffered so much cruelty from your father on the account of a man to whom you have been always absolutely indifferent?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And if she should take me at my word, where am I then? |
fielding-history-3755 | And now, good politic sir, what think you of Mr Blifil? |
fielding-history-3755 | And now, this ill- yoked pair, this lean shadow and this fat substance, have prompted me to write, whose assistance shall I invoke to direct my pen? |
fielding-history-3755 | And one of the maid- servants, before she alighted from her horse, asked if this was not the London road? |
fielding-history-3755 | And pray what else should be the occasion of all her melancholy that night at supper, the next morning, and indeed ever since?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And pray what is the name of this pretty gentleman?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And pray, sir, may I, without offence, enquire whither you are travelling this way?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And shall I live to see him as happy as he deserves?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And then a whisper ran through the whole congregation,"Who is she?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And then turning to Mrs Honour, she asked her"How she had the assurance to mention her name with disrespect?" |
fielding-history-3755 | And was Mrs Waters, then-- but why do I ask? |
fielding-history-3755 | And what am I desiring all this while? |
fielding-history-3755 | And what are your objections to the allowance of the honour which I have sollicited? |
fielding-history-3755 | And what is this world which you would be ashamed to face but the vile, the foolish, and the profligate? |
fielding-history-3755 | And what must I stand sending a parcel of compliments to a confounded whore, that keeps away a daughter from her own natural father? |
fielding-history-3755 | And what return have I found? |
fielding-history-3755 | And what signifies your la''ship having so great a fortune, if you ca n''t please yourself with the man you think most handsomest? |
fielding-history-3755 | And who is this human being? |
fielding-history-3755 | And why shouldst thou grieve, when thou knowest thy grief will do thy friend no good? |
fielding-history-3755 | And will not this dread of censure increase in proportion to the matter which a man is conscious of having afforded for it? |
fielding-history-3755 | And yet, Mr Jones, have I not enough to resent? |
fielding-history-3755 | And yet, can you believe it, gentlemen? |
fielding-history-3755 | Are there no charms in the thoughts of having a coronet on your coach?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Are these the proofs of love which I expected? |
fielding-history-3755 | Are we so abominably selfish, that we can be concerned at others having possession even of what we despise? |
fielding-history-3755 | Are you certain this was the gentleman?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Are you frightened by the word rape? |
fielding-history-3755 | Are you really to be imposed on by professions? |
fielding-history-3755 | Are you used, Mr Jones, to make these sudden conquests?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Are your rewards and punishments den de same ting?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Ask Sophy there-- You have not the worse opinion of a young fellow for getting a bastard, have you, girl? |
fielding-history-3755 | At present, do tell me what man is it you mean about my daughter?" |
fielding-history-3755 | At that the squire thundered out a curse, and bid the parson hold his tongue, saying,"At''nt in pulpit now? |
fielding-history-3755 | Because I said he was a handsome man? |
fielding-history-3755 | Besides, ben''t I engaged to you, and did I ever go off any bargain when I had promised?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Besides, do you think I would even wish to live with the reputation of a murderer? |
fielding-history-3755 | Besides, if it was to do any good indeed; but, let the cause be what it will, what mighty matter of good can two people do? |
fielding-history-3755 | Besides, was not all our quarrel about you? |
fielding-history-3755 | Besides, why-- what-- why should you go to see? |
fielding-history-3755 | Blifil then answered,"I own, sir, I have been guilty of an offence, yet may I hope your pardon?" |
fielding-history-3755 | But I believe you will allow me to be her father, and if I be, am I not to govern my own child? |
fielding-history-3755 | But Mr Allworthy, with a more gentle aspect, turned towards the lad, and said,"Is this true, child? |
fielding-history-3755 | But how can it be otherwise? |
fielding-history-3755 | But if you ask me what you shall do, what can you do less,"cries Jones,"than fulfil the expectations of her family, and her own? |
fielding-history-3755 | But is not revenge forbidden by Heaven? |
fielding-history-3755 | But the captain he knows nothing about it; and as long as there is enough for him too, what does it signify? |
fielding-history-3755 | But what people ever travel across the country from Upton hither, especially to London? |
fielding-history-3755 | But what''s to be done, husband? |
fielding-history-3755 | But when you know what has induced me to give you this trouble, I hope----""Pray, what is your business, madam?" |
fielding-history-3755 | But why do I blame Fortune? |
fielding-history-3755 | But why do I mention another woman? |
fielding-history-3755 | But why do I mention justification? |
fielding-history-3755 | But why do I reflect on happy situations only to aggravate my own misery? |
fielding-history-3755 | But why do I talk thus to a heathen and an unbeliever? |
fielding-history-3755 | But, admit no other would, would not your own heart, my friend, applaud it? |
fielding-history-3755 | But, honestly speaking, brother, have you not a little promoted this fault? |
fielding-history-3755 | Ca n''t you pretend that the despair of possessing her niece, from her being promised to Blifil, has made you turn your thoughts towards her? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can I be such a villain? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can I believe the passion you have profest to me to be sincere? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can I think of soliciting such a creature to consent to her own ruin? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can Lady Bellaston have conferred favours on a man whom she could believe capable of so base a design? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can a man, therefore, with so bad a wound as this be said to be out of danger? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can any man have a higher notion of the rule of right, and the eternal fitness of things? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can any man who is really a Christian abstain from relieving one of his brethren in such a miserable condition?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Can any temptation have sophistry and delusion strong enough to persuade you to so simple a bargain? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can honour bear the thought, that this creature is a tender, helpless, defenceless, young woman? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can honour support such contemplations as these a moment?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Can honour teach any one to tell a lie, or can any honour exist independent of religion?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Can love, which always seeks the good of its object, attempt to betray a woman into a bargain where she is so greatly to be the loser? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can the best of fathers break my heart? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can the blood of the Westerns submit to such contamination? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can you deny that you wished to have her alone in a wood to strip her-- to strip one of the prettiest ladies that ever was seen in the world? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can you get rid of your engagements, and dine here to- day? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can you wish me so ill?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Can you, with honour, be the knowing, the wilful occasion, nay, the artful contriver of the ruin of a human being? |
fielding-history-3755 | Can you, with honour, destroy the fame, the peace, nay, probably, both the life and soul too, of this creature? |
fielding-history-3755 | Confess honestly; do n''t you consider this contrived interview as little better than a downright assignation? |
fielding-history-3755 | Could I be guilty of betraying this poor innocent girl to you, what security could you have that I should not act the same part by yourself? |
fielding-history-3755 | Could I have believed that these were only snares laid to betray the innocence of my child, and for the ruin of us all?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Could I, madam, hope you would admit a visit from him?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Could he have borne such a thought? |
fielding-history-3755 | Could he have desired that if he had loved me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Could he have written such a word?" |
fielding-history-3755 | D-- n it, says I, how can that be? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did I expect to hear such cold language from Mr Jones?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Did I not beg you, did I not intreat you, to leave the whole conduct to me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did he not come by it in defence of a young woman? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did not I advise you never to go into Squire Western''s manor? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did not I tell you many a good year ago what would come of it? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did not she call for a glass of water when she came in? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did not you promise me, brother, that you would take none of these headstrong measures? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did she not faint away on seeing him lie breathless on the ground? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did she not, after he was recovered, turn pale again the moment we came up to that part of the field where he stood? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did you imagine she would not apply them? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did you never hear of the great Squire Western, sirrah? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did you never hear, sir, of one Partridge, who had the honour of being reputed your father, and the misfortune of being ruined by that honour?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Did you not want to rob the lady of her fine riding- habit, no longer ago than yesterday, in the back- lane here? |
fielding-history-3755 | Did you think, child, because you have been able to impose upon your father, that you could impose upon me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do I live but for her?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Do n''t look and say such cruel-- Can you be unmoved while you see your Sophy in this dreadful condition? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do n''t you remember what happened about seven years ago?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you imagine I did not know the reason of your overacting all that friendship for Mr Blifil yesterday? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you know this lady?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you really imagine, brother, that the house of a woman of figure is to be attacked by warrants and brutal justices of the peace? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you really then imagine me a fool? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you remember when you shot the partridge, the occasion of all our misfortunes? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you think I am ignorant who the queen of the fairies is?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you think Mr Allworthy hath more contempt for money than other men because he professes more? |
fielding-history-3755 | Do you think yourself at liberty to invade the privacies of women of condition, without the least decency or notice?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Dost repent heartily of thy promise, dost not, Sophia?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Dost thou imagine I can not live more than twenty- four hours on this dear pocket- book?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Doth not all the country know whose son Tom is? |
fielding-history-3755 | Doth the man who recognizes in his own heart no traces of avarice or ambition, conclude, therefore, that there are no such passions in human nature? |
fielding-history-3755 | Every man must die once, and what signifies the manner how? |
fielding-history-3755 | First then, I desire you to answer me one question-- Did not I beget her? |
fielding-history-3755 | For though she understood not a word of what passed between us, yet she had the skill, the assurance, the----what shall I call it? |
fielding-history-3755 | For what other purpose indeed are our youth instructed in all the arts of rendering themselves agreeable? |
fielding-history-3755 | Go, remember there''s all sorts of mutton and fowls; go, open the door with, Gentlemen, d''ye call? |
fielding-history-3755 | Hark''ee, child,"says she,"is not that very young gentleman now in bed with some nasty trull or other?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Hast lost thy tongue, girl? |
fielding-history-3755 | Hast nut gin thy consent, Sophy, to be married to- morrow?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Hath she appointed the day, boy? |
fielding-history-3755 | Hath your ladyship endeavoured to reason with her?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I acted in such a manner by your ladyship? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I any hopes of ever seeing her, though she was as desirous as myself, without exposing her to the wrath of her father, and to what purpose? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I been so tender of their infancy, so careful of their education? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I ever taught my daughter disobedience?--Here she stands; speak honestly, girl, did ever I bid you be disobedient to me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I indulged her? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I not a thousand times argued with you about giving my niece her own will? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I not often told you that women in a free country are not to be treated with such arbitrary power? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I not taken infinite pains to show you, that the law of nature hath enjoined a duty on children to their parents? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have I so chearfully undergone all the labours and duties of a mother? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have not I done everything to humour and to gratify you, and to make you obedient to me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have not your frequent declarations on this subject given him a moral certainty of your refusal, where there was any deficiency in point of fortune? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have you a mind to oblige her to take such another step?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Have you no sense of ambition? |
fielding-history-3755 | Have you not betrayed my honour to her?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Have you, madam, any particular business which brings you to me?" |
fielding-history-3755 | He did, indeed, himself change colour, and his voice a little faultered while he asked him, What was the matter? |
fielding-history-3755 | He presently ran to her, and with a voice full at once of tenderness and terrour, cried,"O my Sophia, what means this dreadful sight?" |
fielding-history-3755 | He then began to vociferate pretty loudly, and at last an old woman, opening an upper casement, asked, Who they were, and what they wanted? |
fielding-history-3755 | He then concluded by asking,"who that Partridge was, whom he had called a worthless fellow?" |
fielding-history-3755 | He use me ill? |
fielding-history-3755 | He would have got a good picking out of it; but I have no relation now who is a lawyer, and why should I go to law for the benefit of strangers?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Here are pistols over the chimney: who knows whether they be charged or no, or what he may do with them?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Here she looked at him tenderly almost a minute, and then bursting into an agony, cried,"Oh, Mr Jones, why did you save my life? |
fielding-history-3755 | Here the lady affected a laugh, and cried,"My dear lord, sure you know us better than to talk of reasoning a young woman out of her inclinations? |
fielding-history-3755 | His lordship was no sooner gone, than Lady Bellaston, coming up to Mr Western, said,"Bless me, sir, what have you done? |
fielding-history-3755 | His lordship, who was not in the secret, asked gravely, whom he had killed? |
fielding-history-3755 | His majesty, then turning towards Jones, said,"Sir, you have hear what dey say; what punishment do you tink your man deserve?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How came you to persist so obstinately in a falsehood?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How can I bear to do this on a sick- bed? |
fielding-history-3755 | How can I possibly desert such a woman? |
fielding-history-3755 | How can I speak then? |
fielding-history-3755 | How can you imagine, after what you have shewn me, if I had ever any such thoughts, that I should not banish them for ever? |
fielding-history-3755 | How could the little wretch have the folly to fly away from that state of happiness in which I had the honour to place him? |
fielding-history-3755 | How durst you, after all the precautions I gave you, mention the name of Mr Allworthy in this house?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How many books do you think I read in three months?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How much better, therefore, would it be to stay till the morning, when we may expect to meet with somebody to enquire of?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How often have I heard you call him your son? |
fielding-history-3755 | How often have I heard you say, that children should be always suffered to chuse for themselves, and that you would let my cousin Harriet do so?" |
fielding-history-3755 | How often have you prattled to me of him with all the fondness of a parent? |
fielding-history-3755 | How shall I describe her rage? |
fielding-history-3755 | How shall I describe his barbarity? |
fielding-history-3755 | I am cautious of offending you, young lady; but am I to look on all which I have hitherto heard or seen as a dream only? |
fielding-history-3755 | I ask you that, am I not to govern my own child? |
fielding-history-3755 | I desire to know what better proof any lady can give of her virtue than her crying out, which, I believe, twenty people can witness for her she did? |
fielding-history-3755 | I do n''t ask you whether she is handsome or no; perhaps she is not; that''s nothing to the purpose; but do you know of any lady?" |
fielding-history-3755 | I have confest a curiosity,"said he,"sir; need I say how much obliged I should be to you, if you would condescend to gratify it? |
fielding-history-3755 | I have none), could I have the confidence to solicit them to speak in the behalf of a man condemned for the blackest crime in human nature? |
fielding-history-3755 | I may fairly insist upon that, I think?" |
fielding-history-3755 | I must, indeed, say, I never saw a fonder couple; but what is their fondness good for, but to torment each other?" |
fielding-history-3755 | I presume, sir, you have been at the university; may I crave the favour to know what college?" |
fielding-history-3755 | I suppose, sir, you are a gentleman of these parts; for you do not look like one who is used to travel far without horses?" |
fielding-history-3755 | If the fellow should die, what have you done more than taken away the life of a ruffian in your own defence? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is all my kindness vor''ur, and vondness o''ur come to this, to fall in love without asking me leave?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is it Mr Jones, and not Mr Blifil, who is the object of your affection?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is it possible Mr Jones should be now in the house?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is it possible you should be the person?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is it that some natures delight in evil, as others are thought to delight in virtue? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is not this against law?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is there a circumstance in the world which can heighten my agonies, when I hear of any misfortune which hath befallen you? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is there a man who afterwards will be more backward in giving you his sister, or daughter? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is there any honesty in such a man?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is there nothing neat or decent to be had in this horrid place?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Is this the fruit of all my prospects? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is this the return for--? |
fielding-history-3755 | Is this the reward of all my cares? |
fielding-history-3755 | It is very likely, an''t please your worship, that I should bullock him? |
fielding-history-3755 | It may, perhaps, be asked, Why then did he not put an immediate end to all further courtship? |
fielding-history-3755 | Jones asked him what was the matter, and whether he was afraid of the warrior upon the stage? |
fielding-history-3755 | Jones declined this offer in a very civil and proper speech, and then the other asked him,"Whither he was travelling when he mist his way?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Jones had no sooner quitted the room, than the petty- fogger, in a whispering tone, asked Mrs Whitefield,"If she knew who that fine spark was?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Jones now looking on Thwackum with inconceivable disdain, answered,"And doth thy mean soul imagine that any such considerations could weigh with me? |
fielding-history-3755 | La, brother, how could you get into this odious place? |
fielding-history-3755 | Lady Bellaston answered with a smile,"Then you have seen this terrible man, madam; pray, is he so very fine a figure as he is represented? |
fielding-history-3755 | Latin or English? |
fielding-history-3755 | Lud have mercy upon such fool- hardiness!--Whatever happens, it is good enough for you.----Follow you? |
fielding-history-3755 | Meeting the landlady, he accosted her with great civility, and asked,"What he could have for dinner?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Might not towns be contended for in the same manner? |
fielding-history-3755 | Miss Western,"said the aunt;"will you deny your receiving a letter from him yesterday?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Molly answered with great spirit,"And what is this mighty place which you have got for me, father?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Mr Allworthy, did I agree--?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Mrs Miller then asked what was to be done with Blifil? |
fielding-history-3755 | Mrs Partridge being one day at this assembly of females, was asked by one of her neighbours, if she had heard no news lately of Jenny Jones? |
fielding-history-3755 | My first wish( why would not fortune indulge me in it?) |
fielding-history-3755 | Nay, doth not your present anger arise solely from that deficiency? |
fielding-history-3755 | Nay, from any gentleman, from any man of honour? |
fielding-history-3755 | Nay, who hath actually put her into them? |
fielding-history-3755 | Never be bashful, nor stand shall I, shall I? |
fielding-history-3755 | Nightingale answered,"What the devil would you have me do? |
fielding-history-3755 | No, no, I promise you I am above all that.--But where was I? |
fielding-history-3755 | Now I have put all these circumstances together, and whom do you think I have found them out to be?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Now, everybody knows your honour wants for nothing at home; when that''s the case, why should any man travel abroad?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Now, would a woman of her quality travel without a footman, unless upon some such extraordinary occasion?" |
fielding-history-3755 | O brother, what think you? |
fielding-history-3755 | On the contrary, niece, have I not endeavoured to inspire you with a true idea of the several relations in which a human creature stands in society? |
fielding-history-3755 | On what object can we cast our eyes which may not inspire us with ideas of his power, of his wisdom, and of his goodness? |
fielding-history-3755 | Or are we not rather abominably vain, and is not this the greatest injury done to our vanity? |
fielding-history-3755 | Or are you apprehensive----? |
fielding-history-3755 | Or how shall I make up my account, with such an article as this in my bosom against me?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Or is there a pleasure in being accessory to a theft when we can not commit it ourselves? |
fielding-history-3755 | Or what think you of a collection? |
fielding-history-3755 | Or why the audience( provided they travel, like electors, without any expense) may not be wafted fifty miles as well as five? |
fielding-history-3755 | Or why, in any case, will we, as Shakespear phrases it,"put the world in our own person?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Or, if I can, what happiness can I assure myself of with a man capable of so much inconstancy?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Ought he not to do so in friendship to her? |
fielding-history-3755 | Perhaps we shall both fall in it-- and what then?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Pray tell me, Lady Bellaston, who is this blazing star which you have produced among us all of a sudden?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Pray, sir, how doth the good Squire Allworthy? |
fielding-history-3755 | Shall I go to the lady myself? |
fielding-history-3755 | Shall I hear my practice insulted by one who will not pay me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Shall I indulge any passion of mine at such a price? |
fielding-history-3755 | Shall I not stay with her?--Where-- how can I stay with her? |
fielding-history-3755 | Shall I then leave this only friend-- and such a friend? |
fielding-history-3755 | Shall we tear her very heart from her, while we enjoin her duties to which a whole heart is scarce equal? |
fielding-history-3755 | She stood a moment silent, and covered with confusion; then lifting up her eyes gently towards him, she cried,"What would Mr Jones have me say?" |
fielding-history-3755 | She then recounted the story to her maid, and concluded with saying,"Do n''t you think he is a boy of noble spirit?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Should I add to these the epithets of wise, brave, elegant, and indeed every other amiable epithet in our language, I might surely say,_--Quis credet? |
fielding-history-3755 | Sleep is not always good, no more than food; but remember, I demand of you for the last time, will you be blooded?" |
fielding-history-3755 | So I suppose you would not go to bed to Nancy now, if she would let you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Some of these answered by a question, in a squeaking voice, Do you know me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Sophia heaved a deep sigh, and answered,"Indeed, Harriet, I pity you from my soul!----But what could you expect? |
fielding-history-3755 | Sophia presently recovered her confusion, and, with a smile full of sweetness, said,"Is this the mighty favour you asked with so much gravity? |
fielding-history-3755 | Sophia remaining still silent, he cryed out,"What, art dumb? |
fielding-history-3755 | Sophia then began to reason with her aunt in the following manner:--"Why, madam, must I of necessity be forced to marry at all? |
fielding-history-3755 | Suppose she should have fixed on the very person whom you yourself would wish, I hope you would not be angry then?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Sure it is not armour, is it?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Tell me, I beseech you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | The king then asked,"if the husband was with him all that time in his lurking- place?" |
fielding-history-3755 | The physician now arrived, and began to inquire of the two disputants, how we all did above- stairs? |
fielding-history-3755 | The serjeant asked Partridge whither he and his master were travelling? |
fielding-history-3755 | The squire demanded of her who was the father? |
fielding-history-3755 | Then slapping a gentleman of the law, who was present, on the back, he cried out,"What say you to this, Mr Counsellor? |
fielding-history-3755 | Then turning his eyes again upon Hamlet,"Ay, you may draw your sword; what signifies a sword against the power of the devil?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Then you have not heard, it seems, that she hath been brought to bed of two bastards? |
fielding-history-3755 | Then, turning to Mrs Miller with a smile which would have become an angel, he cryed,"What say you, madam? |
fielding-history-3755 | Then, turning to the men, she cried,"What, in the devil''s name, is the reason of all this disturbance in the lady''s room?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Then, turning to the post- boys, she asked them,"Why they were not in the stable with their horses? |
fielding-history-3755 | These words almost froze up the blood of Sophia; but Mrs Fitzpatrick asked Honour who were come?--"Who?" |
fielding-history-3755 | This doctrine, I am afraid, is at present carried much too far: for why should writing differ so much from all other arts? |
fielding-history-3755 | This polite person, now taking his wife aside, asked her"what she thought of the ladies lately arrived?" |
fielding-history-3755 | To be sure you are worthy to be pitied, and I am worthy to be pitied too: for, to be sure, if ever there was a good mistress----""What hath happened?" |
fielding-history-3755 | To which Fitzpatrick replied,"What business have you with the lady?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Upon which Sophia, trembling, said,"Am I really to conceive your lordship to be out of your senses? |
fielding-history-3755 | Upon which everybody fell a laughing, as how could they help it? |
fielding-history-3755 | Upon which she immediately ordered a proper quantity of tears into her own eyes, and then began,"O Gemini, my dear lady, what is the matter?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Upon which the aunt cried,"Mr Blifil-- ay, Mr Blifil, of whom else have we been talking?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Was ever such a stubborn tuoad?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Was he not the father of the child?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Was it not by these headstrong measures that you forced my niece to run away from you in the country? |
fielding-history-3755 | Was not thy mother a d-- d b-- to me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Was not you and she hard at it before I came into the room? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well but, sister, what would you advise me to do; for I tell you women know these matters better than we do?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, and what is it all vor? |
fielding-history-3755 | Well, but shall I obey the world in opposition to the express commands of Heaven? |
fielding-history-3755 | What am I saying? |
fielding-history-3755 | What are all the ringing of bells, and bonfires, to one that is six foot under ground? |
fielding-history-3755 | What are the terrors of friendship to what a wife feels on these occasions? |
fielding-history-3755 | What are we to understand by this? |
fielding-history-3755 | What better, my good sir, could be expected in love derived from the stews, or in friendship first produced and nourished at the gaming- table? |
fielding-history-3755 | What can be the matter with you, child? |
fielding-history-3755 | What can be the matter with you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What can be the reason of this? |
fielding-history-3755 | What can be your motive?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What can two unarmed men do perhaps against fifty thousand? |
fielding-history-3755 | What concern have I in what Mr Jones doth? |
fielding-history-3755 | What critic hath been ever asked, why a play may not contain two days as well as one? |
fielding-history-3755 | What did my sister say to you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What do you mean?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What do you tell of his having a wild look with his eyes? |
fielding-history-3755 | What hath he done of late?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What have I done to forfeit this liberty? |
fielding-history-3755 | What hope have I to bestow? |
fielding-history-3755 | What interest can you have in all this? |
fielding-history-3755 | What interest have I in taking away the reputation of a man who never injured me? |
fielding-history-3755 | What is become of all your gaiety? |
fielding-history-3755 | What is to be done in my dreadful situation?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What matters the cause to me, or who gets the victory, if I am killed? |
fielding-history-3755 | What must I think, my dear Sophy, if you can not bear a little ridicule even on his dress? |
fielding-history-3755 | What objection can you have to the young gentleman?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What reasoning was this, my dear? |
fielding-history-3755 | What right hath any man to take sixpence from me, unless I give it him? |
fielding-history-3755 | What should induce those villains to accuse me falsely?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What signifies all the riches in the world to me without you, now you have gained my heart, so you have-- you have--? |
fielding-history-3755 | What signifies his being base born, when compared with such qualifications as these?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What the devil had she to do wi''n? |
fielding-history-3755 | What the devil in hell can I do more? |
fielding-history-3755 | What think you, Sophia?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What was the fine lady in the puppet- show just now? |
fielding-history-3755 | What was this but recrimination? |
fielding-history-3755 | What will madam say to that big belly? |
fielding-history-3755 | What will your honour be pleased to have for supper? |
fielding-history-3755 | What would you feel, dear sir, if you thought yourself the occasion of them? |
fielding-history-3755 | What would you have given to have sat by her bed- side? |
fielding-history-3755 | What, I suppose dost pretend that thee hast never got a bastard? |
fielding-history-3755 | What, I suppose you are one of those sparks who lead my son into all those scenes of riot and debauchery, which will be his destruction? |
fielding-history-3755 | What, I suppose you despise your father too, and do n''t think him good enough to speak to?" |
fielding-history-3755 | What, art dumb? |
fielding-history-3755 | What, doth your ladyship think I do n''t know then? |
fielding-history-3755 | What, shall it be to- morrow or next day? |
fielding-history-3755 | Whence then did you come?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Where can your la''ship possibly go?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Where did you meet with him, unless you had kept some correspondence together? |
fielding-history-3755 | Where is my daughter, villain?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Where is my daughter? |
fielding-history-3755 | Where will you get any horses or conveyance? |
fielding-history-3755 | Where?" |
fielding-history-3755 | While Mr Wilks, therefore, was thundering out,"Where are the carpenters to walk on before King Pyrrhus?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Who but an atheist could think of leaving the world without having first made up his account? |
fielding-history-3755 | Who ever demanded the reasons of that nice unity of time or place which is now established to be so essential to dramatic poetry? |
fielding-history-3755 | Who knows but some young gentleman or other may be expecting her, with a heart as heavy as her own?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Who knows what may be sufficient evidence of madness to a jury? |
fielding-history-3755 | Who missed an appointment last night, and left an unhappy man to expect, and wish, and sigh, and languish?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Who would have thoft it? |
fielding-history-3755 | Who would think, by looking in the king''s face, that he had ever committed a murder?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Who''s fool then? |
fielding-history-3755 | Who, my dear creature, hath reason to complain? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why am I cursed? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why did not you ask him whether he''d have any supper? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why do n''t you go up?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why do you mention another man to me? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why dost look so grave? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why dost not speak?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why dost unt answer? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why dost unt speak? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why was such a rascal as I born, ever to give her soft bosom a moment''s uneasiness? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why will we not modestly observe the same rule in judging of the good, as well as the evil of others? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why will you interpose? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why will you not confide in me for the management of my niece? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why will you not leave everything entirely to me?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why would you interfere? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why yesterday, of all the days in the year? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, hussy, says he, starting up from a dream, what can I be thinking of, when that angel your mistress is playing? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, is unt it to make her happy? |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, my girl, will you give it such liberties?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, pray, what fortune do you imagine this lady to have?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, why, would you marry an Irishman?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why, you would not harbour rebels, would you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Why-- why-- why-- did I not overhear you telling her she must behave like a princess? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you endeavour to make an event certain misery to him, which may accidentally prove so? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you increase the ill consequences of his simple choice? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you still look upon every apartment as your own, or as belonging to one of your country tenants? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will you? |
fielding-history-3755 | Will your ladyship be pleased to go up now, or stay till the fire is lighted?" |
fielding-history-3755 | Would any man in his senses have provoked a daughter by such threats as these? |
fielding-history-3755 | Would it not be kinder to her, than to continue her longer engaged in a hopeless passion for him? |
fielding-history-3755 | Would you think, sir, I used to call her my little prattler? |
fielding-history-3755 | Would''st not, Sophy? |
fielding-history-3755 | Wut ha Burgundy, Champaigne, or what? |
fielding-history-3755 | Yet who knows what effect the terror of such an apprehension may have? |
fielding-history-3755 | You have made a Whig of the girl; and how should her father, or anybody else, expect any obedience from her?" |
fielding-history-3755 | You wo n''t confess that she hath acted the part of the vilest sister in the world?" |
fielding-history-3755 | _ Interdum stultus opportuna loquitur_"--"Why, which of them,"cries Jones,"would you recommend?" |
fielding-history-3755 | _ Quis desiderio sit pudor aut modus Tam chari capitis?_[*][*]"What modesty or measure can set bounds to our desire of so dear a friend?" |
fielding-history-3755 | _ Quis desiderio sit pudor aut modus Tam chari capitis?_[*][*]"What modesty or measure can set bounds to our desire of so dear a friend?" |
fielding-history-3755 | _ Vir bonus est quis? |
fielding-history-3755 | ` Do they?'' |
fielding-history-3755 | ` Mr Partridge,''says she,` what Mr Allworthy is it that the gentlewoman mentioned? |
fielding-history-3755 | ` Sure,''says she,` your master is not the Mr Jones I have heard Mr Allworthy talk of?'' |
fielding-history-3755 | ` Well you, fellow,''says my lord,` what have you to say? |
fielding-history-3755 | all those warm professions of tenderness, and generous disinterested love? |
fielding-history-3755 | and if they say nothing, ask what his honour will be pleased to have for supper? |
fielding-history-3755 | answered Dowling a little eagerly;"what, Mr Jones that lived at Mr Allworthy''s? |
fielding-history-3755 | answered Jones,"can I bear to think that I have lost such an angel?" |
fielding-history-3755 | answered Partridge,"was that woman who is just gone out the woman who was with you at Upton?" |
fielding-history-3755 | answered Sophia:"Hath Mr Jones, then, any such important business with me?" |
fielding-history-3755 | answered she;"but when did you ever know me to make such mistakes?" |
fielding-history-3755 | answered the father:"you have the impudence to say she''s in the right: doth it not follow then of course that I am in the wrong? |
fielding-history-3755 | answered the lady,"is my niece in this house, and does she not know of my being here?" |
fielding-history-3755 | are you certain they were laid to- day? |
fielding-history-3755 | are you come back to your politics?" |
fielding-history-3755 | ay, surely,"cries the doctor:"who is there among us, who, in the most perfect health, can be said not to be in danger? |
fielding-history-3755 | because she broke thy arm? |
fielding-history-3755 | but where''s the dishonesty in borrowing a little for present spending, since you will be so well able to pay the lady hereafter? |
fielding-history-3755 | but would any of that more, or so much, have come into our pockets? |
fielding-history-3755 | can I then ruin thee? |
fielding-history-3755 | can everything noble and everything base be lodged together in the same bosom?" |
fielding-history-3755 | can you desire me to live? |
fielding-history-3755 | continues Sophia,"any lady? |
fielding-history-3755 | could I have ever suspected that I should live to hear a niece of mine declare a passion for such a fellow? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Allworthy,"and did you know it then?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Allworthy,"why, where did you see him then? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Allworthy:"Well, and what were the words? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Allworthy;"did he dare to strike you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Benjamin;"what book would you have? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones,"I have no home to return to;--but if my friend, my father, would receive me, could I bear the country from which Sophia is flown? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones,"how much? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones,"how!--Are these pistols loaded?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones,"what of my Sophia?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones:"hath Sophia ever laid here?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones:"what can be more innocent than the indulgence of a natural appetite? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones;"Need I say, of you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones;"what do you know of my Sophia?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Jones;"where is-- what-- what is become of my Sophia?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Mrs Miller;"you are not ill, I hope, cousin? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Partridge,"why, the rebels: but why should I call them rebels? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Partridge:"pray, sir, what is that?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Partridge;"who could be merry- making at this time of night, and in such a place, and such weather? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries Sophia,"can it be possible?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries he;"did she ever mention her poor Jones? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries she,"my lord, how can it be prevented? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries the aunt;"is this the return you make me for my kindness in relieving you from your confinement at your father''s?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries the clerk, with great contempt,"who hath any right but what the law gives them? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries the fellow,"why, do n''t you know Measter Jin Bearnes? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries the lady.--"Basest of men?----What wretch is this to whom you have exposed me?" |
fielding-history-3755 | cries the squire, dashing his pipe on the ground;"did ever mortal hear the like? |
fielding-history-3755 | cries the squire;"what can any such fellow have to do with me? |
fielding-history-3755 | dear sir, do n''t you hear him?" |
fielding-history-3755 | did not I beget her? |
fielding-history-3755 | did you hear all that past between him and the fellows?" |
fielding-history-3755 | do you imagine any such event can arrive to a woman of figure in a civilised nation?" |
fielding-history-3755 | do you intend to kill my friend?" |
fielding-history-3755 | dost fancy I do n''t know that as well as thee? |
fielding-history-3755 | have you been fighting for a wench?" |
fielding-history-3755 | he is one of your order, is he?" |
fielding-history-3755 | how came this muff here?" |
fielding-history-3755 | how doth_ ille optimus omnium patronus_?" |
fielding-history-3755 | how shall I describe the wretched condition in which I found your poor cousin? |
fielding-history-3755 | is he frightened now or no? |
fielding-history-3755 | is it the great Mr Allworthy of Somersetshire?'' |
fielding-history-3755 | is that tongue of yours resolved upon my destruction?" |
fielding-history-3755 | is there a soul who can bear the thought of having contributed to the damnation of his child? |
fielding-history-3755 | is there such a man in the world?" |
fielding-history-3755 | madam,"cries Susan;"la, what''s a guinea? |
fielding-history-3755 | madam,"says she,"how should I have imagined that a lady of your fashion would appear in such a dress? |
fielding-history-3755 | more good luck''s thine? |
fielding-history-3755 | my Sophia, am I never to hope for forgiveness?" |
fielding-history-3755 | my dear uncle, what do you think hath happened? |
fielding-history-3755 | my friend,"cries Jones,"what interest hath such a wretch as I? |
fielding-history-3755 | nay, I thought you had been long since dead.--In what manner did you know anything of this young man? |
fielding-history-3755 | no, no: what should he do there? |
fielding-history-3755 | or can she treat the most solemn tie of love with contempt? |
fielding-history-3755 | or could I have imagined that my brother-- why do I call him so? |
fielding-history-3755 | or have I ever been found guilty of a falsehood from my cradle?" |
fielding-history-3755 | or is there any sister or daughter who would be more backward to receive you? |
fielding-history-3755 | or what more laudable than the propagation of our species?" |
fielding-history-3755 | or, speak ingenuously, did not you intend she should?" |
fielding-history-3755 | quoth the squire,"who the devil can he be? |
fielding-history-3755 | repeated Honour;"what could be worse for either of us? |
fielding-history-3755 | replied Jones,"and is it possible that a false suspicion should have drawn all the ill consequences upon you, with which I am too well acquainted?" |
fielding-history-3755 | replied Partridge;"why then there is an end of us, is there not? |
fielding-history-3755 | replied Sophia eagerly;"I hope you have come to no mischief?" |
fielding-history-3755 | replied she:"can you imagine I do not feel the ruin which I must bring on you, should I comply with your desire? |
fielding-history-3755 | replies young Nightingale,"is there this difference between having already done an act, and being in honour engaged to do it?" |
fielding-history-3755 | returned Mrs Western,"what do I hear? |
fielding-history-3755 | returned the father:"and pray who hath been the occasion of putting her into those violent passions? |
fielding-history-3755 | said Allworthy,"I know not whether I should blame or applaud your goodness, in concealing such villany a moment: but where is Mr Thwackum? |
fielding-history-3755 | said Allworthy,"to what then tends all this preface?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said Allworthy,"will you yet deny what you was formerly convicted of upon such unanswerable, such manifest evidence? |
fielding-history-3755 | said Allworthy;"hath he done anything worse than I already know? |
fielding-history-3755 | said Allworthy;"what, did you employ him then to enquire or to do anything in that matter?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said Sophia, a little recollecting herself, and assuming a reserved air.--"Can you be so cruel to ask that question?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said Western,"how the devil should it? |
fielding-history-3755 | said she;"have I ever broke a single promise to you? |
fielding-history-3755 | said the aunt,"have you the assurance to speak of him in this manner; to own your affection for such a villain to my face?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said the doctor, staring;"why, I''ve a gentleman under my hands, have I not?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said the doctor,"do you know the shocking affair?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said the lady,"have I ever given you the least reason to imagine I should commend you for locking up your daughter? |
fielding-history-3755 | said the lady,"what Jones?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said the landlady;"who could have thoft it? |
fielding-history-3755 | said the old gentleman,"and are you really then not married to this young woman?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said the squire,"what signifies time; wo n''t they have time enough to court afterwards? |
fielding-history-3755 | said the squire;"why, who the devil are you?" |
fielding-history-3755 | said the wife,"why, what should I think of them?" |
fielding-history-3755 | says Allworthy:"What do you mean?" |
fielding-history-3755 | says I, Mr Jones, what''s the matter? |
fielding-history-3755 | says Jones,"have a better heart; consider you are going to face an enemy; and are you afraid of facing a little cold? |
fielding-history-3755 | says Jones:"what, do you know that great and good Mr Allworthy then?" |
fielding-history-3755 | says Sophia, smiling;"would not you, Honour, fire a pistol at any one who should attack your virtue?" |
fielding-history-3755 | says one of the ensigns,"who the devil are they? |
fielding-history-3755 | says she,"Mr Jones, whither will you drive me? |
fielding-history-3755 | says she,"what doth your la''ship think? |
fielding-history-3755 | says the barber;"what''s his name?" |
fielding-history-3755 | says the lady;"have you been to wait upon Lady Bellaston yet?" |
fielding-history-3755 | says the parson,"do you then banish revelation? |
fielding-history-3755 | sha n''t I do what I will with my own daughter, especially when I desire nothing but her own good?" |
fielding-history-3755 | shall we take a hackney- coach, and all of us together pay a visit to your friend? |
fielding-history-3755 | should not I be a blockhead to lend my money to I know not who, because mayhap he may return it again? |
fielding-history-3755 | sir, can it be a question what step a lover will take, when reason and passion point different ways? |
fielding-history-3755 | sir,"said she,"what can make a servant amends for the loss of one place but the getting another altogether as good?" |
fielding-history-3755 | upon my soul, I believe your name is Jones?" |
fielding-history-3755 | was that the gentleman that dined with us?" |
fielding-history-3755 | what confidence can I place in her, when she wo n''t do as I would ha''her? |
fielding-history-3755 | what dost thou mean?" |
fielding-history-3755 | what hopes are there for poor me? |
fielding-history-3755 | what is it you mean?" |
fielding-history-3755 | what language can express the sentiments of my heart?" |
fielding-history-3755 | what noise is that? |
fielding-history-3755 | what shall I do? |
fielding-history-3755 | what the devil would the lady have better than such a handsome man with a great estate? |
fielding-history-3755 | what''s become of the spirit? |
fielding-history-3755 | what''s the meaning of this?" |
fielding-history-3755 | what''s this you tell me?" |
fielding-history-3755 | what''s to be done?" |
fielding-history-3755 | what, is it all over? |
fielding-history-3755 | which way did he go?" |
fielding-history-3755 | who the devil would be plagued with a daughter?" |
fielding-history-3755 | why are Miss Graveairs and Miss Giddy no more? |
fielding-history-3755 | why dost unt speak? |
fielding-history-3755 | why there now, who would have thought it? |
fielding-history-3755 | why was I born?" |
fielding-history-3755 | why, where did you see him?" |
fielding-history-3755 | without confessing his sins, and receiving that absolution which he knew he had one in the house duly authorized to give him? |
fielding-history-3755 | would she? |
fielding-history-3755 | would you have me marry her to cure her?" |
fielding-history-3755 | your la''ship hath money enough for both; and where can your la''ship bestow your fortune better? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ''Cur amplius addere quaeris, Rursum quod pereat male, et ingratum occidat omne?'' montaigne-essays-1562 An quidquam stultius, quam, quos singulos contemnas, eos aliquid putare esse universes?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And what after that is done? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And what if he had commanded you to fire our temples? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And what then? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Cur non ut plenus vita; conviva recedis? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does not all the world dance the same brawl that you do? montaigne-essays-1562 Dolus, an virtus, quis in hoste requirat?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Et supra bellum Thebanum et funera Trojae Non alias alii quoque res cecinere poetae? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Faciasne, quod olim Mutatus Polemon? montaigne-essays-1562 Falsus honor juvat, et mendax infamia terret Quem nisi mendosum et mendacem?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | For God sake, sir,replied Cyneas,"tell me what hinders that you may not, if you please, be now in the condition you speak of? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Have you known how to meditate and manage your life? montaigne-essays-1562 Have you not more easy diversions at home? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | He will repent it,we say, and because we have given him a pistol- shot through the head, do we imagine he will repent? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I d cinerem et manes credis curare sepultos? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I desire,says St. Paul,"to be with Christ,"and"who shall rid me of these bands?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is this he,say they,"was he no wiser when he was there? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Non levior cippus nunc imprimit ossa? montaigne-essays-1562 Nonne videmus, Nil aliud sibi naturam latrare, nisi ut, quoi Corpore sejunctus dolor absit, mente fruatur, Jucundo sensu, cura semotu''metuque?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Num tu, qux tenuit dives Achaemenes, Aut pinguis Phrygiae Mygdonias opes, Permutare velis crine Licymnim? montaigne-essays-1562 Pone seram; cohibe: sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Quis accurat loquitur, nisi qui vult putide loqui? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Quis est enim, qui totum diem jaculans non aliquando collineet? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Quis hominum potest scire consilium Dei? montaigne-essays-1562 Quoties non modo ductores nostri, sed universi etiam exercitus, ad non dubiam mortem concurrerunt?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall I be sure to be there by to- morrow night? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall I exchange for you this beautiful contexture of things? montaigne-essays-1562 To what end should you endeavour to draw back, if there be no possibility to evade it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Usque adeone Scire tuum, nihil est, nisi to scire hoc, sciat alter? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What shall I write to you, sirs, or how should I write to you, or what should I not write to you at this time? montaigne-essays-1562 What, shall so much knowledge be lost, with so much damage to the world, without a particular concern of the destinies? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Where do you think to live without disturbance? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why, then,pursued the other,"what difficult and exemplary thing dost thou think thou doest in embracing that snow?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ''Tis a common saying, but of a terrible extent: what does it not comprehend? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ''Tis a free contract why do you not then keep to it, as you would have them do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ''Tis always such; but how slender hold has the resolution of dying? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --"He would never have commanded me that,"replied Blosius.--"But what if he had?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --"Substance";"And what is substance?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --"Would I?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --And what did Theophrastus treat of in those he intituled, the one''The Lover'', and the other''Of Love?'' |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --Was it that the height of courage was so natural and familiar to this conqueror, that because he could not admire, he respected it the less? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --Who could have found out a more subtle invention to secure his safety, than he did to assure his destruction? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --Who has not seen peevish gamesters chew and swallow the cards, and swallow the dice, in revenge for the loss of their money? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --Why dost thou complain of this world? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --to this purpose, if we dread that which cowardice itself has chosen for its refuge? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --what it is to do and to suffer? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | --widow to the greatest king in Europe, did she not come to die by the hand of an executioner? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | 8, v 43] What better interpretation can we make of Messalina''s behaviour? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | A mighty inconvenience, sure, which could poison the whole life of so just, so wise, and so valiant a man; what must we other little fellows do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | A stone is a body; but if a man should further urge:"And what is a body?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | A young man asked the philosopher Panetius if it were becoming a wise man to be in love? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | AEsop, that great man, saw his master piss as he walked:"What then,"said he,"must we drop as we run?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | After which, some one asked their opinion, and would know of them, what of all the things they had seen, they found most to be admired? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Alloquar? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Am I not myself in fault? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Am I sensible of her assaults? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And Antisthenes the Stoic, being very sick, and crying out,"Who will deliver me from these evils?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And after the cure is performed, how can he assure himself that it was not because the disease had arrived at its period or an effect of chance? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And are there any worse sorts of vices than those committed against a man''s own conscience, and the natural light of his own reason? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And besides, though I had a particular distinction by myself, what can it distinguish, when I am no more? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And besides, what fruit is there of this painful solicitude? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And can a man ever enough exalt the value of a friend, in comparison with these civil ties? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And his fifty so lascivious epistles? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And how many have I seen in my time totally brutified by an immoderate thirst after knowledge? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And how many have not escaped dying, who have had three physicians at their tails? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And if even those of the best operation in some measure offend us, what must those do that are totally misapplied? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And that of Aristo:''Of Amorous Exercises''What those of Cleanthes: one,''Of Love'', the other,''Of the Art of Loving''? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And the other, why he should attempt to kill him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And then he inquired, whether we were not all much taken by surprise at his having fainted? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And then how easy a thing is it to satisfy the fancy? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And then, as they were holding his mouth open by force to give him a draught, he observed to M. de Belot:"An vivere tanti est?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And then, what do you think is the best thing in your work? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And then, when he caught the sound of my voice, he continued:"And art thou, my brother, likewise unwilling to see me at peace? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And this Peter or William, what is it but a sound, when all is done? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And though it should present to you the image of approaching death, were it not a good office to a man of such an age, to put him in mind of his end? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And though nobody should read me, have I wasted time in entertaining myself so many idle hours in so pleasing and useful thoughts? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And to say the truth, of all this diversity and confusion of prescriptions, what other end and effect is there after all, but to purge the belly? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And was not the graving of a seal the first and principal cause of the greatest commotion that this machine of the world ever underwent? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And what did the other man say? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And what loss would this be, if they neither instruct us to think well nor to do well? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And what matters it, when it shall happen, since it is inevitable? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And when the rule is concluded, by whom, I pray you? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And who can imagine but that, in this liquid confusion, these faculties must corrupt, confound, and spoil one another? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And why should this seem hard to believe? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And, besides, for whom do you write? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And, if company will make it more pleasant or more easy to you, does not all the world go the self- same way? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And, moreover, who escapes being talked of at the same rate, from the least even to the greatest? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And, of his ancestors what fruition or taste of sport did he reserve to himself, who never went hawking without seven thousand falconers? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | And, pray, why not? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Anything more remote from vanity? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Are not they then pleasant men who think they have rendered this fit for the people''s handling by translating it into the vulgar tongue? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Are not you unjust, that, not to kill him without cause, do worse than kill him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Are there not more below your family in good ease than there are above it in eminence? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Are there not some constitutions that feed upon it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Are they not still wives and friends to the dead who are not at the end of this but in the other world? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Are they so impudent as to sue for remission without satisfaction and without penitence? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Are we assured that in Biscay and in Brittany there are enough competent judges of this affair to establish this translation into their own language? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Are we not brutes to call that work brutish which begets us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | As to the rest, was ever soul so vigilant, so active, and so patient of labour as his? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | As to the second point; should we not be less cuckolds, if we less feared to be so? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Aut quis poterit cogitare quid velit Dominus?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Besides what glory can be compared to his? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Besides, the method of arguing, of which Socrates here makes use, is it not equally admirable both in simplicity and vehemence? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But I had told the truth to my master,--[Was this Henri VI.? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But is it not great impudence to offer our imperfections and imbecilities, where we desire to please and leave a good opinion and esteem of ourselves? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But is it not that we seek more honour from the quotation, than from the truth of the matter in hand? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But is it reason that, being so particular in my way of living, I should pretend to recommend myself to the public knowledge? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But it may, peradventure, be objected against me: Your rule is true enough as to what concerns death; but what will you say of indigence? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But may not this saying of that excellent painter of woman''s humours be here introduced, to show the reason of their complaints? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But the most injurious do not say,"Why has he taken such a thing? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But then, what example of resolution did we not see in the simplicity of all this people? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But to conclude: is there not a direct application of her favour, bounty, and piety manifestly discovered in this action? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But was it not rather the fear of the operation for the stone, at that time really formidable? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But was this man obliged to drink full bumpers by any rule of civility? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But what becomes of all the rest, under what ensigns do they march, in what quarter do they lie? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But what shall we say of those who settle their whole course of life upon the profit and emolument of sins, which they know to be mortal? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But what will become of our young gentleman, if he be attacked with the sophistic subtlety of some syllogism? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But what, if I take things otherwise than they are? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But what? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But what? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But where is there not? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But whom shall we believe in the report he makes of himself in so corrupt an age? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But withal, what better opportunity can he expect than that he has lost? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But''tis an old and pleasant question, whether the soul of a wise man can be overcome by the strength of wine? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | But, to speak the truth, is not man a most miserable creature the while? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Can it point out and favour inanity? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Can she, without winking, stand the lightning of swords? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Can there be a more express act of justice than this? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Can there be any joy equal to this privation? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Can there be worse husbandry than to set up so many certain and knowing vices against errors that are only contested and disputable? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Can we think that the singing boys of the choir take any great delight in music? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Chastisement is instead of physic to children; and would we endure a physician who should be animated against and enraged at his patient? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Concumbunt docte;"["In this language do they express their fears, their anger, their joys, their cares; in this pour out all their secrets; what more? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Could it be for a testimony of their justice or their zeal to religion? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Dent licet assidue, nil tamen inde perit;"["Who says that one light should not be lighted from another light? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Did she not also excel the painter Protogenes in his art? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Did you ever see anything so subdued, so changed, and so confounded? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do I conceive that they still live, to whom the respirable air, and the light itself, by which we are governed, is rendered oppressive?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do I find myself in any calm composedness? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do I not represent myself to the life? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do I not see that the wicked and the good king, he that is hated and he that is beloved, have the one as much reverence paid him as the other? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do I not talk at the same rate throughout? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do I start? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do I tremble with fury? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do comrades praise? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do fevers, gout, and apoplexies spare him any more than one of us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do princes satisfy themselves with so little? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do the doctors themselves show us more felicity and duration in their own lives, that may manifest to us some apparent effect of their skill? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do they hear their prince, or a king commended? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do they meet the smiles of parents with feigned tears? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do they meet with a compatriot in Hungary? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do they not, from a continual and perfect health, draw the argument of some great sickness to ensue? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do we desire to be beloved of our children? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do we do thee any wrong? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do we expect that at every musket- shot we receive, and at every hazard we run, there must be a register ready to record it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do you ask me, whence comes the custom of blessing those who sneeze? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do you believe that chestnuts can hurt a Perigordin or a Lucchese, or milk and cheese the mountain people? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do you boast of your nobility, as being descended from seven rich successive ancestors? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do you not perceive now that the help you give me has no other effect than that of lengthening my suffering?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do you repute any man the greater for being lord of two thousand acres of land? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Do you think they can relish it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does Monsieur make any bargain, or prepare any despatch that does not please? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does either my face, my colour, or my voice give any manifestation of my being moved? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does he parallel the victories, feats of arms, the force of the armies conducted by Pompey, and his triumphs, with those of Agesilaus? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does he turn away a servant? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does it not seem as if she was going to become chaste by her husband''s negligence? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does not he to whom you betray another, to whom you were as welcome as to himself, know that you will at another time do as much for him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does she always will what we would have her to do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does she not often will what we forbid her to will, and that to our manifest prejudice? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does she not seem to be an artist here? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does she not sometimes direct our counsels and correct them? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does she suffer herself, more than any of the rest, to be governed and directed by the results of our reason? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does so rare and exemplary a soul cost no more the killing than one that is common and of no use to the public? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Does the understanding of all therein contained only stick at words? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Dost thou ask, Faustinus, the cause of this so sudden death? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Dost thou call to mind the men of past times, who so greedily sought diseases to keep their virtue in breath and exercise? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Dost thou not see that this world we live in keeps all its sight confined within, and its eyes open to contemplate itself? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Dost thou think thou art too much at ease unless half thy ease is uneasy? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ETEXT EDITOR''S BOOKMARKS: A parrot would say as much as that Agesilaus, what he thought most proper for boys to learn? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ETEXT EDITOR''S BOOKMARKS:"Art thou not ashamed,"said he to him,"to sing so well?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Effects? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Either tranquil life, or happy death Enslave our own contentment to the power of another? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Fear is more importunate and insupportable than death itself Fear to lose a thing, which being lost, can not be lamented? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | For should we see how we are used and would not acquiesce, what would become of us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | For what human means will ever attain its enjoyment? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | For what testimony of affection and goodwill can I extract from him that owes me, whether he will or no, all that he is able to do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | For what, said I, if I should be surprised by such or such an accident? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | For who ever thought he wanted sense? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | For whom did I reserve the discovery of that singular affection I had for him in my soul? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | For whom should I do it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | From Orleans, this 16th of February, in the morning[ 1588- 9? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Had I any, whom would it become so much as yourself to remove them?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Had we not reason to hope such an issue in the person of the late Bishop of Orleans, the Sieur de Morvilliers? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Has fortune no hand in the affair? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Has not the royal majesty been more than once there entertained with all its train? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Has not this example of a gentleman very well known, some air of philosophy in it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Have I not lived long enough? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Have they to do with the stupidest of all their subjects? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | He only fights it with words, and in the meantime, if the shootings and dolours he felt did not move him, why did he interrupt his discourse? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | He seemed to detect in my expression some inquietude at his words; and he exclaimed,"What, my brother, would you make me entertain apprehensions? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | He who has neither the courage to die nor the heart to live, who will neither resist nor fly, what can we do with him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | He who stays to see the author die, whose writings he intends to question, what does he say but that he is weak in his aggressiveness? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | He who, on so just an occasion, has no contentment, where will he think to find it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | His wife Livia, seeing him in this perplexity:"Will you take a woman''s counsel?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How a cause? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How can he help your ignorance? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How high did he stretch the consideration of his own particular duty? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many are there, in every family, of the same name and surname? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many brave individual actions are buried in the crowd of a battle? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many condemnations have I seen more criminal than the crimes themselves? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many doubts and controversies have they amongst themselves upon the interpretation of urines? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many examples of the contempt of pain have we in that sex? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many gallant men have rather chosen to lose their lives than to be debtors for them? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many gentlemen have we in France who by their own account are of royal extraction? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many men, especially in Turkey, go naked upon the account of devotion? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many more have died before they arrived at thy age How many several ways has death to surprise us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many ridiculous things, in my own opinion, do I say and answer every day that comes over my head? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many several ways has death to surprise us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many thousands of men terminate their wishes in such a condition as yours? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many trades and vocations have we admitted and countenanced amongst us, whose very essence is vicious? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How many very wantonly pleasant sports spring from the most decent and modest language of the works on love? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How miserably have they of my time arrived at that knowledge who have been so unhappy as to have found it out? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How much easier is it not to enter in than it is to get out? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How much more decent would it be to see their classes strewed with green leaves and fine flowers, than with the bloody stumps of birch and willows? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How much would he find his imaginary Republic short of his perfection? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How often do we see physicians impute the death of their patients to one another? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How often do we torment our mind with anger or sorrow by such shadows, and engage ourselves in fantastic passions that impair both soul and body? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How often has this work diverted me from troublesome thoughts? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How should he satisfy immoderate desires, that still increase as they are fulfilled? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How suddenly do greasy chamois and linen doublets become the fashion in our armies, whilst all neatness and richness of habit fall into contempt? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | How? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I do not more thoroughly sift myself in any other posture than this: what passion are we exempted from in it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I have a favourable aspect, both in form and in interpretation:"Quid dixi, habere me? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I have no need of goods of which I can make no use; of what use is knowledge to him who has lost his head? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I only judge of myself by actual sensation, not by reasoning: to what end, since I am resolved to bring nothing to it but expectation and patience? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I think my opinions are good and sound, but who does not think the same of his own? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I understand it not; it may be: is it true?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I whisper in a waiting- woman''s or secretary''s ear:"How were they, how did they live together?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | I] And how much less sociable is false speaking than silence? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If I bite my own lips, what ought others to do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If a woman be a strumpet, must it needs follow that she has a foul smell? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If he be angry, can his being a prince keep him from looking red and looking pale, and grinding his teeth like a madman? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If it be vainglory for a man to publish his own virtues, why does not Cicero prefer the eloquence of Hortensius, and Hortensius that of Cicero? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If things surrender themselves to our mercy, why do we not convert and accommodate them to our advantage? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If thou tellest me that it is a dangerous and mortal disease, what others are not so? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If two at the same time should call to you for succour, to which of them would you run? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If we are only to trust to their will, what a case are we in, then? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If we do not betimes begin to see to ourselves, when shall we have provided for so many wounds and evils wherewith we abound? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | If we give the names of monster and miracle to everything our reason can not comprehend, how many are continually presented before our eyes? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | In giving myself so continual and so exact an account of myself, have I lost my time? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | In these, how many soldiers''boys are companions of our glory? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Inquire of yourself where is the object of this mutation? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is Nero''s cruelty unknown to us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is any man now living so impudent as to think himself comparable to them in virtue, piety, learning, judgment, or any kind of perfection? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is anything of another''s actions or faculties proposed to him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is he a poet? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it for thee to govern us, or for us to govern thee? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not a pious and a pleasing office of my life to be always upon my friend''s obsequies? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not an error to esteem any actions less worthy, because they are necessary? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not her custom to let those live in quiet by whom she is not importuned? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not here as in matter of books, that sell better and become more public for being suppressed? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not meanness of spirit that renders them so pliable to all extremities? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not reason that my conscience should be much more engaged when men simply rely upon it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not the common and final end of all studies? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not the principal and most reputed knowledge of our later ages to understand the learned? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it not to build a wall without stone or brick, or some such thing, to write books without learning and without art? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it possible you can imagine never to arrive at the place towards which you are continually going? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it reason that even the arts themselves should make an advantage of our natural stupidity and weakness? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it reasonable so long to fear a thing that will so soon be despatched? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it reasonable that the life of a wise man should depend upon the judgment of fools? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it that we pretend to a reformation? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it to be emperor? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it to be imagined that an apoplexy will not stun Socrates as well as a porter? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it to say, the less we expend in words, we may pay so much the more in thinking? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it yet temperance and frugality to avoid expense and pleasure of which the use and knowledge are imperceptible to us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is it, perhaps, as Plato says, that they have formerly been debauched young fellows? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is not simplicity, as we take it, cousin- german to folly and a quality of reproach? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is not this true? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is not your house situated in a sweet and healthful air, sufficiently furnished, and more than sufficiently large? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is she beautiful, capable, and happily provided of all her faculties? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is she rich of what is her own, or of what she has borrowed? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is she settled, even and content? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there any deformity in doing amiss, that can excuse us from confessing ourselves? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there any form from which vice can not, if it will, extract occasion to exercise itself, one way or another? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there any local, extraordinary, indigestible thought that afflicts you?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there any trophy dedicated to the conquerors which was not much more due to these who were overcome? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there any who desires to be sick, that he may see his physician at work? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there anything in the pain suffered, that one can counterpoise to the pleasure of so sudden an amendment? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there anything more delicate, more clear, more sprightly; than Pliny''s judgment, when he is pleased to set it to work? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there anything that does not grow old, as well as you? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there more noise or confusion in the scolding of herring- wives than in the public disputes of men of this profession? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there no more in it, then, but only slily and with circumspection to do ill? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is there nothing but these veins and muscles that swell and flag without the consent, not only of the will, but even of our knowledge also? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is this all thou canst do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is this to hit the white? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Is thy life of so great value, that so many mischiefs must be done to preserve it?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | It being also asked of Agis, which way a man might live free? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | It is not above three weeks that I have known you; what inducement, then, could move you to attempt my death?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | It makes this person disown his former virtue and continency:"Quae mens est hodie, cur eadem non puero fait? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Let childhood look forward and age backward; was not this the signification of Janus''double face? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Let him be as wise as he will, after all he is but a man; and than that what is there more frail, more miserable, or more nothing? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Let them well consider what they do before they, produce it to the light who hastens them? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Let us always have this saying of Plato in our mouths:"Do not I think things unsound, because I am not sound in myself? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Let us tell ambition that it is she herself who gives us a taste of solitude; for what does she so much avoid as society? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | May I not confidently instance in those of Hannibal and his great rival Scipio? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | May it not also be that this reproach seems to imply cowardice and feebleness of heart? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Men are apt presently to inquire, does such a one understand Greek or Latin? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Mene salis placidi vultum, fluctusque quietos Ignorare?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Might not one render it even voluptuous, like the Commoyientes of Antony and Cleopatra? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Miso, one of the seven sages, of a Timonian and Democritic humour, being asked,"what he laughed at, being alone?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Moreover, has not custom made a republic of women separately by themselves? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Must it be true, that to be a perfect good man, we must be so by an occult, natural, and universal propriety, without law, reason, or example? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Nec carus aeque, nec superstes Integer? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Not only the argument of reason invites us to it-- for why should we fear to lose a thing, which being lost, can not be lamented? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Now, the duty of chastity is of a vast extent; is it the will that we would have them restrain? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Nunc non e manibus illis, Nunc non a tumulo fortunataque favilla, Nascentur violae?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | O Pythagoras, why didst not thou allay this tempest? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Of so many millions, there are but three men who take upon them to record their experiments: must fortune needs just hit one of these? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Of what Aristippus in his''Of Former Delights''? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Of what does Socrates treat more largely than of himself? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Of what use are colours to him that knows not what he is to paint? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | One asking to this purpose, Agesilaus, what he thought most proper for boys to learn? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Or was it that he conceived valour to be a virtue so peculiar to himself, that his pride could not, without envy, endure it in another? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Or was it that the natural impetuosity of his fury was incapable of opposition? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Or"Do so learned writings proceed from a man of so weak conversation?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Or, if he played at chess? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Our children are still called by names that he invented above three thousand years ago; who does not know Hector and Achilles? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Our contest is verbal: I ask what nature is, what pleasure, circle, and substitution are? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Our extremest pleasure has some sort of groaning and complaining in it; would you not say that it is dying of pain? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Philippides, in my opinion, answered King Lysimachus very discreetly, who, asking him what of his estate he should bestow upon him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Quantae connscindunt hominem cupedinis acres Sollicitum curae? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Quidve superbia, spurcitia, ac petulantia, quantas Efficiunt clades? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Remember him, who being asked why he took so much pains in an art that could come to the knowledge of but few persons? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Setting aside his learning, of which I make less account, in which of these excellences do any of us excel him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall I address thee? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall I here acquaint you with one faculty of my youth? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall I speak it, without the danger of having my throat cut? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall it be of ignorance, simplicity, and facility; or of malice and imposture? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall we force the general law of nature, which in every living creature under heaven is seen to tremble under pain? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall we not dare to say of a thief that he has a handsome leg? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Shall we persuade our skins that the jerks of a whip agreeably tickle us, or our taste that a potion of aloes is vin de Graves? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Should I be ignorant of the dangers of that seeming placid sea, those now quiet waves?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Should I have died less cheerfully before I had read Cicero''s Tusculan Quastiones? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Should one commit a thing to your silence that it were of importance to the other to know, how would you disengage yourself? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Should they require of you contrary offices, how could you serve them both? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Some may condemn the freedom of those two soldiers who so roundly answered Nero to his beard; the one being asked by him why he bore him ill- will? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Take a master of arts, and confer with him: why does he not make us sensible of this artificial excellence? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Tam subitae mortis causam, Faustine, requiris? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Testimony of the truth from minds prepossessed by custom? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | That their souls, in being more gross and dull, are less penetrable and not so easily moved? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | That this is true: I am come to that pass of late, that the least motion forces pure blood out of my kidneys: what of that? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | The amorous dialogues of Sphaereus? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | The remedy the vulgar use is not to think on''t; but from what brutish stupidity can they derive so gross a blindness? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | These boastful humours may counterfeit some content, for what will not fancy do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | They commonly begin thus:"How is such a thing done?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | They took breath in their drinking, and watered their wine"Quis puer ocius Restinguet ardentis Falerni Pocula praetereunte lympha?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Think you Jupiter himself would not cry out upon it?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | This story that they make such a clutter withal, what has it to do, I fain would know, with the contempt of pain? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Though they were the ecstasies of Archimedes himself, what then? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To one who being present exhorted him to recommend himself to God:"Why, who goes thither?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what do Caesar and Alexander owe the infinite grandeur of their renown but to fortune? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what end are these elevated points of philosophy, upon which no human being can rely? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what end do we avoid the servile attendance of courts, if we bring the same trouble home to our own private houses? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what end do we dismember by divorce a building united by so close and brotherly a correspondence? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what end do we so arm ourselves with this harness of science? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what end do you go about to inquire of him, who knows nothing to the purpose? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what end serves the knowledge of things if it renders us more unmanly? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what end should we go insinuate our misery amid their gay and sprightly humour? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what more just necessity does he reserve himself? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what purpose? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To what vanity does the good opinion we have of ourselves push us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To whom do they not, at last, become tedious and insupportable? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To whom does he prescribe that which he does not expect any one should perform? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | To whom ought not treachery to be hateful, when Tiberius refused it in a thing of so great importance to him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Unde manus inventus Metu Deorum continuit? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Vel cur his animis incolumes non redeunt genae?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Was I going a journey? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Was it not a pleasant passage of a friend of mine? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Was it not he himself, who ought to have had all the pleasure of it, and all the obligation? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Was not this to nestle and settle himself to sleep at greater ease? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | We can say, Cicero says thus; these were the manners of Plato; these are the very words of Aristotle: but what do we say ourselves? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | We will have them nearer to us: is the garden, or half a day''s journey from home, far? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Were it not an excellent piece of thrift in him who could dine on the steam of the roast? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Were it not possible for us to imitate this resolution after a more decent manner? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Were it not so, who had ever given reputation to virtue; valour, force, magnanimity, and resolution? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What affliction could be greater or more just than that of Pompey''s friends, who, in his ship, were spectators of that horrible murder? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What altar is spared?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What appetite would not be baffled to see three hundred women at its mercy, as the grand signor has in his seraglio? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What are become of all the provisions we have so many years laid up against the accidents of fortune? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What are you thinking of?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What can a man expect from a physician who writes of war, or from a mere scholar, treating of the designs of princes? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What can men say to the divine justice upon this subject? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What can they not do, what do they fear to do, for never so little hope of an addition to their beauty? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What care I for that? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What causes of the misadventures that befall us do we not invent? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What commodity will not serve their turn, in so knowing an age? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What could I have said to these people? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What could a pitiful schoolmaster have done worse, whose trade it was thereby to get his living? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What could he do less? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What could we expect from him who had murdered his mother and his brother, but that he should put his tutor to death who had brought him up?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What crime does this bad age shrink from? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What did King Cotys do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What did Panaetius leave unsaid when he called Plato the Homer of the philosophers? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What do the so long and lively descriptions in Plato of the loves of his time pretend to? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What do we judge? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What do you there want? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What does she so much seek as elbowroom? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What greater victory do you expect than to make your enemy see and know that he is not able to encounter you? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What has she not the power to impose upon our judgments and beliefs? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What have our legislators gained by culling out a hundred thousand particular cases, and by applying to these a hundred thousand laws? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What he thinks to be so just in recommendation of military valour, why may it not be the same in recommendation of any other good quality? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What if I listen to books a little more attentively than ordinary, since I watch if I can purloin anything that may adorn or support my own? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What if another, and a hundred others, have made contrary experiments? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What if he has borrowed the matter and spoiled the form, as it often falls out? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What if the plainest reasons are the best seated? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What impressions will not the weakness of human belief admit? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What is it that makes tyrants so sanguinary? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What is it we may not reason of at this rate? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What is ten leagues: far or near? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What is this but cowardice? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What is this but flatly to abuse our simplicity? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What matter is it, you will say, which way it comes to pass, provided a man does not terrify himself with the expectation? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What matter the wringing of our hands, if we do not wring our thoughts? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What mischief do not those pictures of prodigious dimension do that the boys make upon the staircases and galleries of the royal houses? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What monstrous animal is this, that is a horror to himself, to whom his delights are grievous, and who weds himself to misfortune? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What need have they of anything but to live beloved and honoured? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What needed he to have done more than to fly back to his friends across the river? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What of that? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What privilege has this to continue particularly in my house? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What profit shall he not reap as to the business of men, by reading the Lives of Plutarch? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What remains to an old man of the vigour of his youth and better days? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What remedy? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What share have they, then, in the engagement, where every one is on their side? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What soul has he? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What was the meaning of that ridiculous piece of the chaussuye of our forefathers, and that is still worn by our Swiss? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What wickedness have we left undone? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What will he get by it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What will it be in the end? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What will the angry man answer? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What would I not rather do than read a contract? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What would men say of the other Athenians? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What would you say of him that would not vouchsafe to respite his reading in a book whilst he was under incision? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What youth is restrained from evil by the fear of the gods? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What, hast thou neither means nor power in any other thing, but only to undertake Caesar? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What, if the truest are not always the most commodious to man, being of so wild a composition? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What, shall mere doubt and inquiry strike our imagination, so as to change us? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What, then, ought prating to produce, since prattling and the first beginning to speak, stuffed the world with such a horrible load of volumes? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | What? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | When Plutarch compares them, he does not, for all that, make them equal; who could more learnedly and sincerely have marked their distinctions? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | When did we write so much as since our troubles? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | When he is astounded with the apprehension of death, can the gentlemen of his bedchamber comfort and assure him? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | When jealousy or any other caprice swims in his brain, can our compliments and ceremonies restore him to his good- humour? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | When old age hangs heavy upon his shoulders, can the yeomen of his guard ease him of the burden? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | When were we ever agreed amongst ourselves:"This book has enough; there is now no more to be said about it"? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Whence does it come to pass that our common language, so easy for all other uses, becomes obscure and unintelligible in wills and contracts? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Where are all her fair promises? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Where can that drop of fluid matter contain that infinite number of forms? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Whereas they should say,"Is such a thing done?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Which of them ever changed countenance? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Which of them not only stood or fell indecorously? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who can complain of being comprehended in the same destiny, wherein all are involved? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who does not see that in a state all depends upon their nurture and bringing up? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who ever enhanced the price of merchandise at such a rate? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who ever lived so long and so far into death? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who ever saw one physician approve of another''s prescription, without taking something away, or adding something to it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who ever so greedily hunted after security and repose as Alexander and Caesar did after disturbance and difficulties? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who has got understanding by his logic? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who has not heard at Paris of her that caused her face to be flayed only for the fresher complexion of a new skin? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who hinders my groom from calling himself Pompey the Great? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who is he that had not rather not be read at all than after a drowsy or cursory manner? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who is ignorant of Fabricius sentence against the physician of Pyrrhus? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who is it that has disguised it thus, with this false, pale, and ghostly countenance? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who is the man that by fleeing from his country, can also flee from himself?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Who, then, can despair of his condition, seeing the shocks and commotions wherewith Rome was tumbled and tossed, and yet withstood them all? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Whoever asked his pupil what he thought of grammar and rhetoric, or of such and such a sentence of Cicero? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Whoever found such an effect of our discipline? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Whoever shall ask a man,"What interest have you in this siege?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why barbarous, because they are not French? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why did Poppea invent the use of a mask to hide the beauties of her face, but to enhance it to her lovers? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why did he fancy he did so great a thing in forbearing to confess it an evil? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why did you break the agreeable repose I was enjoying? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why do they cover with so many hindrances, one over another, the parts where our desires and their own have their principal seat? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why do they not, moreover, forswear breathing? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why do we not imitate the Roman architecture? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why do you not now at this instant settle yourself in the state you seem to aim at, and spare all the labour and hazard you interpose?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why does he not give?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why dost thou complain of me and of destiny? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why dost thou fear thy last day? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why has he not paid such an one?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why have they veiled, even below the heels, those beauties that every one desires to show, and that every one desires to see? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why is not the jugular vein as much at our disposal as the median vein? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why should not I judge of Alexander at table, ranting and drinking at the prodigious rate he sometimes used to do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why should philosophy, which only has respect to life and effects, trouble itself about these external appearances? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why should they not give ear to our offers and requests, so long as they are kept within the bounds of modesty? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why therefore should we, contrary to their laws, enslave our own contentment to the power of another? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why, goddess, has your confidence in me ceased?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why, in like manner, do we not value a man for what is properly his own? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Why? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will not that be soon at Paris, Sire? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will they have their faults less, for being of longer continuance; and that of an unjust beginning, the sequel can be just? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will they not seek the quadrature of the circle, even when on their wives? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will we remove from them all occasion of wishing our death though no occasion of so horrid a wish can either be just or excusable? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will you have an example? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will you have one example of the ancient controversy in physic? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will you know how much I get by this? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will you know what I think of it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Will you see how they shoot short? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Wilt thou tamper with them to win their affections? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Would not Ariosto himself say? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Would you know what impression your service and merit have made in her heart? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Would you make them judges of a lawsuit, of the actions of men? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Years have evidently helped me to drain certain rheums; and why not these excrements which furnish matter for gravel? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | Yet had fortune never so little favoured the design, who knows to what height this juggling might have at last arrived? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | You are to judge him by himself and not by what he wears; and, as one of the ancients very pleasantly said:"Do you know why you repute him tall? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | [ As to which Cassius pleasantly said:"What, shall I bear a tyrant, I who can not bear wine?"] |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Do you believe the dead regard such things?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Does the tomb press with less weight upon my bones? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Dost ask where thou shalt lie after death? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Dost thou seek causes from above? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Dost thou, then, old man, collect food for others''ears?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Even felicity, unless it moderate itself, oppresses?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["For what is that friendly love? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["For who is there that antiquity, attested and confirmed by the fairest monuments, can not move?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["For who shoots all day at butts that does not sometimes hit the white?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["For who studies to speak accurately, that does not at the same time wish to perplex his auditory?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["If that half of my soul were snatch away from me by an untimely stroke, why should the other stay? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Is Venus really so repugnant to newly- married maids? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Is all that thy learning nothing, unless another knows that thou knowest?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Is life worth so much? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Olus, what is it to thee what he or she does with their skin?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Put on a lock; shut them up under a guard; but who shall guard the guard? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Shall impious soldiers have these new- ploughed grounds?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Should I place confidence in this monster? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Tell me, is it not madness, that one should die for fear of dying?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["To whom no one is ill who can be good? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["What boy will quickly come and cool the heat of the Falernian wine with clear water?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["What did I say? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["What is glory, be it as glorious as it may be, if it be no more than glory?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["What matters whether by valour or by strategem we overcome the enemy?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["What my mind is, why was it not the same, when I was a boy? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["What praise is that which is to be got in the market- place( meat market)?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["What prevents us from speaking truth with a smile?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["What shame can there, or measure, in lamenting so dear a friend?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Whither dost thou run wandering?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Who is surprised to see a swollen goitre in the Alps?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Who of men can know the counsel of God? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Why before the Theban war and the destruction of Troy, have not other poets sung other events?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Why do we seek climates warmed by another sun? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Why does no man confess his vices? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Why for so short a life tease ourselves with so many projects?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Why not depart from life as a sated guest from a feast? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Why seek to add longer life, merely to renew ill- spent time, and be again tormented?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Why, ruler of Olympus, hast thou to anxious mortals thought fit to add this care, that they should know by, omens future slaughter?... |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Will you do what reformed Polemon did of old? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | ["Wouldst thou not exchange all that the wealthy Arhaemenes had, or the Mygdonian riches of fertile Phrygia, for one ringlet of Licymnia''s hair? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | a gladiator of Caesar''s endured, laughing all the while, his wounds to be searched, lanced, and laid open:["What ordinary gladiator ever groaned? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | am I in a bath? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | am I more at ease than thou?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | am I the better for being sensible of this; or am I the worse? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and his followers be pardoned, who send so many souls from life to death? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and how fair an opportunity she herein gives every one to know and to make a right judgment of himself? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and how many more in several families, ages, and countries? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and how so concealed, that till five- and- forty years after, I did not begin to be sensible of it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and how the indigent Barrus? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and if it put us into a worse condition than Pyrrho''s hog? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and that in this universal republic, it conduces more to birth and augmentation than to loss or ruin? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and that the fatal end of their journey being continually before their eyes, would not alter and deprave their palate from tasting these regalios? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and the book called''The Lover'', of Demetrius Phalereus? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and the fable of Jupiter and Juno, of Chrysippus, impudent beyond all toleration? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and then how many more, according to the opinion of others? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and those rules that exceed both our use and force? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and whence are the clouds perpetually supplied with water? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and why does he not captivate women and ignoramuses, as we are, with admiration at the steadiness of his reasons and the beauty of his order? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and why does not some woman take a fancy to possess over her companions the glory of this chaste love? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and with what assurance deliver their conjectures for current pay? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | and would not the physician deserve to be whipped who should wish the plague amongst us, that he might put his art in practice? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | anne parentum Frustrantur falsis gaudia lachrymulis, Ubertim thalami quasi intra limina fundunt? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | art thou a man at arms, art thou an archer, art thou a pikeman?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | audiero nunquam tua verba loquentem? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | but,"Why does he part with nothing? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | can any man conceive in his mind or realise what is dearer than he is to himself?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | cicatricum, et sceleris pudet, Fratrumque: quid nos dura refugimus AEtas? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | cur neque deformem adolescentem quisquam amat, neque formosum senem?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | do you not see that I only sleep for Maecenas?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | does he not forget his palaces and girandeurs? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | does not this incorrigible coxcomb think that he assumes a new understanding by undertaking a new dispute? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | dost thou then refuse me a place?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | fiducia cessit Quo tibi, diva, mei?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | for to what friend dare you intrust your griefs, who, if he does not laugh at them, will not make use of the occasion to get a share of the quarry? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | for who would dare to contemn things so far fetched, and sought out at the hazard of so long and dangerous a voyage? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | has it not put arms into their hands, and made them raise armies and fight battles? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | hast thou a mind that thy subjects shall look upon thee as their cash- keeper and not as their king? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | have you not lived? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | how be responsible for the opinions of men they do not know? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | how could we excuse the error they so oft fall into, of taking fox for marten? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | how is it that her horns are contracted and reopen? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | how many who desire to die, or who die without alarm or regret? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | if I should run the same fortune that Caecina has done, would you that your daughter, my wife, should do the same?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | if we thereby lose the tranquillity and repose we should enjoy without it? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | is a day to come which may undermine the world?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | is he unjust in not doing what it is impossible for him to do? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | is it grace or the matter, the invention, the judgment, or the learning? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | is it not folly? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | is it this part or that? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | is she indifferent whether her life expire by the mouth or through the throat? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | is there any pleasure that tickles me? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | is there anything but us in nature which inanity sustains, over which it has power? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | magnum documentum, ne patriam rein Perdere guis velit;"["Dost thou not see how ill the son of Albus lives? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | may not my observations reflect upon myself?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | must there be no end of thy revenges and cruelties? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | of which can there be a more manifest sign than to eat a man''s own words-- nay, to lie against a man''s own knowledge? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or by virtue of his grandmother''s prayers? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or does he write in prose? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or have I, through private hatred or malice, offended any kinsman or friend of yours? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or than, as a slave to my own business, tumble over those dusty writings? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or that she sought another husband who might sharpen her appetite by his jealousy, and who by watching should incite her? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or the operation of something else that he had eaten, drunk, or touched that day? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or why do not the cheeks return to these feelings?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or, which is worse, those of another man, as so many do nowadays, to get money? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | or:["If a superior force has taken that part of my soul, why do I, the remaining one, linger behind? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | otherwise, whence should the continual debates we see amongst them about the knowledge of the disease proceed? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | patriae quis exsul Se quoque fugit?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | quantique perinde timores? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | quemquamne hominem in animum instituere, aut Parare, quod sit carius, quam ipse est sibi?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | quid intactum nefasti Liquimus? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | quid luxus desidiesque?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | said he,"must this bit of a woman also serve for a testimony to my rules?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | says he,"would it, then, be a reputed cowardice to overcome them by giving ground?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | should he have stood still, and if chance would have ordered it so, have seen him he was come thither to defend killed before his face? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | so that you presently assume the interest, coldness, and authority of a husband? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | that I have? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | that I have? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | the knowledge of the stars and the motion of the eighth sphere before their own:["What care I about the Pleiades or the stars of Taurus?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | the meanest, lowest, and most beaten more adapted to affairs? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | utque Barrus inops? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | what animals law and justice are? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | what does the east wind court with its blasts? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | what is it that we do not lay the fault to, right or wrong, that we may have something to quarrel with? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | what is she doing? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | what of all that, if he be a fool? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | what remains for him to covet or desire? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | what string of his soul was not touched by this idle and childish game? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | when the Romans so much, as upon the point of ruin? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | whence do winds prevail on the main? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | whence rises the monthly moon, whither wanes she? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | where were their parts to be played if there were no pain to be defied? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | wherefore should we fancy them to have other thoughts within, and to be worse than they seem? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | who but must conclude that these are wild sallies pushed on by a courage that has broken loose from its place? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | who does not give up himself to the mercy of whoever has the impudence to promise him a cure? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | who has assured unto thee the term of life? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | who is it that teases me so? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | whoever died so erect, or more like a man? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | why do they not live of their own? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | why do you vainly form these puerile wishes?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | why does a man, who has so much advantage in matter and treatment, mix railing, indiscretion, and fury in his disputations? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | why does he not sway and persuade us to what he will? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | why does no one love a deformed youth or a comely old man?" |
montaigne-essays-1562 | why not refuse light, because it is gratuitous, and costs them neither invention nor exertion? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | why not? |
montaigne-essays-1562 | why, in giving your estimate of a man, do you prize him wrapped and muffled up in clothes? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | ''Sdeath, what more have kings and princes? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | ''tis not for want of goodwill; he is really to be excused for his delay; for what the devil would you have a devil do? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | ( And wherefore?) |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | 2, de Republica, the most philosophical? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | A fart for the money, said Panurge; have I not had above fifty thousand pounds''worth of sport? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | A plague take them; why did they not choose rather to die there than to leave their good prince in that pinch and necessity? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | A silly cockney am I not, As ever did from Paris come? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | A turd on''t, said the skipper to his preaching passenger, what a fiddle- faddle have we here? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | A woman that is neither fair nor good, to what use serves she? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Adonis, of the bark of a myrrh tree; and Castor and Pollux of the doupe of that egg which was laid and hatched by Leda? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | After that the Lord of Suckfist had ended, Pantagruel said to the Lord of Kissbreech, My friend, have you a mind to make any reply to what is said? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | After this he asked, What''s o''clock? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | After this he said unto us, What think you of this image? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | After what manner, said Gargantua, do you say these fair hours and prayers of yours? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Afterwards I asked him, Good man, these two girls, are they maids? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Am I a Jan? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And Tobit, chap.5, after he had lost his sight, when Raphael saluted him, answered, What joy can I have, that do not see the light of Heaven? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And be merry? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And have you no remedy for this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And how is it within? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And how long hast thou been there? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And how, said the monk, does the Abbot Gulligut, the good drinker,--and the monks, what cheer make they? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And how? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And if so be it was preordinated for thee, wouldst thou be so impious as not to acquiesce in thy destiny? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And in their helves? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And indeed, why should he have thought this difficult? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And must my words be thus interpreted? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And of what kind of trees? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And of what other trees? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And that of the old? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And the number of those that are to be warmed thus hereafter is? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And their arms? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And there is made-- what? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And to what end? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what a devil is become of them? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what besides? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what do they say then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what else? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what else? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what else? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what else? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what else? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what is that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what kind of fool? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what lawsuits couldst thou have? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what more? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And what, I pray you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And where are they? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And wherefore, said Pantagruel, wert thou afraid of the toothache or pain of the teeth? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And wherewith didst thou live? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And why should I not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And would you indeed damn your precious soul? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | And would you know what I would do unto him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Another asked a she- friend of his, How is it, hatchet? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are not these beggarly devils sufficiently wretched already? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are not you assured within yourself of what you have a mind to? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are these same Chitterlings, said Friar John, male or female, angels or mortals, women or maids? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are they all cuckolds? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are they for pies and tarts? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are we a- going to the little children''s limbo? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are you married, or are you not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are you resolved to live and die with me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Are you there, said Eudemon, Genicoa? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Art thou content that thirty thousand wainload of devils should get away with thee at this same very instant? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Art thou here, Friar John? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Art thou mad, said Friar John, to run on at this rate? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Art thou speaking ill of women, cried Panurge, thou mangy scoundrel, thou sorry, noddy- peaked shaveling monk? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | As he spake these words, in came the monk very resolute, and asked them, Whence are you, you poor wretches? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | As soon as I was perceived by him, he asked me, Whence comest thou, Alcofribas? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | As soon as he saw me he was overjoyed, and bawled out to me, What cheer, ho? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | As soon as may be? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | As soon as the boat had clapped them on board, they all with one voice asked, Have you seen him, good passengers, have you seen him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | As they were going down again thus amazed, he asked them, Will you have a whimwham( Aubeliere.)? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | At this dingle dangle wagging of my tub, what would you have me to do? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | At which noise the enemies awaked, but can you tell how? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | At which word the company began to laugh, which Pantagruel perceiving, said, Panurge, what is that which moves you to laugh so? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | At whose appearance before the court Pantagruel said unto them, Are you they that have this great difference betwixt you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ay, but how shall we know the catchpole? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But I will tell you what you shall do, said he to the midwives, in France called wise women( where be they, good folks? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But Pantagruel said unto them, Are the two lords between whom this debate and process is yet living? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But although it should continue longer, is there any man so foolish as to have the confidence to promise himself three years? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But could n''t we see some of''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But hark ye me, cried Panurge, may not we take a nap in the mean time? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But hark you me, master of mine, asked Panurge, have they not some of different growth? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But how is it that you do these things? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But how, and wherewith? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But how, continued he, can you make it out that''tis the oldest city in the world? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But howsoever tell me, Should I marry or no? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But if I do not marry? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But if in my adventure I encounter aright, as I hope I will, shall I be fortunate? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But if there came such liquor from my ballock, would you not willingly thereafter suck the udder whence it issued? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But in this carnal strife and debate of yours have you obtained from God the gift and special grace of continency? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But is it so, said Grangousier, do the false prophets teach you such abuses? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But now what is to be done? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But pray what countrymen are you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But pray, father, said I, whence come you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But tell me, if it had been the will of God, would you say that he could not do it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But the other answered him, Is it come to that, friend and neighbour? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But to the purpose, said he; are not you in love with me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what do you think of eating some kind of cabirotadoes? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what happened thereupon? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what harm had poor I done? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what harm, in the devil''s name, have these poor devils the Capuchins and Minims done unto him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what if neither of these two ways will work upon you, of which doleful truth some of our playwrights stand so many living monuments? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what shall I say of those poor men that are plagued with the pox and the gout? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what then, my gentle companion? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what''s this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what, in good earnest? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But what? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But when you have done all these fine things, quoth Trinquamelle, how do you, my friend, award your decrees, and pronounce judgment? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But whence comes this ciron- worm betwixt these two fingers? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But where is the last year''s snow? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But whither are we bound? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But who can endure to be wedded to a dish? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But who is he, conspicuous from afar, With olive boughs, that doth his offerings bear? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But who is this Ucalegon below, that cries and makes such a sad moan? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But who shall cuckold me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But why, prithee, dear Double- fee, do they call these worshipful dons of yours ignorant fellows? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But will you go with me to gain the pardons? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But will you tell me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, I pray you, sir, must I this evening, ere I go to bed, eat much or little? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, O eternal God, what is thy enterprise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, asked Pantagruel, do these birds never return to the world where they were hatched? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, first, how would you have''em served here? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, pray, when you have been pumped dry one day, what have you got the next? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, quoth Pantagruel, when will you be out of debt? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, quoth the abbess, thou roguish wench, why didst not thou then make some sign to those that were in the next chamber beside thee? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, rr, rrr, rrrr, rrrrr, hoh Robin, rr, rrrrrrr, you do n''t understand that gibberish, do you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, said Panurge to the new- comers, how do you come by all this venison? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, said he, what doth that part of our army in the meantime which overthrows that unworthy swillpot Grangousier? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | But, said his lady, why hath he been so very liberal of his manual kindness to me, without the least provocation? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By Palm Sunday, said Panurge, is there any greater pain of the teeth than when the dogs have you by the legs? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By St. Antony''s hog, said Xenomanes, I believe so; for how can this whip be sufficient to lash this top? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the belly of Saint Buff, quoth Panurge, should I be Vulcan, whom the poet blazons? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the belly of Sanct James, what shall we poor devils drink the while? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the blood of a hog''s- pudding, till when wouldst thou delay the acting of a husband''s part? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the body of a fox new slain, quoth Pantagruel, what is that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the haven of safety, cried out Rondibilis, what is this you ask of me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the memory of the decretals, said Friar John, tell us, I pray you, what you honest men here live on? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the oath you have taken, tell me truly what time of the year do you do it least in? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the pody cody, I have fished fair; where are we now? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | By the virtue of God, why do not you sing, Panniers, farewell, vintage is done? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Came we hither to eat or to fight? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Can these same heroes or demigods you talk of die? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Can you tell how? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Can you tell how? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Can you tell what Octavian Augustus said? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Can you tell with what instruments they did it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Children, do you want me still in anything? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Come, brave boys, are you resolved to go with me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Come, he that would be thought a gentleman, let him storm a town; well, then, shall we go? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Come, how much? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Come, let us drink: will you send nothing to the river? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Come, wert thou not a wise doctor to fling away a whole purse of gold on those mangy scoundrels? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Could a body hypocritically take there a small hypocritical touch? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Could not a man take a chirping bottle with you to taste your wine? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Damn it, did you then take me along with you for your chaplain, to sing mass and shrive you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Diavolo, is there no more must? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did I ill? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did not Roquetaillade come out at his mother''s heel, and Crocmoush from the slipper of his nurse? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did not they furnish you sufficiently with wine? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did not you take heed, quoth he, a little before he opened his mouth to speak, what a shogging, shaking, and wagging his head did keep? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did you ever hitherto find me in the confraternity of the faulty? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did you ever pick the lock of a cupboard to steal a bottle of wine out of it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did you ever see him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did you ever see him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Did you never hear of my Lord Meurles his greyhound, which was not worth a straw in the fields? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Didst thou ever hear the vulgar proverb, Happy is the physician whose coming is desired at the declension of a disease? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Didst thou ever see the monk of Castre''s cowl? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do I dream, or is it true that they tell me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do but tell me whether you will be confessed and fast only three short little days of God? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do n''t your worships here now and then use to take a leap? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do not we thereby honour the Lord God Almighty, Creator, Protector, and Conserver of all things? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do they get you bairns? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do they think to have to do with a ninnywhoop, to feed you thus with cakes? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do we know but that she may be an eleventh sibyl or a second Cassandra? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you call this a wedding? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you call this children''s play? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you esteem men by their number rather than by their valour and prowess? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you find any trouble or disquiet in your body by the importunate stings and pricklings of the flesh? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you fleece''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you jog hither, wagging your tails, to pant at my wine, and bepiss my barrel? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you know Friar Claude of the high kilderkins? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you make nothing of this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you never commit dry- bobs or flashes in the pan? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you reckon these two to be akin? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you remember what happened at Rome two hundred and threescore years after the foundation thereof? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you see here this little bunch, to which they are going to give t''other wrench? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you see that basin yonder in his cage? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you see this diamond? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you see this madge- howlet? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you see this russet? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you see this same ram? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you speak Christian, said Epistemon, or the buffoon language, otherwise called Patelinois? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you think the fellow was bashful? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you understand none of this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you wet yourselves to dry, or do you dry to wet you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Do you, quoth Panurge, aver that without all exception? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Dost thou not know, and is it not daily told unto thee, that the end of the world approacheth? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Dost thou not see the Abbey of Theleme? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Dost thou see the smoke of hell''s kitchens? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Dost thou see''em here, sirrah? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Dost thou think that these atrocious abuses are hidden from the eternal spirit and the supreme God who is the just rewarder of all our undertakings? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Dost thou think, Friar John, by thy faith, that he is in the state of salvation? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Doth not he die like a good fellow that dies with a stiff catso? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Doth not the light comfort all the world? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Dum venerit judicari? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Each one cried out, Thou filthy collier toad, Doth it become thee to be found abroad? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Et ubi prenus? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | First, what do they eat? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Foolish and dishonest? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | For how shall I be able, said he, to rule over others, that have not full power and command of myself? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | For to what end should the sun impart unto her any of his light? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | For who could have forborne? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | For who so rich can be that sometimes may not owe, or who can be so poor that sometimes may not lend? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | For why? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Friar John, art thou here my love? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Friar Stephen, do n''t we play the devils rarely? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Give me thy advice freely, I beseech thee, Should I marry or no? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Give me your advice, billy, and tell me your opinion freely, Should I marry or no? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Go to, begin and cry, Do you lack any green sauce? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Good people, most illustrious drinkers, and you, thrice precious gouty gentlemen, did you ever see Diogenes, and cynic philosopher? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ha, I understand, said Thaumast, but what? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ha, ha, said the monk, am not I in danger of drowning, seeing I am in water even to the nose? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ha, thou false fever, wilt thou not be gone? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Had he eaten sour plums unpeeled? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Had it not been enough to have thrown the hell- hounds a few cropped pieces of white cash? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Had you good luck in your first marriage? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Hark ye me, dear rogue, Xenomanes, my friend, I prithee are these hermits, hypocrites, and eavesdroppers maids or married? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Has n''t the fellow told you he does not know a word of the business? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Hast thou got thy bilbo? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Hast thou got thy swindging tool? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Hast thou hurt thyself? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Hath he not a rare voice? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have I not got a brave determination of all my doubts, and a response in all things agreeable to the oracle that gave it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have they the monk? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have we not raised it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have you a mind to go ashore there? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have you any dice in your pocket? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have you put him to any ransom? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have you smelt the salt deep? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have you understood all this well? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Have you undertaken the task to enrich me in this world? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | He gave me a lusty rapping thwack on my back,--what then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Hearken here, Epistemon, my little bully, dost not thou hold him to be very resolute in his responsory verdicts? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Help me, said the monk, in the devil''s name; is this a time for you to prate? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ho, ho, ho, ho, my good people, my friends and my faithful servants, must I hinder you from helping me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Honest man, could not you throw me ashore? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How are they when you''ve done? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How are you when you shake? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How came this mad fellow to break loose? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How could I help it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How did you find that they are now wise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How do they call thee? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How do they drink? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How do they like''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How do they love it dressed? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How do they use to be? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How do they use to walk? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How do you correct''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How do you pig together? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How doleful, trist, and plangorous would such a sight and pageantry prove unto them? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How dost like me now? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How dost thou like this fare? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How hang your pouches? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How interpret you that passage? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How is it, quoth Panurge, that you conceive this matter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How is that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How is that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How is the gateway? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How is the snatchblatch? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How is their motion? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How is your performance the rest of the year? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How long has it been wise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How long otherwise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How many and what dispositions made them fools? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How many and what dispositions were wanting to make''em wise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How many bouts a- nights? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How many of''em do you intend to save? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How many scores have you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How many steps have you told? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How many would you have? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How much is that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How much is the whole? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How much weighs each bag of tools? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How much would you have for having taken him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How must they be done? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How now, Friar John? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How now, madam, said he, your paternosters? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How should the ancient folly be come to nothing? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How should the bells be rung? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How should they be wise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How should this same new wisdom be started up and established? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How so? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How the devil can she be cuckolded who never yet was married? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How then, should he be roasted? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How thick do you judge the planks of our ship to be? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How thrive you with this second wife of yours? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How were they made? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How''s their complexion then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How, cried the devil, what is it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How, quoth Panurge, are you a shaver, then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How, quoth the friar, the fit rhyming is upon you too? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How, said Panurge, say you so? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | How? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | However, like maids, they say nay, and take it; and speak the less, but think the more, minding the work in hand; do they not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I am learned, you see: Foecundi calices quem non fecere disertum? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I do not ask thee, said Janotus, blockhead, quomodo supponit, but pro quo? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I hear the block crack; is it broke? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I heard Master Francis Villon ask Xerxes, How much the mess of mustard? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I heartily beseech you, what must I do? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I mean, what weather is it there? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I perceived that the travellers and inhabitants of that country asked, Whither does this way go? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I say, you who are here, and not that other you who playeth below in the tennis- court? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I suppose they are not all of one age; but, pray, how is their shape? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I tell you the time and place; what would you have more? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | I will be? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | If I had put within this bottle two pints, the one of wine and the other of water, thoroughly and exactly mingled together, how would you unmix them? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | If thy house must come to ruin, should it therefore in its fall crush the heels of him that set it up? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | If we are drowned, will it not be drowned too? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | If you give no credit thereto, why do not you the same in these jovial new chronicles of mine? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | If you shall be a cuckold? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | If you were to go from hence to Cahusac, whether had you rather, ride on a gosling or lead a sow in a leash? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In autumn? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In confirmation hereof, Theophrastus, being asked on a time what kind of beast or thing he judged a toyish, wanton love to be? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In heaven, I grant, replied Homenas; but we have another here on earth, do you see? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In hurlyburly fight, Can any tell where random blows may light? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In summer? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In the interim, Panurge said to Friar John, Is this the island of the Macreons? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In the meanwhile he would fart like a horse, and the women would laugh and say, How now, do you fart, Panurge? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In what hierarchy of such venomous creatures do you place Panurge''s future spouse? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | In winter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Indeed formerly you were wo nt to give us some freely, and will you not now let us have any for our money? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is any man so learned as the devils are? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is he a rank heretic? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it a blaspheming clause or reserve any way scandalous unto the world? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it an ill expression? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it come to that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it not a canonical and authentic exception, worthy to be premised to all our undertakings? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it not because they have not enough at home wherewith to fill their bellies and their pokes? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it not better and more honourable to perish in fighting valiantly than to live in disgrace by a cowardly running away? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it not the want of flesh meat? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it possible for me to live without a wife, in the name of all the subterranean devils? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it so, quoth Panurge, that you understand the matter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it thy fatal destiny, or influences of the stars, that would put an end to thy so long enjoyed ease and rest? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it time for us to drink now? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is it your pleasure, most dear father, that you speak? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is not that a mean whereby we do acknowledge him to be the sole giver of all whatsoever is good? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is not that enough? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is not that verily a sanctifying of his holy name? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is not the night mournful, sad, and melancholic? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is not this an infallible and sovereign antidote? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is she a cucquean for that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is that the gentleman? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is there anything of the feminine gender among them? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is this all that the trismegistian Bottle''s word means? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is this all they have? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is this beyond our law or our faith-- against reason or the holy Scripture? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is this nothing? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is this one of the nine comforts of matrimony? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is this small saving or frugality? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Is''t come to that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | It falleth to your turn to give an answer: Should Panurge, pray you, marry, yea or no? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Lend''s a hand here, hoh, tiger, wouldst thou? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Let us turn the clean contrary way, and brush our former words against the wool: what if I encounter ill? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Light, where''s the book? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Madam, do you cut little children''s things? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | May not this be said to redeem and gain time with a vengeance, think you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | May we not hear the pope- hawk sing? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Nay, good sir devil, replied the farmer; how can I be said to have choused you, since it was your worship that chose first? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Nay, why do n''t you iron- bind him, if needs be? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | No more sweet wine? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | No, no, Quare? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now I have left nothing behind me at the wicket through forgetfulness; why then should I think of going thither? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now tell me who ever had more cause to be vexed than poor Tom? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now what do you think on''t, neighbour, my friend? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now which is most honourable, the air or the earth? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now who should happen to meet but these two? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now would I know what kind of hatchet this bawling Tom wants? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now you have it, what do you make on''t? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now, by the oath you have taken, tell me, when you have a mind to cohabit, how you throw''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now, by the virtue of God-- Hold, interrupted Homenas, what god do you mean? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now, come and tell me whether the horns of your other knights of the bull''s feather have such a virtue and wonderful propriety? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now, did you ever hear the like since you were born? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now, in my way, I met with a fellow that was lying in wait to catch pigeons, of whom I asked, My friend, from whence come these pigeons? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Now, whilst they were thus busy about me, the fire triumphed, never ask how? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | O destinies, why did you not spin me for a cabbage- planter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | O my friend, said Pantagruel, dost thou know what Agesilaus said when he was asked why the great city of Lacedaemon was not enclosed with walls? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | O my good God, what had I done that thou shouldest thus punish me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | O my pretty little waggish boy, said Grangousier, what an excellent wit thou hast? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | O the Lord help us now, quoth Panurge; whither are we driven to, good folks? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ods- belly, art thou talking here of making thy will now we are in danger, and it behoveth us to bestir our stumps lustily, or never? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ods- belly, do they make nothing of the valiant cooks? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ods- death, how shall we clear her? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ods- fish, why do n''t we take him up by the lugs and throw him overboard to the bottom of the sea? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ods- me, thou buffalo''s head stuffed with relics, what ape''s paternoster art thou muttering and chattering here between thy teeth? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Of what colour is the tip? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Of what complexion? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Of what kind? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Of what''s the colour of the twigs? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Oh, you devils, cried Friar John, proto- devils, panto- devils, you would we d a monk, would you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | One, two, three; where is the fourth? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Or are we going to hell for orders? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Or yet by the mystery of necromancy? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Or, for the more certainty, will you have a trial of your fortune by the art of aruspiciny, by augury, or by extispiciny? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Ought he not to be singed? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Our faithful friend, speak; are you married? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pannus, pro quo supponit? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pantagruel made a notable observation upon the processions; for says he, Have you seen and observed the policy of these Semiquavers? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pantagruel, hearing the sad outcry which Panurge made, said, Who talks of flying? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Panurge then whispered me, Fellow- traveller, quoth he, hast thou not been somewhat afraid this bout? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Picrochole, my ancient friend of old time, of my own kindred and alliance, comes he to invade me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Poet, was Homer frying congers when he wrote the deeds of Agamemnon? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray did you observe, continued Epistemon, how this damned ill- favoured Semiquaver mentioned March as the best month for caterwauling? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray now tell me who can tell but that the Swiss, now so bold and warlike, were formerly Chitterlings? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray now, good father hermit, have not you here some other pastime besides fasting? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray tell me, noble topers, do they not deserve to have their snouts slit? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray then, if I may be so bold, whence comes this plenty and overflowing of all dainty bits and good things which we see among you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray what do you call''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray where are their hens? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray, Friar Shakewell, does your whole fraternity quaver and shake at that rate? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray, asked he, what is the true name of all these things in your country language? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray, have you many? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray, how came you to know that men were formerly fools? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray, how do you feed''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray, master, cried Panurge, if I also rang this bell could I make those other birds yonder, with red- herring- coloured feathers, sing? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray, quoth Panurge, is there no remedy, no help for the poor man, good people? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Pray, why is it that people say that men are not such sots nowadays as they were in the days of yore? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Prithee, Mr. Devil in a coif, wouldst thou have a man tell thee more than he knows? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Prithee, who will transmit it to the executors? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Prut, tut, said Pantagruel, what doth this fool mean to say? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Quid juris? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Quoth Friar John, What could they say more, were he all peg and she all hole? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Reason? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Red- snout cried out against them, saying, with a loud voice, Body of me, you little prigs, will you offer to take the bread out of my mouth? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Remember you''re upon your oath, and tell me justly and bona fide how many times a day you monk it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Right, quoth Panurge, but couldst thou keep pace with him, Friar John, my dainty cod? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Rot you, am I not vexed enough already, but you must have the impudence to come and plague me, ye scurvy fly- catchers you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Say? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I be a cuckold, father, yea or no? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I come and help you again? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I go yet further? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I help you here too? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I help you still? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I lend you a hand here? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I marry? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I marry? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I thrive or speed well withal? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I weep? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall I yet say more? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall not I be a cuckold? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall we charge them or no? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall we not kill all these dogs, Turks and Mahometans? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Shall we see, said Picrochole, Babylon and Mount Sinai? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Should I marry? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Should not he be scalded first? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Sirrah, give me-- an account whether you had a letter of attorney, or whether you were feed or no, that you offered to bawl in another man''s cause? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | So you''d have them burned? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Some have been served so? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Suppose we should find ourselves pent up between the Chitterlings and Shrovetide? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Tell me-- do you prosper well with her? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | That is well cacked, well scummered, said Panurge; do you compare yourself with Hercules? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | That time or tense, said Epistemon, is aorist, derived from the preter- imperfect tense of the Greeks, admitted in war(?) |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | That were heretics? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | The catchpole, having made shift to get down a swingeing sneaker of Breton wine, said to Basche, Pray, sir, what do you mean? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | The deuce on you, what more might a king, an emperor, or a pope wish for? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | The lady at this word thrust him back above a hundred leagues, saying, You mischievous fool, is it for you to talk thus unto me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | The monk then said, What do you think in your conscience is meant and signified by this riddle? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | The people then asked why it was the friars had so long and large genitories? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | The ship being cleared of Dingdong and his tups: Is there ever another sheepish soul left lurking on board? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | The universities of your world have commonly a book, either open or shut, in their arms and devices; what book do you think it is? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their brows? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their complexion? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their eyes? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their features? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their feet? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their graces? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their hair? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their heels? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their looks? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Their lower parts? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then Panurge put off his counterfeit garb, changed his false visage, and said unto her, You will not then otherwise let me do a little? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then again said the gallant:''Despota tinyn panagathe, diati sy mi ouk artodotis? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then he said to Grangousier, Do you see this young boy? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then said Pantagruel, How dost thou know that the privy parts of women are at such a cheap rate? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then said Pantagruel, My friend, is this all you have to say? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then said he to Gargantua, My pretty little boy, whither do you lead us? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then said the prior of the convent: What should this drunken fellow do here? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then shall I not marry? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then what do they do? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Then, said Pantagruel, St. Alipantin, what civet? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | There quoth Panurge, Is it here? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Therefore I beseech you, my good Master Rondibilis, should I marry or not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Thirst, for who in the time of innocence would have drunk without being athirst? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | This caused Thamous to answer: Here am I; what dost thou call me for? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | This, then, is the exposition of that which the lady means, Diamant faux, that is, false lover, why hast thou forsaken me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Thou comest from Paris then, said Pantagruel; and how do you spend your time there, you my masters the students of Paris? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Thus as they talked and chatted together, Carpalin said, And, by the belly of St. Quenet, shall we never eat any venison? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Till at last he be? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Till what time do the doxies sit up? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To revile with opprobrious speeches the good and courageous props and pillars of the Church,--is that to be called a poetical fury? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To see fashions? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To the purpose of the truel,--what is the reason that the thighs of a gentlewoman are always fresh and cool? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To what a devil, then, said he, serve so many paltry heaps and bundles of papers and copies which you give me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To what end all this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To what end doth she quaver with her lips, like a monkey in the dismembering of a lobster? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To what use can those writings serve you, those papers and other procedures contained in the bags and pokes of the law- suitors? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To which Pantagruel answered, What devilish language is this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To which Pantagruel said, Is it true? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | To which he answered that they were Hebrew words, signifying, Wherefore hast thou forsaken me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Trinc then: what says your heart, elevated by Bacchic enthusiasm? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Tripes and bowels of all the devils, cries Panurge, what do you tell me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Tunc, my lords, quid juris pro minoribus? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Turn it over, where''s the chapter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Virtue of the frock, quoth Friar John, what kind of voyage are we making? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Vultis etiam pardonos? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Was Ulysses so mad as to go back into the Cyclop''s cave to fetch his sword? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Was he one of our decretalists? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Was not Bacchus engendered out of the very thigh of Jupiter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Was not Minerva born of the brain, even through the ear of Jove? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Was not he sent for? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Was she to blame for an ill- managed fear,-- Or rather pious, conscionable care? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Washing them, therefore, first at the fountain, the pilgrims said one to another softly, What shall we do? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | We are almost drowned here amongst these lettuce, shall we speak? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Well then, sir, said Friar John, while the ship''s crew water have you a mind to have good sport? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Well, he must have it then for all this, for so''tis written in the Book of Fate( do you hear? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Well, my friend, said Pantagruel, but can not you speak French? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Well, talk no more of it, quoth the devil; what canst thou sow our field with for next year? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Well, what say you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Were his teeth on edge, I pray you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Were it not for it, what would become of the toll- rates and rent- rolls? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Were not they very careful to entertain them well, punctually to look unto them, and to attend them faithfully and circumspectly? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Were you ever a cuckold? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wert thou not cured of thy rheums? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What a devil have we below, quoth Jupiter, that howls so horridly? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What a devil should we do else? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What a devil, said the monk, shall we do else? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What a pox ails the fellow? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What a pox to thy bones dost thou mean, stony cod? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What a shameful disorder in nature, is it not, to make war against women? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What are the faggots and brushes of? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What are the hopes of his labour? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What besides? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What can be the signification of the uneven shrugging of her hulchy shoulders? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What caps do they wear? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What cheer, ho, fore and aft? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What colour? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What could it have cost him to hearken unto what the honest man had invented and contrived for his good? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What course shall we then take? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What d''ye take him to be? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What d''ye think the old fornicator saith? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What devil were able to overthrow such walls? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What did he? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What did they get by''t, in your opinion? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What didst thou drink? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do they boil with''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do they do then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do they end with? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do they mend it with? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do they say to this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do they season their meat with? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do they wear on their hands? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you get out of''em then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you give''em then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you mean by dog- sleep? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you mean by that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you mean, master of mine? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you pretend by these large conquests? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you say? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you think is become of the art of forcing the thunder and celestial fire down, which the wise Prometheus had formerly invented? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you think on''t, hah? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you think they did? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What do you think was the cause of Erichthonius''s being the first inventor of coaches, litters, and chariots? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What doth he expect to reap thereby? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What drawer or tiring do you mean? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What drives him to it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What fell out upon it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What fool so confident to say, That he shall live one other day? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What fruit do they eat? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What fuel feeds it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What good comes of it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What harm had done those poor devils the catchpoles? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What has he made you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What hast thou to do with it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What have I heard? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What have they besides, then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What if you skipped, and let''em fast a whole day? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is in their kitchens? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is it makes the wolves to leave the woods? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is it that induceth you, what stirs you up to believe, or who told you that white signifieth faith, and blue constancy? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is it that this polypragmonetic ardelion to all the fiends of hell doth aim at? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is it that you advise and counsel me to do? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is that to me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is that, said they? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is the cause, said Gargantua, that Friar John hath such a fair nose? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is the matter, said he, my chicken? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is the matter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is the meaning of that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is the meaning of this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is the reason, asked Friar John, that monks are always to be found in kitchens, and kings, emperors, and popes are never there? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What is this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What joy, conjecture you, will then be found amongst those officers when they see this rivulet of gold, which is their sole restorative? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What kind of cloth is it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What kind of dice, quoth Trinquamelle, grand- president of the said court, do you mean, my friend Bridlegoose? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What kind of tools are yours? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What leaping dost thou mean? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What liquor? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What made Hercules such a famous fellow, d''ye think? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What makes and daily increases the famous and celebrated patrimony of St. Peter in plenty of all temporal, corporeal, and spiritual blessings? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What makes poor scoundrel rogues to beg, I pray you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What makes, in many countries, the people rebellious and depraved, pages saucy and mischievous, students sottish and duncical? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What maketh all this for our present purpose? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What maketh women whores? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What meaneth this restless wagging of her slouchy chaps? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What men? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What mother, said the mayor, does the man mean? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What moves him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What moveth him to take all these pains? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What o''devil has he swallowed? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What place is he to go to? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What provokes him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What rigging do you keep''em in? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What sauce are they most dainty for? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What say they? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What say you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What says Cato in his Book of Husbandry to this purpose? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What season do you do it best in? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What sets him on? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What shadows the brooks? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What shall I say? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What shall be our remedy? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What shall be the end of so many labours and crosses? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What shall we have, said he, to drink in these deserts? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What sort of cloth is it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What sort of porridge? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What sort of rings on their fingers? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What sort of wood is''t? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What sort? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What sort? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What the better for the succeeding wisdom? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What the deuce moved him to be so snappish and depravedly bent against the good fathers of the true religion? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What the devil else shouldst thou do but marry? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What the devil, Sanct Thomas of England was well content to die for them; if I died in the same cause, should not I be a sanct likewise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What the devil, quoth Panurge, means this busy restless fellow? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What think you of it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What think''st of it, Friar John, hah? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What thinkest thou of it, say, thou bawdy Priapus? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What though she be dead, must not we also die? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What virtue will there be then, said the monk, in their bullets of concupiscence, their habits and their bodies? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What was it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What was the issue? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What wear they on their feet? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What were we the worse for the former folly? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What will it signify to make your will now? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What will my husband say? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What wilt thou have me do? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What wine drink you at Paris? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What wonder is it then? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What wood d''ye burn in your chambers? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What would the wenches do? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What''s the colour of their stockings? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What''s the matter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What''s the price? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What''s their last course? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What''s your lading? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, always the same ditty? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, are you there yet? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, drink so shallow? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, it seems I do not drink but by an attorney? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, my member? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, quoth a third, shall I have no share in it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, said Gargantua, to drink so soon after sleep? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, said Gargantua, to skite? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, said Grangousier, my little rogue, hast thou been at the pot, that thou dost rhyme already? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, said Pantagruel, have they the pox there too? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, said the monk, have you almost done preaching? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What, was the shop their mother? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | What? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When I tell you,--If it please God,--do I to you any wrong therein? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When do they get up? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When dost thou reckon to reap, hah? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When have we All- saints day? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When it was asked Ovid, Why Aegisthus became an adulterer? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When shall the worshipful esquire drink? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When shall we drink? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When the Massorets and Cabalists are asked why it is that none of all the devils do at any time enter into the terrestrial paradise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When the devil would you have a man be afraid but when there is so much cause? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When the fruit was on the table, Pantagruel asked, Now tell me, gentlemen, are your doubts fully resolved or no? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When the good man came back, he asked him, Ha, my friend, what news do you bring me? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When they had well fed, quoth the horse to the ass; Well, poor ass, how is it with thee now? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When they''ve even used, how are they? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When we had thus chatted and tippled, Bacbuc asked, Who of you here would have the word of the Bottle? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | When? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whence comes this to pass, my masters? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whence proceeded the foregoing folly? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whence the following wisdom? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where are those of Toby Lamb and Robin Ram that sleep while the rest are a- feeding? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where are you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where did you find this written? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where do you hide''em? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where is faith? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where is he? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where is humanity? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where is law? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where is my funnel? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where is reason? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where is that written? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where is the fear of God? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where shall we put it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Where the devil didst thou rake up all these fripperies? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whereabouts were we? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whereat I was much astonished, and asked them, My masters, is there any danger of the plague here? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wherefore is it, that our devotions were instituted to be short in the time of harvest and vintage, and long in the advent, and all the winter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whereof could the chassis or paper- windows be made? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whereunto( in your opinion) doth this little flourish of a preamble tend? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whether wouldst thou be jealous without cause, or be a cuckold and know nothing of it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Which causes Herophilus much to blame the physician Callianax, who, being asked by a patient of his, Shall I die? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Which is the oldest city in the world? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Which of you, said Pantagruel, is the plaintiff? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Which was first, thirst or drinking? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Which way? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whither are you bound? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whither does that way go? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who a God''s name made''em wise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who are those? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who art thou? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who can tell but St. Martin''s running footman Belzebuth may still be hatching us some further mischief? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who d''ye think are most, those that loved mankind foolish, or those that love it wise? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who hath given him this counsel? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who is able to tell if the world shall last yet three years? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who is it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who made it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who of them is the best cock o''the game? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who the devil made''em fools? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who then will? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Who? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whom do you think you have in hand? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Whom have you got o''board? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why all this ado? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why am not I, said Minos, there invited? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why did the modern wisdom begin now, and no sooner? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why did the old folly end now, and no later? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why didst thou not leave thy purse with the miller? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why didst thou not take me away before her, seeing for me to live without her is but to languish? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why do n''t you swaddle him round with good tight girths, or secure his natural tub with a strong sorb- apple- tree hoop? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why do you then doubt of that which you know not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why is my Trasia thus sad and melancholy? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why so, I prithee tell? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why then do we not follow his example, doing as he did in the countries through which we pass? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why then, said Pantagruel, do they put it again into the press? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why was Nabuzardan, King Nebuchadnezzar''s head- cook, chosen to the exclusion of all other captains to besiege and destroy Jerusalem? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why were they fools? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why, replied Panurge, the lately married? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why, what would you do with them? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Why? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will fish go down with them? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will he rid us of his damned company, to go shite out his nasty rhyming balderdash in some bog- house? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will he take a hair of the same dog? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will nobody be so kind as to cram some dog''s- bur down the poor cur''s gullet? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will not this be the golden age in the reign of Saturn? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will she be discreet and chaste? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will the addle- pated wight have the grace to sheer off? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will they lie backwards, and let out their fore- rooms? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will this fair father make us here an offering of his tail to kiss it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will you eat a pudding? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will you have a piece of velvet, either of the violet colour or of crimson dyed in grain, or a piece of broached or crimson satin? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will you have another draught of white hippocras? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will you have any more of it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will you have chains, gold, tablets, rings? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will you maintain, quoth Pantagruel, that the codpiece is the chief piece of a military harness? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will you not be gone? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Will you teach me, quoth Panurge, how to discern flies among milk, or show your father the way how to beget children? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wilt say how much? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wilt thou come along with us, Friar John? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wilt thou come, ho devil? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wilt thou come, sea- calf? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | With this cat? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Without it, how could the papers and writs of lawyers''clients be brought to the bar? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Without it, how should the water be got out of a draw- well? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would n''t this secure us from this storm? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would not the noble art of printing perish without it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would you have them vault or wriggle more? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would you know what''tis, gamesters? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would you know whither? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would you know why I''m thus, good people? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would you put tricks upon travellers? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would you say that a fly could drink in this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Would you take my advice? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wouldst thou be content to be found with thy genitories full in the day of judgment? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wouldst thou everlastingly leave it there, or wouldst thou pluck it out with thy grinders? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Wouldst thou, like a perfidious tyrant, thus spoil and lay waste my master''s kingdom? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea but, quoth Panurge, would you have me so solitarily drive out the whole course of my life, without the comfort of a matrimonial consort? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea but, said Carpalin, were it not good to cloy all their ordnance? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea but, said Epistemon, if thou shouldst be set upon, how wouldst thou defend thyself? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea but, said I, my friend, what is the name of that city whither thou carriest thy coleworts to sell? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea but, said Pantagruel, is the king there? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea but, said he, my friend Panurge, he is marvellously learned; how wilt thou be able to answer him? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea but, said he, where didst thou shite? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea, but, said Grangousier, my friend, what cause doth he pretend for his outrages? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea, but, said Grangousier, what went you to do at Saint Sebastian? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yea, but, said Grangousier, which torchecul did you find to be the best? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Yes, for why? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | You are, as I take it, the king''s jester; are n''t you? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | You do not? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | You have catched a cold, gammer? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | You monks and friars of the cowl- pated and hood- polled fraternity, have you no remedy nor salve against this malady of graffing horns in heads? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | You never saw her? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | You were also married before you had this wife? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | You, my French countrymen, which is the way you take to go thither? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | Your name is, as I take it, Robin Mutton? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | always in a kitchen, friend? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | and dost thou prate here of thy being innocent, as if thou couldst be delivered from our racks and tortures for being so? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | answered Panurge; have you fixed your thoughts there? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | are we come to that pass? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | asked Homenas; what was it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | asked Jupiter; when? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | asked Panurge; and how do you call them? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | between the anvil and the hammers? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | by St. Anthony''s belly, doth it become thee to speak without command? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | cried Friar John; are ye here still, ye bloodhounds, ye citing, scribbling imps of Satan? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | cried Friar John; do you call these same folks illiterate lobcocks and duncical doddipolls? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | cried she, the man''s a fool: What need you use a wooden tool? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | cried the four; do not you foreign people know the one? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | cried they; do you call it Entelechy or Endelechy? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | did I not give you a sufficient account of the elements''transmutation, and the blunders that are made of roast for boiled, and boiled for roast? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | do all those that see the pope grow as tall as yon huge fellow that threatens us? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | do ye presume to say that our seamen are not honest men? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | do you think I am afraid? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | do you use to pay ransoms to religious men? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | dost thou take me for an ass? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | hah? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | hast thou dwelt any while in Greece? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | hast thou taken from me the perfectest amongst men? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | have not I sufficiently well exercised myself? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | have you not talked long enough to drink? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | hid? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | how the devil came I by this? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | meddle with Shrovetide? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | must I again contrist myself? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | or as the Cilician women, according to the testimony of Dioscorides, were wo nt to do the grain of alkermes? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | or will he, monk- like, run his fist up to the elbow into his throat to his very maw, to scour and clear his flanks? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | pray tell me who taught you to talk at this rate of the power and predestination of God, poor silly people? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | quoth Panurge; why, what would you have me say? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Epistemon; everyone shall ride, and I must lead the ass? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Friar John; how can I help it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Gargantua; do you throw at us grape- kernels here? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Grangousier, do you think that the plague comes from Saint Sebastian? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Grangousier, how is it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Grangousier, what is this, good people? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said I, and where? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said I, is there here a new world? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Pantagruel, and what is that? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Pantagruel, do they ask any better terms than the hand at the pot and the glass in their fist? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Panurge, are your farts so fertile and fruitful? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Panurge; was it here we were born to perish? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said Tripet, this fellow gibes and flouts us? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | said they, was there no more to do but to lose a hatchet to make us rich? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | the true idea of the Olympic regions, wherein all( other) virtues cease, charity alone ruleth, governeth, domineereth, and triumpheth? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | they were none of your lower- form gimcracks, were they? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | we were too rich, were we? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | what did I see there? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | what does he? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | what''s that to thee? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | what''s the matter? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | whence comest thou, O dark lantern of Antichrist? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | where are their females? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | where art thou? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | where is our main course? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | where the devil are they? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | where was it? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | who art thou? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | who shall have this wreck? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | who were they? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | will you take my bargain over my head? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | wo n''t truth serve your turns? |
rabelais-gargantua-3107 | would you draw and inveigle from me my clients and customers? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | ''Tis hard that I, far- toiling voyager, Crossed by some evil wind, Can not the haven find, Nor catch his form that flies me, where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | (_ to_ ANTIGONE) And thou,--no prating talk, but briefly tell, Knew''st thou our edict that forbade this thing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | ... II 2 The cause then of my cry Was coming all too nigh:( Doth the clear nightingale lament for nought?) |
sophocles-seven-2010 | 1 Where is he? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | A shepherd wast thou, and a wandering hind? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | A. Toil upon toil brings toil, And what save trouble have I? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Above there, or below? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Aias, dear brother, comfort of mine eye, Hast thou then done even as the rumour holds? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Aias, my lord, what act is in thy mind? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Alas, shalt thou be seen Graced with mine arms amongst Achaean men? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Alas, what shall I say to him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Am I a fool, or do I truly hear Lament new- rising from our master''s home? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Am I again deceived? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Am I not vile? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Am I permitted? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Am I ruled by Thebes? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Am I the man to spurn at Heaven''s command? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Am I to speak? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Am I undone? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Among whom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And Aias was thy foeman? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And I, Shall I bide here till thou com''st forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And Nestor, my old friend, good aged man, Is he yet living? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And are thine eyes 2 Sightless? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And art thou bent on truth in the reply? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And art thou not ashamed, acting alone? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And could a mother''s heart be steeled to this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And did they certainly report him dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And did this prophet then profess his art? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And finds the sufferer now some pause of woe? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And hadst thou ever hoped the Gods would care For mine affliction, and restore my life? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And hadst thou there acquaintance of this man? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And hath Creon sent, Pitying my sorrows, mine own children to me Whom most I love? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And have they so determined on my life? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And have ye dared to give Mine arms to some man else, unknown to me?'' |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And how is he not here, if all be well? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And how was she detected, caught, and taken? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And is he now at hand within the house? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And is he still alive for me to see? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And is not lying shameful to thy soul? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And is there none to succour or prevent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And is this in act? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And is this thine intent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And know''st thou not whom thou behold''st in me, Young boy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And may one touch and handle it, and gaze With reverence, as on a thing from Heaven? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And now The General''s proclamation of to- day-- Hast thou not heard?--Art thou so slow to hear When harm from foes threatens the souls we love? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And now This gory venom blackly spreading bane From Nessus''angry wound, must it not cause The death of Heracles? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And now why vaunt the deeds that won the day, When these dear maids will tell them in thine ear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And shall not men be taught the temperate will? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And shar''st with her dominion of this realm? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And since the event how much of time hath flown? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And they, Thy brethren, what of them? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And thou, poor helpless crone, didst see this done? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And to what Power thus consecrate? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And was I then, By mine own edict branded thus, to look On Theban faces with unaltered eye? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And was there none, no fellow traveller, To see, and tell the tale, and help our search? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And were the eyes and spirit not distraught, When the tongue uttered this to ruin me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And what desire or quest hath brought thee hither? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And what hast thou determined for her death? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And what hath brought thee, old Tirésias, now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And what was Atreus, thine own father? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And when I have gotten this unpolluted draught? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And when leaf- shadowed Earth has drunk of this, What follows? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And when the father saw him, With loud and dreadful clamour bursting in He went to him and called him piteously:''What deed is this, unhappy youth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And when they banished me, stood''st firm to shield me, What news, Ismene, bring''st thou to thy sire To day? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And where didst thou come near him and stand by? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And where didst thou inhabit with thy flock? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And where is he who rules this country, sirs? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And where is his poor body''s resting- place? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And where, then, is the promise thou hast given? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And wherefore hast thou darted forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And whither must we go? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And who That saw thee hurrying forth to certain death Would not bewail thee, brother? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And who is he that I should say him nay? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And who the slain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And who will carry that? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And who will marry you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And who would dare reject his proffered good? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And who, by Heaven, are they? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And wilt thou gather the appointed wood? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And wilt thou honour such a pestilent corse? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And wilt thou sever her from thine own son? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And wilt thou then Sail to befriend them, pressing me in aid? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And wouldst thou have us gentle to such friends? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | And yet What am I asking? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Another gave me, then? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Antigone, child of the old blind sire, What land is here, what people? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Are my woes lessening? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Are none Mourning for loss of fathers but yourself? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Are they set forth To please the Atridae, Phoenix and the rest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Are ye come to add Some monster evil to my mountainous woe? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Are ye the men to tell me where to find The mansion of the sovereign Oedipus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art not ashamed To look on him that sued to thee for shelter? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art not more tender of the life thou hast? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art silent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou Orestes? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou he indeed, That didst preserve Orestes and myself From many sorrows? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou he? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou mad, unhappy one, to laugh Over thine own calamity and mine? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou silent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou then so resolved, O brother mine? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou to hear it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou to probe the seat of mine annoy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Art thou, too, wroth with the all- pestilent sons Of Atreus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | As fearing what reverse Prophetically told? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | At home, afield, or on some foreign soil? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Because you missed me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Both may be equal yonder; who can tell? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But I fain would learn What wrong is that you speak of? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But I would first Learn from thee who of men hath sent thee forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But for our errand to- day Behoves thee, master, to say Where is the hearth of his home; Or where even now doth he roam? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But grant thy speech were sooth, and all were done In aid of Menelaüs; for this cause Hadst thou the right to slay him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But have my miseries a measure? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But how Can this be lawful? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But how shall I find matters there within? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But how, if they should save thee afterward? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But how? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But now to hear of thee, who more distressed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But of mortals here That soothsayers are more inspired than I What certain proof is given? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But resolve me this: Hast dyed thy falchion deep in Argive blood? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But tell Where is the pain- worn wight himself abroad? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But tell me first what height Had Laius, and what grace of manly prime? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But tell me what request Or what intelligence thou bring''st with thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But the tale? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But they, where are they? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But what can I herein Avail to do or undo? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But what more fatal than the lapse of rule? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But where did Laius meet this violent end? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But where is Aias to receive my word? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But where is Teucer? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But wherefore ask? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But wherefore on the flock this violent raid? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But who can hide evil that courts the day? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But who could bear to see thee in this mind? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But who that hears the deep oracular sound Of his dark words, will dare to follow thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But who that is a woman could endure To dwell with her, both married to one man? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But why come hither? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But why desire it so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But why renew thy rage? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But why these words? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | But, I may presume, Ye held an inquisition for the dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | By heaven I pray thee, did my father do this thing, Or was''t my mother? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | By illness coming o''er him, or by guile? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | By what certain sign? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | By whom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Came he near them? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Came this device from Creon or thyself? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can aught be still more hateful to be seen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can he be brought again immediately? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can hour outlasting hour make less or more Of death? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can it be poor Electra? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can it be so, my son, that thou art brought By mad distemperature against thy sire, On hearing of the irrevocable doom Passed on thy promised bride? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can it be well To pour forgetfulness upon the dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can it be, the offence of my disease Hath moved thee not to take me now on board? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can the eye so far deceive? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can this be famed Electra I behold? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can this be possible? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can this be truth I utter? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can ye behold this done And tamely hide your all- avenging fire? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Can you describe him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Canst thou not Hear, and refuse to do what thou mislikest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Canst thou not be still? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Child, art thou here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Child, hast thou heard what holy oracles He left with me, touching that very land? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Child, what shall I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Child, wherefore art thou come? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Clear of this mischief, mean''st thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Come, tell it o''er again,--said you ye brought My brother bound to aid you with his power? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Corinthian friend, I first appeal to you: Was''t he you spake of? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Could human thought have prophesied My name would thus give echo to mine ill? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Could this be ventured by a woman''s hand? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dark instrument Of ever- hateful guile!--What hast thou done? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dates his valour from to day? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Daughter Antigone, what is it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Daughter, what is coming? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Daughter, what must I think, or do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Daunted by what fear Stayed ye me sacrificing to the God[2] Who guards this deme Colonos? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dead, or at rest in sleep? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dear friends, kind women of true Argive breed, Say, who can timely counsel give Or word of comfort suited to my need? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dear friends, what will ye do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dear is that shore to me, dear is thy father O ancient Lycomedes''foster- child, Whence cam''st thou hither? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dear lady, by the Gods, Who is the stranger? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dear only saviour of our father''s house, How earnest thou hither? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dear son, whose voice disturbs us? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Derived from Labdacus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Did I not tell thee so, long since? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Did I not tell you this would come? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Did fear of this make thee so long an exile? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Did my sons hear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Did she give it thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Did ye not hear it, friends? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Did you not on oath Proclaim your captive for your master''s bride? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Did you not say That she, on whom you look with ignorant eye, Was Iolè, the daughter of the King, Committed to your charge? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Didst thou, then, recklessly aspire To brave kings''laws, and now art brought In madness of transgression caught? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Do I hear Odysseus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Do I see thee with the marvellous bow? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Do I talk idly, or is this the truth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dost hear, Woe- burdened wanderer? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dost not perceive? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dost thou confess to have done this, or deny it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dost thou find no comfort in my news? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dost thou inquire of him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Dost thou see? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Doth he yet live? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Doth the mind smart withal, or only the ear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Doth this delight them, or how went the talk? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Doth this not argue an insensate sire? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Ended he with peace divine? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Even here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Farther? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Fate- wearied Oedipus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Fate-- not thou-- hath sent My sire and mother to the home of death What wealth have I to comfort me for thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Fear''st thou not the Achaeans in this act? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Feel you not the justice of my speech? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Find ye no merit there? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | First consider one thing well: Who would choose rule accompanied with fear Before safe slumbers with an equal sway? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | First of thy brother I beseech thee tell, How deem''st thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Following what service? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For if at home I foster rebels, how much more abroad? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For some one,--but first tell me, whispering low Whate''er thou speakest,--who is this I see? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For tell me, or be patient till I show, What should I gain by ceasing this my moan? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For what end, daughter? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For what transgression of Heaven''s ordinance? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For when the eyes have looked their last How should sore labour vex again? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For wherefore should the Centaur, for what end, Show kindness to the cause for whom he died? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For whither wandering shall we find Hard livelihood, by land or over sea? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For who Can make the accomplished fact as things undone? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For whom could he himself be sailing forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | For whom to spend those gifts? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Friendly, to hand me over to my foes? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | From both? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | From what didst thou release me or relieve? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | From whom hast thou heard this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Gain for the sons of Atreus, or for me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Gave you this man the child of whom he asks you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Had he scant following, or, as princes use, Full numbers of a well- appointed train? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Had he some cause for fear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Had not he, Menelaüs, children twain, begotten of her Whom to reclaim that army sailed to Troy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hadst thou a share in that adventurous toil? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hadst thou the face To bring thy boldness near my palace- roof, Proved as thou art to have contrived my death And laid thy robber hands upon my state? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hast caught my drift? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hast not even heard my name, Nor echoing rumour of my ruinous woe? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hast thou come, daughter? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hast thou had dealings with him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hast thou let him go? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hast thou my child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hast thou my sister for thine honoured queen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hast thou thy wits, and knowest thou what thou sayest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hath Phoebus so pronounced my destiny? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hath Trachis a magician of such might? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hath he borne that? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hath it not before oppressed thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hath mortal head Conceived a wickedness so bold? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hath thy trouble come? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Have Atreus''sons felt thy victorious might? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Have I not set my foot as firm and far? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Have my arms caught thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Have none of her companions breathed her name? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Have they a lord, or sways the people''s voice? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Have they given thee cause to grieve? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Have we not Teucer, Skilled in this mystery? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Have you no shame, to stir up private broils In such a time as this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hear ye his words? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hear ye not Aias there, How sharp the cry that shrills from him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Here, or there? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | His loves ere now Were they not manifold? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | His own, or Creon''s? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hold fast continually, for who hath seen Zeus so forgetful of his own? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Hold, till thou first hast made me clearly know, Is Peleus''offspring dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How came it, when the minstrel- hound was here, This folk had no deliverance through thy word? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How came she in thy charge? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can I do it, when my mother''s death And thy sad state sprang solely from this girl? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can I gainsay what I see? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can I prove a rebel to his mind Who thus exhorts me with affectionate heart? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can he bear it still? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can he range, Whose limb drags heavy with an ancient harm? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can his providence forsake his son? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can it heal to burn thee on the pyre? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can my father be no more to me Than who is nothing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How can one like me Desire of thee to touch an outlawed man, On whose dark life all stains of sin and woe Are fixed indelibly? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How canst thou clear that sin? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How caused? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How could he live, whose life was thus consumed with moan? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How could her single thought Contrive the accomplishment of death on death? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How could that furrowing of thy father''s field Year after year continue unrevealed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How couldst thou bear Thus to put out thine eyes? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How didst thou set forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How do I know this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How dost thou know it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How durst thou then transgress the published law? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How else, when neither war, nor the wide sea Encountered him, but viewless realms enwrapt him, Wafted away to some mysterious doom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How else, when the end Of stormy sickness brings no cheering ray? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How first began the assault of misery? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How groundless, if I am my parents''child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How if a princess, offspring of their King? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How if thy thought be vain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How is it with you, brother? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How mean''st thou by that word? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How mean''st thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How must one look in speaking such a word? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How now, my son? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How righteous, to release what thou hast ta''en By my device? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How say you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How say you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How say you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How say''st thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How shall I dare to front my father''s eye? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How shall I speak the dreadful word? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How shall ye live when ye have heard? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How should I know him whom I ne''er Set eye on? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How should I leave this substance for that show? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How should this pain me, in pretence being dead, Really to save myself and win renown? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How should this plead for pardon? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How then can I desire to be a king, When masterdom is mine without annoy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How then should he escape me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How then should they require thee to go near, And yet dwell separate? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How then? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How to shield me, how to aid me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How was it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How was that? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How wert thou so long deceived? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How will he once endure to look on me, Denuded of the prize of high renown, Whose coronal stood sparkling on his brow? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How with the wise wilt thou care? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How, dear youth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How, if his eyes be not transformed or lost? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How, stranger? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How, then, friends, Can I be moderate, or feel the touch Of holy resignation? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How, then? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How, when the powers of will and thought are past, Should life be any more enthralled to pain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | How? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | I 1 When shall arise our exile''s latest sun? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | I bid thee show, What journey is Alcmena''s child pursuing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | I broke in with my word:''Aias, what now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | I call thee daily-- wilt thou never come? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | I may not look on high, Nor to the tribe of momentary men.-- Oh, whither, then, Should it avail to fly? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | I pray thee, speak''st thou thus to anger me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | I, who in this thy coming have beheld Thee dead and living? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | II 1 Who more acquainted with fierce misery, Assaulted by disasters manifest, Than thou in this thy day of agony? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | III 2 Doth not thy sense enlighten thee to see How recklessly Even now thou winnest undeservèd woe? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | If choice were given you, would you rather choose Hurting your friends, yourself to feel delight, Or share with them in one commingled pain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | If honour to such lives be given, What needs our choir to hymn the power of Heaven? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | If this you do Be noble, why must darkness hide the deed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | If thou fearest, Thou hast no cause-- for doubtfulness is pain, But to know all, what harm? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | If thou wert gone, what were my life to me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Ill boding harbinger of woe, what word Have thy lips uttered? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | In Greece, or in some barbarous country? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | In vain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Insolent, art thou here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Into what region are these wavering sounds Wafted on aimless wings? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is all forlorn? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is ancient Polybus not still in power? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is death thy destination for them both? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is he drawing nigh? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is he gone? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is he living, dost thou know? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is he too departed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is it by chance, or heard she of her son? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is it she or no? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is it some lightning- bolt new- fallen from Zeus, Or cloud- born hail that is come rattling down? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is it thy choice now to go home with me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is it thy voice? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is it true? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is it well? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is my prayer heard? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is not the city in the sovereign''s hand? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is not this terrible, Laërtes''son Should ever think to bring me with soft words And show me from his deck to all their host? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is not this violence? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is pain upon thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is that thy thought? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is that your counsel? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is that, now, clearly spoken, or no? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is the King coming? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is there no help but this abode must see The past and future ills of Pelops''race? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is there none to strike me With doubly sharpened blade a mortal blow? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is there something more? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is''t not Orestes''body that I bear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is''t not a silly scheme, To think to compass without troops of friends Power, that is only won by wealth and men? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is''t not proved? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is''t possible that thou shouldst grieve for me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is''t possible we have some kinsman here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Is''t possible? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Jocasta, my dear queen, why didst thou send To bring me hither from our palace- hall? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Just, that my murderer have a peaceful end? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Kind friend, first tell me what I first would know-- Shall I receive my Heracles alive? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Kind voice of Heaven, soft- breathing from the height I 1 Of Pytho''s opulent home to Thebè bright, What wilt thou bring to day? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Know I not things in Thebes Better than thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Know ye of one Begotten of Laius? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Know ye what thing ye ask? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Know''st not into whose hands thou gav''st me once? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Know''st thou not Thy silence argues thine accuser''s plea? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Know''st thou on what terms I yield it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Know''st thou''tis of thy sovereign thou speak''st this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Know''st thou, is this of whom he speaks the same? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | LEADER OF CHORUS What portent from the Gods is here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Lady, why tarriest thou I 2 To lead thy husband in? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Learn what? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Lest from your parents you receive a stain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Lichas, tell, Who is the stranger- nymph? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Look, O my lord, to thy path, Either to go or to stay How is my thought to proceed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Lords of Colonos, will ye suffer it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Madly it sounds-- Or springs it of deep grief For proofs of madness harrowing to his eye? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Makes he towards us? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Mariners, Must ye, too, leave me thus disconsolate? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Mark ye the brave and bold, II 1 Whom none could turn of old, When once he set his face to the fierce fight? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | May I know? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | May I sit? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | May I then speak true counsel to my friend, And pull with thee in policy as of yore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | May it be told, or must no stranger know? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | May not men Repent and change? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | May not persuasion fetch him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | May this clear evidence be mine to see? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | May we not know the reasons of your will? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Me miserable, which way shall I turn, Which look upon? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Mean''st thou from those same urns whereof thou speakest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Mean''st thou in this the fortune of thy sons Or mine? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Mean''st thou that prime misfortune of thy birth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Mean''st thou this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Mean''st thou to Troy, and to the hateful sons Of Atreus, me, with this distressful limb? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Meanwhile he needs some comfort and some guide, For such a load of misery who can bear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Methinks thou knowest too, for thou hast seen, My kind reception of the stranger- maid? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Methought I heard thee say, King Laius Was at a cross- road overpowered and slain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Mistress, wilt thou go yonder and make known, That certain Phocians on Aegisthus wait? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Most hostile to her of all souls that are? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Moved by an oracle, or from some vow? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Moves he? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must I be taught impiety from thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must I endure such words from him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must I lose thy voice? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must I not even sacrifice in peace From your harsh clamour, when you''ve had your say? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must I not fear my mother''s marriage- bed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must I still follow as thou thinkest good? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must double vileness then be mine Both shameful silence and most shameful speech? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must not the King be told of what will come? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must the same syllables be thrice thrown forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Must we endure detraction from a slave? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | My daughter, why these tears? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | My daughters, Have ye both heard our friends who inhabit here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | My daughters, are ye there? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | My heart hangs on thy word with trembling awe: What new giv''n law, Or what returning in Time''s circling round Wilt thou unfold? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | My son, are ye now setting forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | My son, what fairest gale hath wafted thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | My son, what saidst thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Next inform us of Laërtes''son; How stands his fortune? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | No more? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | No more? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | No right to mourn my brother who is gone? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Not dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Not know? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Not know? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Nought else beneath the roof? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Now if that stranger Had aught in common with king Laius, What wretch on earth was e''er so lost as I? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Now, canst thou tell me where we have set our feet? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Now, dost thou know on Oeta''s topmost height The crag of Zeus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Now, what remains? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O Athens''sovereign lord, what hast thou said? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O Father, who are these? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O Lemnian earth and thou almighty flame, Hephaestos''workmanship, shall this be borne, That he by force must drag me from your care? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O charnel gulf I 2 Of death on death, not to be done away, Why harrowest thou my soul? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O my dread lord, therein do I offend? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O poor torn limb, what shall I do with thee Through all my days to be? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O shameful plea? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O ye his daughters, one with me in blood, Say, will not ye endeavour to unlock The stern lips of our unrelenting sire? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | O, foot, torn helpless thing, What wilt thou do to me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | OLD M. Kind dames and damsels, may I clearly know If these be King Aegisthus''palace- halls? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | OLD M. Lady, why hath my speech disheartened thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | OLD M. May I guess further that in yonder dame I see his queen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Odysseus''voice? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Oedipus, wherefore is Jocasta gone, Driven madly by wild grief? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Of Laius once the sovereign of this land? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Of what country or what race Shall I pronounce ye? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Of what wild enterprise? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Of whom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Of whom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Oh where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Oh, am I thus dishonoured of the dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Oh, how shall we commend Such dealings, how defend them? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Oh, where, then, lies the stern Aias, of saddest name, whose purpose none might turn? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | On whose behalf Slew he my child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Only let me hear thy will, Is''t constant to remain here and endure, Or to make voyage with us? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or beguiled she one sweet hour With Apollo in her bower, Who loves to trace the field untrod by man? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or better, where he may himself be found? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or did the Bacchic god, Who makes the top of Helicon to nod, Take thee for a foundling care From his playmates that are there? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or doth some memory haunt you of the deeds I did before you, and went on to do Worse horrors here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or hath he left the palace? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or how? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or is my voice as vain Now, as you thought it when you planned this thing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or is the battle still to be? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or is thy love Thy father''s, be his actions what they may? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or peers Fate through the gloom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or shall kindness fade? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or stood his valour unaccompanied In all this host? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or terrible, but gainful? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or was the God- abandoned father''s heart Tender toward them and cruel to my child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or was the ruler of Cyllene''s height The author of thy light? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or where for fathers, than their children''s fame? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or wouldst thou tempt me further? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Or, hast thou seen them honouring villany? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Our land''s chivalry Are valiant, valiant every warrior son Of Theseus.--On they run? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Own sister of my blood, one life with me, Ismenè, have the tidings caught thine ear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Polybus in his grave? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Return? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Saidst thou a slaughtered queen in yonder hall Lay in her blood, crowning the pile of ruin? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Sailed he not forth of his own sovereign will? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say then what cruel workman forged the gifts, But Fury this sharp sword, Hell that bright band? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say then, shall Theban dust o''ershadow me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say what? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say wherefore dost thou crave with such desire The clearness of an undistracted mind? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, can the mind be noble, where the stream Of gratitude is withered from the spring? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, dames and damsels, have we heard aright, And speed we to the goal of our desire? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, dost thou bear my bidding full in mind? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, for what cause, after so long a time, Can Atreus''sons have turned their thoughts on him, Whom long they had cast forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, for what end? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, hath not Heaven decreed to execute On thee and me, while yet we are alive, All the evil Oedipus bequeathed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, is Aegisthus near while thus you speak? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, is it well? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, maidens, how must I proceed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, must I tell it with these standing by, Or go within? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, must we call them back in presence here, Or would''st thou tell thy news to these and me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Say, was she clasped by mountain roving Pan? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Seest thou not? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall I add more, to aggravate thy wrath? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall I go, then, and find out The name of the spot? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall I mourn Him first, or wait till I have heard thy tale? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall I raise the dead again to life? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall I raise thee on mine arm? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall I, across the Aegean sailing home, Leave these Atridae and their fleet forlorn? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall men have joy, And not remember? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall other men prescribe my government? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall our age, forsooth, Be taught discretion by a peevish boy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall we not sail when this south- western wind Hath fallen, that now is adverse to our course? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Shall we stay, And list again the lamentable sound? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Single or child- bearing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Slave- born, or rightly of the royal line? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Son of Menoeceus, brother of my queen, What answer from Apollo dost thou bring? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Sore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Speak you plain sooth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Speak, aged friend, whose look proclaims thee meet To be their spokesman-- What desire, what fear Hath brought you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Speak, any one of you in presence here, Can you make known the swain he tells us of, In town or country having met with him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Speaks he from hearsay, or as one who knows? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Stay; whither art bound? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Strange in the stranger land, I 1 What shall I speak? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Stranger, dost thou perceive? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Strive they? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Such, mother, is the crime thou hast devised And done against our sire, wherefore let Right And Vengeance punish thee!--May I pray so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Sure thou wast not with us, when at first We launched our vessels on the Troyward way? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Tell me the great cause Why thou inveighest against them with such heat? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Tell me this; Didst thou, or not, urge me to send and bring The reverend- seeming prophet? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Tell me, I pray, what was become of him, Patroclus, whom thy father loved so well? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Tell me, my daughter, is the man away? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Tell me, what hope is mine of daily food, Who will be careful for my good? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Tell us, how ended she her life in blood? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | That I may not escape thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | That this is well? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | The sacrificer stands prepared,--and when More keen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | The slayer, who? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then am not I the spoiler, as ye said? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then at that season did he mention me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then how could I endure the light of heaven? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then how not others, like to me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then if the king shall hear this from another, How shalt thou''scape for''t? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then is not laughter sweetest o''er a foe? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then is the land inhabited of men? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then seest thou not What meed of honour, if thou dost my will, Thou shalt apportion to thyself and me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then seest thou not how true unto their aim Our father''s prophecies of mutual death Against you both are sped? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then shall I advance Before the Trojan battlements, and there In single conflict doing valiantly Last die upon their spears? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then tell me, who is she thou brought''st with thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then why doth he not come, but still delay? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then you require this with an absolute will? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Then, am not I third- partner with you twain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | They force me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Think you I will yield? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Think you he will consider the blind man, And come in person here to visit him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Think you that you bear In those cold gifts atonement for her guilt? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Think you the wretch in heartfelt agony Weeps inconsolably her perished son? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Think you to triumph in offending still? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Think, O my lord, of thy path, Secretly look forth afar, What wilt thou do for thy need? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thou art so resolved? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thou bidst me then let bury this dead man? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thou didst what deed that misbecame thy life? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thou dost not mean thy gift to Heracles? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thou hast full cognizance How things within the palace are preserved? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thou knowest the captive maid thou leddest home? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thou wilt not answer him about the child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Through what dark traffic is the mariner Betraying me with whispering in thine ear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thy dwelling with us, then, is our great gain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thy father? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thy mistress, sayest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thy mother''s bed, Say, didst thou fill? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thy murderer? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Thy potent cause for spending so much breath? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Till what term wilt thou remain Inactive? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To bring me back with reasons or perforce? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To bury him, when all have been forbidden? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To expire On sharp- cut dragging thongs,''Midst wildly trampling throngs Of swiftly racing hoofs, like him, Poor hapless one? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To her and me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To lie? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To thrust me from the land? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To what end? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To what end? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To whom beyond thyself and me belongs Such consecration? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | To whom more worthy should I tell my grief? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Treason or dulness then? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Unhappy man, will not even Time bring forth One spark of wisdom to redeem thine age? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Unhappy that ye are, why have ye reared Your wordy rancour''mid the city''s harms? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Unto what doom doth my Fate drive me now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Vanished in ruin by a dire defeat? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Voices of prophecy, where are ye now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was Death then so enamoured of my seed, That he must feast thereon and let theirs live? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was all that love unto a foundling shown? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was it so dark? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was not Aias he? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was not Eteocles thy brother too? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was not he the author of my life? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was she unknown, as he that brought her sware? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was this planned against the Argives, then? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was''t for the Argive host? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was''t then before that city he was kept Those endless ages of uncounted time? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Was''t your own, or from another''s hand? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wast thou Laius''slave? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Well, and what follows to complete the rite? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Well, bring it forth.--What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Well, dost remember having given me then A child, that I might nurture him for mine? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Well, for thy sake I''d grant a greater boon; Then why not this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Well, have ye found? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Well, since''tis so, how can I help thee now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Well, sirs? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Were they not there To take this journey for their father''s good? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What Power impelled thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What Theban gave it, from what home in Thebes? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What aid of God or mortal can I find? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What ails thee now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What ails thee, Dêanira, Oeneus''child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What are the appointed forms? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What are these tokens, aged monarch, say? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What are they? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What are thy purposes against me, Zeus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What art thou doing, knave? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What augur ye from this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What benefit Comes to thee from o''erturning thine own land? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What bid you then that I have power to do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What blow is harder than to call me false? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What boon dost thou desire so earnestly? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What boon dost thou profess to have brought with thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What boon, my children, are ye bent to obtain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What burden through the darkness fell Where still at eventide''twas well? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What call so nearly times with mine approach? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What can I do for thee now, even now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What can have roused him to a work so wild? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What can it profit thee to vex me so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What can life profit me without my sister? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What can there be that we have not on board? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What canst thou mean? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What canst thou mean? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What cares oppress thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What cause Having appeared, will bring this doom to pass? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What cause hast thou Thus to arrest my going? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What cause have they to laugh? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What chance shall win men''s marvel? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What change is here, my son? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What change will never- terminable Time Not heave to light, what hide not from the day? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What charge or occupation was thy care? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What charge then wouldst thou further lay on us? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What citizen or stranger told thee this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What converse keeps thee now beyond the gates, Dear sister? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What could I see, whom hear With gladness, whom delight in any more? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What countryman, and wherefore suppliant there? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What countrymen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What crave ye, sirs? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What dark speech Hast thou contrived? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What deed of his could harm thy sovereign head? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What destiny, dear girl, Awaits us both, bereaved and fatherless? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What do I hear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What do I hear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What do I hear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What dost thou bid me do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What dost thou bid me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What dost thou forbid, old sir? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What dost thou mean? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What dost thou, stranger? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What dost thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What eager thought attends his presence here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What else were natural? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What evil is not here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What evil would thy words disclose? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What far land Holds me in pain that ceaseth not? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What fault is there in reverencing my power? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What fear you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What fine advantage wouldst thou first achieve? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What followed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What fool is he That counts one day, or two, or more to come? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What friend hath moved her? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What friend will carry thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What further use of thee, When we have ta''en these arms? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What fury of wild thought Came o''er thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What gain I through his coming back to Troy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What good am I, thus lying at their gate? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What guile is here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hand to heal, what voice to charm, Can e''er dispel this hideous harm? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What harm can come of hearkening? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hast thou done, that thou canst threaten thus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hast thou new to add? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hath befallen, my daughter? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hath he now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hath so suddenly arisen, that thus Thou mak''st ado and groanest o''er thyself? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What have I reaped hereof? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What help? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hidden lore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hidden woe have I unwarily Taken beneath my roof? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hide From a heart suspicious of ill? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What high law Ordaining? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What holy name will please them, if I pray? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What hope is yet Left standing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What in her life should make your heart afraid? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What intelligence Intends he for our private conference, That he hath sent his herald to us all, Gathering the elders with a general call? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is befallen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is he you mean? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is hopeless? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is it, O son of Aegeus? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is our cause for delay? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is that thou fearest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is the fault, and how to be redressed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is the matter? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is the present scene? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is the race thou spurnest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is thine intent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is thy desire? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is thy new intent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is wrongly done? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What is''t? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What joy have I in life when thou art gone? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What kept Odysseus back, if this be so, From going himself? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What know I? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What know I? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What knowest thou of our state? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What land of refuge? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What lasteth in the world? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What led your travelling footstep to that ground? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What lends him such assurance of defence? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What man hath been so daring in revolt? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What man of all the host hath caught thine eye? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What man than Aias was more provident, Or who for timeliest action more approved? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What man that lives hath more of happiness Than to seem blest, and, seeming, fade in night? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What matter who? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What mean''st thou, aged sir, by what thou sayest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What mean''st thou, boy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What mean''st thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What means he? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What means this prayer? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What means thy question? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What men are ye that to this desert shore, Harbourless, uninhabited, are come On shipboard? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What message have I sent beseeching, But baffled flies back idly home? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What message must I carry to my lord? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What mission sped thee forth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What mission? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What more calamitous stroke of Destiny Awaits me still? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What more dost thou require of me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What more of woe, Or what more woeful, sounds anew from thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What morn shall see thy face? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What must I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What must I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What must I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What must I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What must I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What must I think? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What native country, shall we learn, is thine? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What need hath brought thee to the shore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What new affliction heaped on sovereignty Com''st thou to tell? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What new command are we to learn Crossing thy former mind? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What new plan is rising in thy mind? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What new thing is befallen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What news can move us thus two ways at once? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What noise again is troubling my poor cave? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What now is thine intent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What oracle hath been declared, my child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What pain is there in hearing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What pain o''ercomes thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What passing touch Of conscience moved them, or what stroke from Heaven, Whose wrath requites all wicked deeds of men? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What plea For my defence will hold? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What point is lacking for thine errand''s speed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What power will give thee refuge for such guilt? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What profit lives in fame and fair renown By unsubstantial rumour idly spread? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What punishment Wilt thou accept, if thou art found to be Faithless to her? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What quarrel, sirs? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What rage, what madness, clutched The mischief- working brand? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What region holds him now,''Mong winding channels of the deep, Or Asian plains, or rugged Western steep? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What robber would have ventured such a deed, If unsolicited with bribes from hence? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What rumour? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What saith he, boy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What saith he? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What saith the oracle? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What say''st thou, daughter? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What say''st? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What say''st? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What saying is this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What seek ye more to know? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall I do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall I say, what think, my father? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall I say? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall I speak, or which way turn The desperate word? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall we do, my lord? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What shall we do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What should I utter, O my child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What sight hath fired thee with this quenchless glow? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What sign dost thou perceive That proves thine end so near? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What sign hath so engrossed thine eye, poor girl? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What soil? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What sorrow beyond sorrows hath chief place? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What source Of bitterness''twixt us and Thebes can rise? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What sudden change is this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What then Further engrosseth thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What then is thy command? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What then possessed thee to give up the child To this old man? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What then restrained his eager hand from murder? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What thing hath passed to make it known to thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What thought O''ermaster''d thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What thought of justice should be mine for her, Who at her age can so insult a mother? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What torment wilt thou wreak on him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What troubles thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What urgent cause requires his presence? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What valour is''t to slay the slain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What was her death, poor victim of dire woe? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What was that thing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What was the fatal cause? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What was the man thou noisest here so proudly? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What was the sudden end? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What was thy fraud in fetching me this robe?'' |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What were they, mother, for I never knew? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What were they? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What were thy tidings? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wickedness is this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wild aim Beckons thee forth in arming this design Whereto thou wouldst demand my ministry? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What will ye do, then? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wilt thou do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wilt thou do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wilt thou make of me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wilt thou say? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wilt thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What witness of such words will bear thee out? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What word hath passed thy lips? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What word is fallen from thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What word is spoken, mother? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What word of mine agreed not with the scene? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What words are these? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What words have passed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What would you I should yield unto your prayer? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What would you then? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wouldst thou ask me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wouldst thou do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wouldst thou do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wouldst thou have? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wouldst thou when the camp is hushed in sleep?'' |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What wound Can be more deadly than a harmful friend? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What''s this but adding cowardice to evil? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What, stranger? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What, then, can be thy grief? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What, wilt thou threaten, too, thou audacious boy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | What? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | When comes the revelation of thine aid? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | When death is certain, what do men in woe Gain from a little time? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | When hath not goodness blessed the giver of good? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | When majesty was fallen, what misery Could hinder you from searching out the truth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | When shall the tale of wandering years be done? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | When shrunk to nothing, am I indeed a man? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whence came the truth to thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whence couldst thou hear of succour for my woes, That close in darkness without hope of dawn? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whence learned he this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whence? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whence? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where Could there be found confession more depraved, Even though the cause were righteous? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where again Shall gladness heal my pain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where am I? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where am I? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where and when? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where are the proofs of thy prophetic power? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where are the strangers then? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where are those maidens and their escort? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where are ye, O my children? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where are ye, men, whom over Hellas wide This arm hath freed, and o''er the ocean- tide, And through rough brakes, from every monstrous thing? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where are ye, where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where art thou to lift me and hold me aright? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where art thou told his seat is fixed, my son? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where art thou, O my child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where art thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where can be found a richer ornament For children, than their father''s high renown? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where did the force of woe O''erturn thy reason? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where didst thou find her? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where do ye behold The tyrant? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where is he rumoured, then, alive or dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where is that man? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where is the King? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where is thy fear of Heaven? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where is thy voucher of command o''er him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where mean''st thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where must I go? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where must one look? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where of thy right o''er those that followed him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where shall now be read The fading record of this ancient guilt? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where shall we find refuge? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where upon earth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where was the scene of this unhappy blow? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where''s Teucer? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where, amongst whom of mortals, can I go, That stood not near thee in thy troublous hour? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where-- where art thou, boy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whereby then can it furnish joy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whereby? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore I bid thee declare, What must I do for thy need? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore again, when sorrow''s cruel storm Was just abating, break ye my repose? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore should I stint their flow? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore speak''st thou so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore that shouting? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore, kind sir? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore, my father? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wherefore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whereof? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Which of us twain, believ''st thou, in this talk Hath more profoundly sinned against thy peace? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Which of you know where are the Phocian men Who brought the news I hear, Orestes''life Hath suffered shipwreck in a chariot- race? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Which path have I not tried? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Which way? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whither am I borne? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whither am I fallen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whither now turns thy strain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whither shall I flee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whither? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who are the men into whose midmost toils All hapless I am fallen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who art thou, of all damsels most distressed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who can be mild and gentle, when thou speakest Such words to mock this people? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who can gain profit from the blind? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who can he be that kneels for such a boon? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who can win safety through such help as mine? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who comes here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who cries there from the covert of the grove? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who does not gain by death, That lives, as I do, amid boundless woe? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who durst declare it[3], that Tirésias spake False prophecies, set on to this by me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who gave her birth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who gave me being? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who hath cared for this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who hath given thine ear The word that so hath wrought on thy belief? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who hath sent thee to our hall? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who hath told That I have wrought a deed so full of woe? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who in heaven Hath leapt against thy hapless life With boundings out of measure fierce and huge? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who in such courses shall defend his soul From storms of thundrous wrath that o''er him roll? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who is it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who is so fond, to be in love with death? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who is that aged wight? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who is the man, and what his errand here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who is the wrong- doer, say, and what the deed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who is this, brother? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who is''t to whom thou speakest? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who may avoid thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who professes here to love him? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who shall seize on me Without the will of my protectors here? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who stayed that onset? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who that had a noble heart And saw her father''s cause, as I have done, By day and night more outraged, could refrain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who then can have decked With all those ceremonies our father''s tomb? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who then that plots against a life so strong Shall quit him of the danger without harm? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who then will tell me, who? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who thus can live on air, Tasting no gift of earth that breathing mortals share? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who to- day Shall dole to Oedipus, the wandering exile, Their meagre gifts? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who told thee this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who was he That brought you this dire message, O my queen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who was her sire? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who was their sire? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who was thy father''s father? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who will not give Honour at festivals, and in the throng Of popular resort, to these in chief, For their high courage and their bold emprise?'' |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who will not love the pair And do them reverence? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who, dear sovereign, gave thee birth, 2 Of the long lived nymphs of earth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Who, not possessed with furies, could choose this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whom but Odysseus canst thou mean by this? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whom dost thou mean? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whom fear you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whom hath the voice from Delphi''s rocky throne I 1 Loudly declared to have done Horror unnameable with murdering hand? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whom have the Heavens so followed with their hate? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whose being overshadows thee with fear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whose hand employed he for the deed of blood? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whose hands? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whose murder doth Apollo thus reveal? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whose power compels thee to this sufferance? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whose skill save thine, Monarch Divine? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Whose will shall hinder me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why Not slay me then and there? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why broods thy mind upon such thoughts, my king? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why did I leave thy sacred dew And loose my vessels from thy shore, To join the hateful Danaän crew And lend them succour? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why didst thou receive me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why do ye summon me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why dost thou bring a mind so full of gloom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why dost thou groan aloud, And cry to Heaven? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why dost thou stand aghast, Voiceless, and thus astonied in thine air? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why doubt it? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why drive you me within? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why fondle vainly the fair- sounding name Of mother, when her acts are all unmotherly? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why hast thou robbed My bow of bringing down mine enemy? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why hast thou set thy heart on unavailing grief? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why must it keep This breathing form from sinking to the shades? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why not destroy me out of hand? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why not for my own line? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why pay So scanty heed to her who fights for thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why should I fear Thy frown? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why should I fear, when I see certain gain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why should man fear, seeing his course is ruled By fortune, and he nothing can foreknow? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why should''st thou demand? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why silent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why so intent on this assurance, sire? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why so strange? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why sounds again from hence your joint appeal, Wherein the stranger''s voice is loudly heard? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why speak''st thou so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why starest thou at the sky? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why steal''st thou forth in silence? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why such a question? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why then delay? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why then did he declare me for his son? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why this remonstrance? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why through deceit? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why thus delay our going? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why thus uncalled for salliest thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why vex thy heart with what is over and done? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why was he dumb, your prophet, in that day? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why will not men the like perfection prove? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why wilt thou ruin me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why, hath not Creon, in the burial- rite, Of our two brethren honoured one, and wrought On one foul wrong? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why, is not she so tainted? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Why? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will Telamon, my sire and thine, receive me With radiant countenance and favouring brow Returning without thee? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will he come, or still delay? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will he find me alive, My daughters, and with reason undisturbed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will he ne''er Come from the chase, but leave me to my doom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will shame withhold her from the wildest deed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will some one go and bring the herdman hither? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will some one of your people bring him hither? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will ye forsake me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will ye not pity me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will ye then ask him for a wretch like me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will you be certified your fears are groundless? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will you not drive the offender from your land? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Will you not hear me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt not speak? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt them be counselled? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou join hand with mine to lift the dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou lay thy hold On me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou ne''er be ruled? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou not answer, but with shame dismiss me Voiceless, nor make known wherefore thou art wroth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou not learn after so long to cease From vain indulgence of a bootless rage? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou not listen? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou not tell me why thou art hurrying This backward journey with reverted speed? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou remain? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou say He slew my daughter for his brother''s sake? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou say Thus thou dost''venge thy daughter''s injury? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou share The danger and the labour? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou speak so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou still Speak all in riddles and dark sentences? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou thus fight against me on his side? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou yet hold That silent, hard, impenetrable mien? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wilt thou, too, vanish? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | With leaves or flocks of wool, or in what way? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | With what commission? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | With what contents Must this be filled? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | With whom could I exchange a word? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Won he to his goal? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wouldst thou aught more of me than merely death? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wouldst thou have all the speaking on thy side? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Wretched one, is she dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Yet more? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Yet tell me, doth he live, Old sir? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Yet where could I have found a fairer fame Than giving burial to my own true brother? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | You did not find me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | You think me likely to seek gain from you? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | Your purchase, or your child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | [_ Pointing to his eyes_ For why should I have sight, To whom nought now gave pleasure through the eye? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | _''A wounded spirit who can bear? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | against the word of Creon? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | am I not now Lame and of evil smell? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | and am I labouring to an end? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | and must I be debarred thy fate? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | and what means his word? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | and where, oh where On Trojan earth, tell me, is this man''s child? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | and why not Hyllus first, Whom most it would beseem to show regard For tidings of his father''s happiness? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | and will you not be counselled? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | are you alone in grief? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | art thou hopeful from the fear I spake of? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | brother, who, when thou art come, Could find it meet to exchange Language for silence, as thou bidst me do? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | but how shall I escape Achaean anger? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | by main force, or by degrading shames? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | can check thy might? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | can it be that you are come to bring Clear proofs of the sad rumour we have heard? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | from this discoloured blade, Thy self- shown slayer? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | has that rascal knave Sworn to fetch me with reasons to their camp? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | how can I look to Heaven? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | how shall ye vaunt Before the gods drink- offering or the fat Of victims, if I sail among your crew? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | is there none so bold? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | is this he, whom I, of all the band, Found singly faithful in our father''s death? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | know you not your speech offends even now? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | know''st thou not that Heaven Hath ceased to be my debtor from to- day? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | knowest thou not Thou hast been taking living men for dead? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | must I give way? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | no provision for a dwelling- place? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | on whom Call to befriend me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | or do thine accents idly fall? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | or for what? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | or must I turn and go? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | say, wilt thou bide aloof? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | that deep groan? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | weep Before the tent? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | were they so? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | what canst thou so mislike in me? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | what dost thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | what is it, man? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | what is''t you would know? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | what means this universal doubt? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | what old evil will thy words disclose? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | what saidst thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | what shall I say? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | when I have seen it with mine eyes? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | where art thou? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | where is wisdom? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | where? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | wherefore? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | which way? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | whither should I go and stay? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | who considereth? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | who? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | why go where thou wilt find thy bane? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | why this curse upon thyself? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | why this talk in the open day? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | wilt thou kill thy son''s espousal too? |
sophocles-seven-2010 | woe is me, doubly unfortunate, Forlorn and destitute, whither henceforth For wretched comfort must we go? |
plato-republic-1334 | ''And do not the natures of men and women differ very much indeed?'' |
plato-republic-1334 | ''Lover of wisdom,''''lover of knowledge,''are titles which we may fitly apply to that part of the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | ''Sweet Sir,''we will say to him,''what think you of things esteemed noble and ignoble? |
plato-republic-1334 | ), having no reason in them, and yet to be set in authority over the highest matters? |
plato-republic-1334 | --How would you answer him? |
plato-republic-1334 | --What defence will you make for us, my good Sir, against any one who offers these objections? |
plato-republic-1334 | A right noble thought; but do you suppose that we shall refrain from asking you what is this highest knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | A state which is intermediate, and a sort of repose of the soul about either-- that is what you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | Adeimantus added: Has no one told you of the torch- race on horseback in honour of the goddess which will take place in the evening? |
plato-republic-1334 | After this manner the democrat was generated out of the oligarch? |
plato-republic-1334 | Again, as to the devastation of Hellenic territory or the burning of houses, what is to be the practice? |
plato-republic-1334 | Again, has he greater experience of the pleasures of honour, or the lover of honour of the pleasures of wisdom? |
plato-republic-1334 | Again, is not the passionate element wholly set on ruling and conquering and getting fame? |
plato-republic-1334 | Again, when pleasure ceases, that sort of rest or cessation will be painful? |
plato-republic-1334 | All of whom will call one another citizens? |
plato-republic-1334 | All that would arise out of his ignorance of the true upper and middle and lower regions? |
plato-republic-1334 | Also they are utterly unjust, if we were right in our notion of justice? |
plato-republic-1334 | Am I not right? |
plato-republic-1334 | Am I not right? |
plato-republic-1334 | Am I not right? |
plato-republic-1334 | Am I not right? |
plato-republic-1334 | Am I not right? |
plato-republic-1334 | And O my friend, I said, surely the gods are just? |
plato-republic-1334 | And a man will be most likely to care about that which he loves? |
plato-republic-1334 | And a narrative it remains both in the speeches which the poet recites from time to time and in the intermediate passages? |
plato-republic-1334 | And again, if he is forgetful and retains nothing of what he learns, will he not be an empty vessel? |
plato-republic-1334 | And agreeably to this mode of thinking and speaking, were we not saying that they will have their pleasures and pains in common? |
plato-republic-1334 | And all arithmetic and calculation have to do with number? |
plato-republic-1334 | And also of the mental ones; his soul is to be full of spirit? |
plato-republic-1334 | And also to be within and between them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And an art requiring as much attention as shoemaking? |
plato-republic-1334 | And another consideration has just occurred to me: You will remember that our young men are to be warrior athletes? |
plato-republic-1334 | And any difference which arises among them will be regarded by them as discord only-- a quarrel among friends, which is not to be called a war? |
plato-republic-1334 | And anything which is infected by any of these evils is made evil, and at last wholly dissolves and dies? |
plato-republic-1334 | And are enemies also to receive what we owe to them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And are suits decided on any other ground but that a man may neither take what is another''s, nor be deprived of what is his own? |
plato-republic-1334 | And are you going to run away before you have fairly taught or learned whether they are true or not? |
plato-republic-1334 | And are you stronger than all these? |
plato-republic-1334 | And as State is to State in virtue and happiness, so is man in relation to man? |
plato-republic-1334 | And as we are to have the best of guardians for our city, must they not be those who have most the character of guardians? |
plato-republic-1334 | And both pleasure and pain are motions of the soul, are they not? |
plato-republic-1334 | And both should be in harmony? |
plato-republic-1334 | And by contracts you mean partnerships? |
plato-republic-1334 | And can any one of those many things which are called by particular names be said to be this rather than not to be this? |
plato-republic-1334 | And can she or can she not fulfil her own ends when deprived of that excellence? |
plato-republic-1334 | And can that which does no evil be a cause of evil? |
plato-republic-1334 | And can the just by justice make men unjust, or speaking generally, can the good by virtue make them bad? |
plato-republic-1334 | And can there be anything better for the interests of the State than that the men and women of a State should be as good as possible? |
plato-republic-1334 | And can therefore neither be ignorance nor knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | And can you mention any pursuit of mankind in which the male sex has not all these gifts and qualities in a higher degree than the female? |
plato-republic-1334 | And democracy has her own good, of which the insatiable desire brings her to dissolution? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do I differ from you, he said, as to the importance of the enquiry? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do not good practices lead to virtue, and evil practices to vice? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do not the two styles, or the mixture of the two, comprehend all poetry, and every form of expression in words? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do the unjust appear to you to be wise and good? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do they not educate to perfection young and old, men and women alike, and fashion them after their own hearts? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do they not share? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do we know what we opine? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you also agree, I said, in describing the dialectician as one who attains a conception of the essence of each thing? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you breed from them all indifferently, or do you take care to breed from the best only? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you consider truth to be akin to proportion or to disproportion? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you imagine, I said, that I am such a madman as to try and cheat, Thrasymachus? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you not know, I said, that all mere opinions are bad, and the best of them blind? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you remember the word of caution which preceded the discussion of them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you suppose that I ask these questions with any design of injuring you in the argument? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you take the oldest or the youngest, or only those of ripe age? |
plato-republic-1334 | And do you wish to behold what is blind and crooked and base, when others will tell you of brightness and beauty? |
plato-republic-1334 | And does not the latter-- I mean the rebellious principle-- furnish a great variety of materials for imitation? |
plato-republic-1334 | And does not the same hold also of the ridiculous? |
plato-republic-1334 | And does not the same principle hold in the sciences? |
plato-republic-1334 | And does not tyranny spring from democracy in the same manner as democracy from oligarchy-- I mean, after a sort? |
plato-republic-1334 | And does the essence of the invariable partake of knowledge in the same degree as of essence? |
plato-republic-1334 | And dogs are deteriorated in the good qualities of dogs, and not of horses? |
plato-republic-1334 | And each art gives us a particular good and not merely a general one-- medicine, for example, gives us health; navigation, safety at sea, and so on? |
plato-republic-1334 | And each of them is such as his like is? |
plato-republic-1334 | And even if injustice be found in two only, will they not quarrel and fight, and become enemies to one another and to the just? |
plato-republic-1334 | And even to this are there not exceptions? |
plato-republic-1334 | And everything else on the style? |
plato-republic-1334 | And food and wisdom are the corresponding satisfactions of either? |
plato-republic-1334 | And from being a keeper of the law he is converted into a breaker of it? |
plato-republic-1334 | And good counsel is clearly a kind of knowledge, for not by ignorance, but by knowledge, do men counsel well? |
plato-republic-1334 | And has not the body itself less of truth and essence than the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And has not the eye an excellence? |
plato-republic-1334 | And has not the soul an excellence also? |
plato-republic-1334 | And he is good in as far as he is wise, and bad in as far as he is foolish? |
plato-republic-1334 | And he is the best guard of a camp who is best able to steal a march upon the enemy? |
plato-republic-1334 | And he is the only one who has wisdom as well as experience? |
plato-republic-1334 | And he is to be deemed courageous whose spirit retains in pleasure and in pain the commands of reason about what he ought or ought not to fear? |
plato-republic-1334 | And he who is most skilful in preventing or escaping from a disease is best able to create one? |
plato-republic-1334 | And he who is not on a voyage has no need of a pilot? |
plato-republic-1334 | And he who lives well is blessed and happy, and he who lives ill the reverse of happy? |
plato-republic-1334 | And his friends and fellow- citizens will want to use him as he gets older for their own purposes? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how am I to convince you, he said, if you are not already convinced by what I have just said; what more can I do for you? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how am I to do so? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how can one who is thus circumstanced ever become a philosopher? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how can we rightly answer that question? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how does the son come into being? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how is the error to be corrected? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how long is this stage of their lives to last? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how will they proceed? |
plato-republic-1334 | And how would he regard the attempt to gain an advantage over the unjust; would that be considered by him as just or unjust? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if care was not taken in the breeding, your dogs and birds would greatly deteriorate? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if merchandise is to be carried over the sea, skilful sailors will also be needed, and in considerable numbers? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if our youth are to do their work in life, must they not make these graces and harmonies their perpetual aim? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if that is true, what sort of general must he have been? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if the old man and woman fight for their own, what then, my friend? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if the world perceives that what we are saying about him is the truth, will they be angry with philosophy? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if there be any State in which rulers and subjects will be agreed as to the question who are to rule, that again will be our State? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if they are both known to them, one must be the friend and the other the enemy of the gods, as we admitted from the beginning? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if they are to be what we were describing, is there not another quality which they should also possess? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if they turn out to be two, is not each of them one and different? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if they were able to converse with one another, would they not suppose that they were naming what was actually before them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And if we only have a guardian who has this knowledge our State will be perfectly ordered? |
plato-republic-1334 | And ignorance and folly are inanitions of the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in like manner does the touch adequately perceive the qualities of thickness or thinness, of softness or hardness? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in oligarchical States, from the general spread of carelessness and extravagance, men of good family have often been reduced to beggary? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in our State what other name besides that of citizens do the people give the rulers? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in our opinion the guardians ought to have both these qualities? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in such a case what is one to say? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in that case they will be right in doing good to the evil and evil to the good? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in that interval there has now been discovered something which we call opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in the first place, he will honour studies which impress these qualities on his soul and will disregard others? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in the laying of bricks and stones is the just man a more useful or better partner than the builder? |
plato-republic-1334 | And in what sort of actions or with a view to what result is the just man most able to do harm to his enemy and good to his friend? |
plato-republic-1334 | And inasmuch as they are two, each of them is one? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is he likely to be brave who has no spirit, whether horse or dog or any other animal? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is he not truly good? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is justice dimmer in the individual, and is her form different, or is she the same which we found her to be in the State? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not a State larger than an individual? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not a similar method to be pursued about the virtues, which are also four in number? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not life to be reckoned among the ends of the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not that farthest from reason which is at the greatest distance from law and order? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not the love of learning the love of wisdom, which is philosophy? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not the unjust like the wise and good and the just unlike them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not their humanity to the condemned in some cases quite charming? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not this involuntary deprivation caused either by theft, or force, or enchantment? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is not this the reason why of old love has been called a tyrant? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is opinion also a faculty? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is our theory a worse theory because we are unable to prove the possibility of a city being ordered in the manner described? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is the art of war one of those arts in which she can or can not share? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is the city which is under a tyrant rich or poor? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is the satisfaction derived from that which has less or from that which has more existence the truer? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is there any greater or keener pleasure than that of sensual love? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is there any man in whom you will find more of this sort of misery than in the tyrannical man, who is in a fury of passions and desires? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is there anything more akin to wisdom than truth? |
plato-republic-1334 | And is this confined to the sight only, or does it extend to the hearing also, relating in fact to what we term poetry? |
plato-republic-1334 | And it has this particular quality because it has an object of a particular kind; and this is true of the other arts and sciences? |
plato-republic-1334 | And just actions cause justice, and unjust actions cause injustice? |
plato-republic-1334 | And literature may be either true or false? |
plato-republic-1334 | And living in this way we shall have much greater need of physicians than before? |
plato-republic-1334 | And luxury and softness are blamed, because they relax and weaken this same creature, and make a coward of him? |
plato-republic-1334 | And may not the many which are doubles be also halves?--doubles, that is, of one thing, and halves of another? |
plato-republic-1334 | And may we not rightly call such men treacherous? |
plato-republic-1334 | And may we not say of the philosopher that he is a lover, not of a part of wisdom only, but of the whole? |
plato-republic-1334 | And may we not say that the mind of the one who knows has knowledge, and that the mind of the other, who opines only, has opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | And may we not say the same of all things? |
plato-republic-1334 | And may we not say, Adeimantus, that the most gifted minds, when they are ill- educated, become pre- eminently bad? |
plato-republic-1334 | And men are blamed for pride and bad temper when the lion and serpent element in them disproportionately grows and gains strength? |
plato-republic-1334 | And might a man be thirsty, and yet unwilling to drink? |
plato-republic-1334 | And must not an animal be a lover of learning who determines what he likes and dislikes by the test of knowledge and ignorance? |
plato-republic-1334 | And must not such a State and such a man be always full of fear? |
plato-republic-1334 | And must not the like happen with the spirited or passionate element of the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And must not the soul be perplexed at this intimation which the sense gives of a hard which is also soft? |
plato-republic-1334 | And must not the tyrannical man be like the tyrannical State, and the democratical man like the democratical State; and the same of the others? |
plato-republic-1334 | And must not we swim and try to reach the shore: we will hope that Arion''s dolphin or some other miraculous help may save us? |
plato-republic-1334 | And narration may be either simple narration, or imitation, or a union of the two? |
plato-republic-1334 | And next, how does he live? |
plato-republic-1334 | And next, shall we enquire whether the kindred science also concerns us? |
plato-republic-1334 | And no good thing is hurtful? |
plato-republic-1334 | And not- being is not one thing but, properly speaking, nothing? |
plato-republic-1334 | And now tell me, I conjure you, has not imitation been shown by us to be concerned with that which is thrice removed from the truth? |
plato-republic-1334 | And now what is their manner of life, and what sort of a government have they? |
plato-republic-1334 | And now why do you not praise me? |
plato-republic-1334 | And now, Adeimantus, is our State matured and perfected? |
plato-republic-1334 | And of individuals who consort with the mob and seek to please them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And of the objects which are being carried in like manner they would only see the shadows? |
plato-republic-1334 | And of the pleasures of love, and all other pleasures, the same holds good? |
plato-republic-1334 | And of the unjust may not the opposite be supposed? |
plato-republic-1334 | And of truth in the same degree? |
plato-republic-1334 | And once more, the inharmonious and unseemly nature can only tend to disproportion? |
plato-republic-1334 | And one feature they will erase, and another they will put in, until they have made the ways of men, as far as possible, agreeable to the ways of God? |
plato-republic-1334 | And one woman has a turn for gymnastic and military exercises, and another is unwarlike and hates gymnastics? |
plato-republic-1334 | And one woman is a philosopher, and another is an enemy of philosophy; one has spirit, and another is without spirit? |
plato-republic-1334 | And opinion is to have an opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | And ought not the same natures to have the same pursuits? |
plato-republic-1334 | And our guardian is both warrior and philosopher? |
plato-republic-1334 | And reasoning is peculiarly his instrument? |
plato-republic-1334 | And shall I add,''whether seen or unseen by gods and men''? |
plato-republic-1334 | And shall we proceed to get rid of the weepings and wailings of famous men? |
plato-republic-1334 | And shall we receive into our State all the three styles, or one only of the two unmixed styles? |
plato-republic-1334 | And should an immortal being seriously think of this little space rather than of the whole? |
plato-republic-1334 | And should we not enquire what sort of knowledge has the power of effecting such a change? |
plato-republic-1334 | And so of all other things;--justice is useful when they are useless, and useless when they are useful? |
plato-republic-1334 | And so of the other senses; do they give perfect intimations of such matters? |
plato-republic-1334 | And so they will be drawn by a necessity of their natures to have intercourse with each other-- necessity is not too strong a word, I think? |
plato-republic-1334 | And so tyranny naturally arises out of democracy, and the most aggravated form of tyranny and slavery out of the most extreme form of liberty? |
plato-republic-1334 | And such a pilot and ruler will provide and prescribe for the interest of the sailor who is under him, and not for his own or the ruler''s interest? |
plato-republic-1334 | And suppose injustice abiding in a single person, would your wisdom say that she loses or that she retains her natural power? |
plato-republic-1334 | And suppose we make astronomy the third-- what do you say? |
plato-republic-1334 | And surely, he said, this occurs notably in the case of one; for we see the same thing to be both one and infinite in multitude? |
plato-republic-1334 | And that human virtue is justice? |
plato-republic-1334 | And that others should approve, of what we approve, is no miracle or impossibility? |
plato-republic-1334 | And that to which an end is appointed has also an excellence? |
plato-republic-1334 | And that which hurts not does no evil? |
plato-republic-1334 | And that which is not hurtful hurts not? |
plato-republic-1334 | And that which is opposed to them is one of the inferior principles of the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the State which is enslaved under a tyrant is utterly incapable of acting voluntarily? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the anticipations of future pleasures and pains are of a like nature? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the avaricious, I said, is the oligarchical youth? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the better part of the soul is likely to be that which trusts to measure and calculation? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the citizens being thus agreed among themselves, in which class will temperance be found-- in the rulers or in the subjects? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the country which was enough to support the original inhabitants will be too small now, and not enough? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the ear has an end and an excellence also? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the end or use of a horse or of anything would be that which could not be accomplished, or not so well accomplished, by any other thing? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the fairest is also the loveliest? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the forbidding principle is derived from reason, and that which bids and attracts proceeds from passion and disease? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the friend he regards and describes as one in whom he has an interest, and the other as a stranger in whom he has no interest? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the good is advantageous? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the government is the ruling power in each state? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the greater the interval which separates them from philosophy and reason, the more strange and illusive will be the pleasure? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the greatest degree of evil- doing to one''s own city would be termed by you injustice? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the harmonious soul is both temperate and courageous? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the higher the duties of the guardian, I said, the more time, and skill, and art, and application will be needed by him? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the individual will be acknowledged by us to be just in the same way in which the State is just? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the inharmonious is cowardly and boorish? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the insatiable desire of wealth and the neglect of all other things for the sake of money- getting was also the ruin of oligarchy? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the interest of any art is the perfection of it-- this and nothing else? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the just is the good? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the kinds of knowledge in a State are many and diverse? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the knowing is wise? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the laws which they make must be obeyed by their subjects,--and that is what you call justice? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the lover of honour-- what will be his opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the lustful and tyrannical desires are, as we saw, at the greatest distance? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the man who has the spirit of harmony will be most in love with the loveliest; but he will not love him who is of an inharmonious soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the melody and rhythm will depend upon the words? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the more detestable his actions are to the citizens the more satellites and the greater devotion in them will he require? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the much greater to the much less? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the new government which thus arises will be of a form intermediate between oligarchy and aristocracy? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the oligarch is third from the royal; since we count as one royal and aristocratical? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the painter too is, as I conceive, just such another-- a creator of appearances, is he not? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the persons whose property is taken from them are compelled to defend themselves before the people as they best can? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the pilot likewise, in the strict sense of the term, is a ruler of sailors and not a mere sailor? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the pilot-- that is to say, the true pilot-- is he a captain of sailors or a mere sailor? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the possibility has been acknowledged? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the power which the eye possesses is a sort of effluence which is dispensed from the sun? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the reason is that each part of him is doing its own business, whether in ruling or being ruled? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the reason of this, over and above the general constitution of the State, will be that the guardians will have a community of women and children? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the reason why the good are useless has now been explained? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the result will be that he becomes a worse potter? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the royal and orderly desires are nearest? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the same is true of all other things; they have each of them an end and a special excellence? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the same observation will apply to all other things? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the same of horses and animals in general? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the sometime greater to the sometime less, and the greater that is to be to the less that is to be? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the tragic poet is an imitator, and therefore, like all other imitators, he is thrice removed from the king and from the truth? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the tyrannical soul must be always poor and insatiable? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the unjust is good and wise, and the just is neither? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the unjust man will strive and struggle to obtain more than the unjust man or action, in order that he may have more than all? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the virtue which enters into this competition is justice? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the wise is good? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the work of the painter is a third? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the worker in leather and brass will make them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And the young should be trained in both kinds, and we begin with the false? |
plato-republic-1334 | And then, although they may have no desire of change, the others charge them with plotting against the people and being friends of oligarchy? |
plato-republic-1334 | And there are three kinds of pleasure, which are their several objects? |
plato-republic-1334 | And there is a neutral state which is neither pleasure nor pain? |
plato-republic-1334 | And therefore he will not sorrow for his departed friend as though he had suffered anything terrible? |
plato-republic-1334 | And therefore philosophers must inevitably fall under the censure of the world? |
plato-republic-1334 | And therefore the cause of well- being? |
plato-republic-1334 | And therefore they are likely to do harm to our young men-- you would agree with me there? |
plato-republic-1334 | And therefore to acknowledge that bad and good are the same? |
plato-republic-1334 | And they appear to lead the mind towards truth? |
plato-republic-1334 | And they will place them under the command of experienced veterans who will be their leaders and teachers? |
plato-republic-1334 | And they will take them on the safe expeditions and be cautious about the dangerous ones? |
plato-republic-1334 | And things great and small, heavy and light, as they are termed, will not be denoted by these any more than by the opposite names? |
plato-republic-1334 | And this assimilation of himself to another, either by the use of voice or gesture, is the imitation of the person whose character he assumes? |
plato-republic-1334 | And this is because injustice creates divisions and hatreds and fighting, and justice imparts harmony and friendship; is not that true, Thrasymachus? |
plato-republic-1334 | And this is equally true of imitation; no one man can imitate many things as well as he would imitate a single one? |
plato-republic-1334 | And this is what the arts of music and gymnastic, when present in such manner as we have described, will accomplish? |
plato-republic-1334 | And this, surely, must be the work of the calculating and rational principle in the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And those who govern ought not to be lovers of the task? |
plato-republic-1334 | And to this end they ought to be wise and efficient, and to have a special care of the State? |
plato-republic-1334 | And to which class do unity and number belong? |
plato-republic-1334 | And was I not right, Adeimantus? |
plato-republic-1334 | And we have admitted that justice is the excellence of the soul, and injustice the defect of the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And we have admitted, I said, that the good of each art is specially confined to the art? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what are these? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what do the Muses say next? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what do the rulers call one another in other States? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what do the rulers call the people? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what do they call them in other States? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what do they receive of men? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what do you say of lovers of wine? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what do you say to his receiving the right hand of fellowship? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what do you think of a second principle? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what does the judge affirm to be the life which is next, and the pleasure which is next? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what due or proper thing is given by cookery, and to what? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what happens? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what in ours? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what is that which justice gives, and to whom? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what is the faculty in man to which imitation is addressed? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what is the name which the city derives from the possession of this sort of knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what is the next question? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what is the organ with which we see the visible things? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what is the prime of life? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what is this knowledge, and among whom is it found? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what is your view about them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what manner of government do you term oligarchy? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what may that be? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what of passion, or spirit? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what of the ignorant? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what of the maker of the bed? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what of the unjust-- does he claim to have more than the just man and to do more than is just? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what shall be their education? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what shall we say about men? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what shall we say of the carpenter-- is not he also the maker of the bed? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what similar use or power of acquisition has justice in time of peace? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what then would you say? |
plato-republic-1334 | And what would you say of the physician? |
plato-republic-1334 | And when persons are suffering from acute pain, you must have heard them say that there is nothing pleasanter than to get rid of their pain? |
plato-republic-1334 | And when these fail? |
plato-republic-1334 | And when they meet in private will not people be saying to one another''Our warriors are not good for much''? |
plato-republic-1334 | And when truth is the captain, we can not suspect any evil of the band which he leads? |
plato-republic-1334 | And when you see the same evils in the tyrannical man, what do you say of him? |
plato-republic-1334 | And when you speak of music, do you include literature or not? |
plato-republic-1334 | And when you want to buy a ship, the shipwright or the pilot would be better? |
plato-republic-1334 | And where do you find them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And where freedom is, the individual is clearly able to order for himself his own life as he pleases? |
plato-republic-1334 | And which are the harmonies expressive of sorrow? |
plato-republic-1334 | And which are the soft or drinking harmonies? |
plato-republic-1334 | And which are these two sorts? |
plato-republic-1334 | And which is wise and which is foolish? |
plato-republic-1334 | And which method do I understand you to prefer? |
plato-republic-1334 | And which sort of life, Glaucon, do you prefer? |
plato-republic-1334 | And which, I said, of the gods in heaven would you say was the lord of this element? |
plato-republic-1334 | And whichever of these qualities we find in the State, the one which is not found will be the residue? |
plato-republic-1334 | And who are the devoted band, and where will he procure them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And who is best able to do good to his friends and evil to his enemies in time of sickness? |
plato-republic-1334 | And why are mean employments and manual arts a reproach? |
plato-republic-1334 | And why, sillybillies, do you knock under to one another? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will any one say that he is not a miserable caitiff who remorselessly sells his own divine being to that which is most godless and detestable? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will he then change himself for the better and fairer, or for the worse and more unsightly? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will not a true astronomer have the same feeling when he looks at the movements of the stars? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will not he who has been shown to be the wickedest, be also the most miserable? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will not men who are injured be deteriorated in that which is the proper virtue of man? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will not the bravest and wisest soul be least confused or deranged by any external influence? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will not the city, which you are founding, be an Hellenic city? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will not the words and the character of the style depend on the temper of the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will not their wives be the best women? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will the habit of body of our ordinary athletes be suited to them? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will the love of a lie be any part of a philosopher''s nature? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will there be in our city more of these true guardians or more smiths? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will they be a class which is rarely found? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will they not be lovers of Hellas, and think of Hellas as their own land, and share in the common temples? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will you be so very good as to answer one more question? |
plato-republic-1334 | And will you have a work better done when the workman has many occupations, or when he has only one? |
plato-republic-1334 | And with the hearing, I said, we hear, and with the other senses perceive the other objects of sense? |
plato-republic-1334 | And would he try to go beyond just action? |
plato-republic-1334 | And would not a really good education furnish the best safeguard? |
plato-republic-1334 | And would you call justice vice? |
plato-republic-1334 | And would you say that the soul of such an one is the soul of a freeman, or of a slave? |
plato-republic-1334 | And yet not so well as with a pruning- hook made for the purpose? |
plato-republic-1334 | And yet there is a sense in which the painter also creates a bed? |
plato-republic-1334 | And yet you were acknowledging a little while ago that knowledge is not the same as opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | And yet, as you see, there are freemen as well as masters in such a State? |
plato-republic-1334 | And you also said that the just will not go beyond his like but his unlike? |
plato-republic-1334 | And you are aware too that the latter can not explain what they mean by knowledge, but are obliged after all to say knowledge of the good? |
plato-republic-1334 | And you know that a man who is deranged and not right in his mind, will fancy that he is able to rule, not only over men, but also over the gods? |
plato-republic-1334 | And you may further imagine that his instructor is pointing to the objects as they pass and requiring him to name them,--will he not be perplexed? |
plato-republic-1334 | And you placed astronomy next, and then you made a step backward? |
plato-republic-1334 | And you would say the same of the conception of the good? |
plato-republic-1334 | And you would say the same sort of thing of the physician? |
plato-republic-1334 | And, conversely, that which has less of truth will also have less of essence? |
plato-republic-1334 | Any affinity to wantonness and intemperance? |
plato-republic-1334 | Any more than heat can produce cold? |
plato-republic-1334 | Any more than they can be rhapsodists and actors at once? |
plato-republic-1334 | Are not necessary pleasures those of which we can not get rid, and of which the satisfaction is a benefit to us? |
plato-republic-1334 | Are not the chief elements of temperance, speaking generally, obedience to commanders and self- control in sensual pleasures? |
plato-republic-1334 | Are not the public who say these things the greatest of all Sophists? |
plato-republic-1334 | Are not these functions proper to the soul, and can they rightly be assigned to any other? |
plato-republic-1334 | Are you not aware, I said, that the soul of man is immortal and imperishable? |
plato-republic-1334 | Are you satisfied then that the quality which makes such men and such states is justice, or do you hope to discover some other? |
plato-republic-1334 | As being the same with knowledge, or another faculty? |
plato-republic-1334 | As they are or as they appear? |
plato-republic-1334 | At any rate you can tell that a song or ode has three parts-- the words, the melody, and the rhythm; that degree of knowledge I may presuppose? |
plato-republic-1334 | At what age? |
plato-republic-1334 | Because I want to know in which of the three classes you would place justice? |
plato-republic-1334 | Because it has a particular quality which no other has? |
plato-republic-1334 | Beds, then, are of three kinds, and there are three artists who superintend them: God, the maker of the bed, and the painter? |
plato-republic-1334 | Beginning with the State, I replied, would you say that a city which is governed by a tyrant is free or enslaved? |
plato-republic-1334 | Being is the sphere or subject- matter of knowledge, and knowledge is to know the nature of being? |
plato-republic-1334 | But again, will they tell us that such a nature, placed under favourable circumstances, will not be perfectly good and wise if any ever was? |
plato-republic-1334 | But although the gods are themselves unchangeable, still by witchcraft and deception they may make us think that they appear in various forms? |
plato-republic-1334 | But are not these spirited natures apt to be savage with one another, and with everybody else? |
plato-republic-1334 | But are the rulers of states absolutely infallible, or are they sometimes liable to err? |
plato-republic-1334 | But can any of these reasons apply to God? |
plato-republic-1334 | But can that which is neither become both? |
plato-republic-1334 | But can the musician by his art make men unmusical? |
plato-republic-1334 | But can you persuade us, if we refuse to listen to you? |
plato-republic-1334 | But can you tell me of any other suitable study? |
plato-republic-1334 | But can you use different animals for the same purpose, unless they are bred and fed in the same way? |
plato-republic-1334 | But did we not say, Thrasymachus, that the unjust goes beyond both his like and unlike? |
plato-republic-1334 | But do you imagine that men who are unable to give and take a reason will have the knowledge which we require of them? |
plato-republic-1334 | But do you know whom I think good? |
plato-republic-1334 | But do you mean to say that this is not the opinion of the multitude? |
plato-republic-1334 | But do you not admire, I said, the coolness and dexterity of these ready ministers of political corruption? |
plato-republic-1334 | But do you observe the reason of this? |
plato-republic-1334 | But do you see, he rejoined, how many we are? |
plato-republic-1334 | But does he therefore confer no benefit when he works for nothing? |
plato-republic-1334 | But does the painter know the right form of the bit and reins? |
plato-republic-1334 | But have you remarked that sight is by far the most costly and complex piece of workmanship which the artificer of the senses ever contrived? |
plato-republic-1334 | But he may have friends who are senseless or mad? |
plato-republic-1334 | But he would claim to exceed the non- musician? |
plato-republic-1334 | But he would wish to go beyond the non- physician? |
plato-republic-1334 | But how is the image applicable to the disciples of philosophy? |
plato-republic-1334 | But how will they draw out the plan of which you are speaking? |
plato-republic-1334 | But how will they know who are fathers and daughters, and so on? |
plato-republic-1334 | But if he were taken back again he would imagine, and truly imagine, that he was descending? |
plato-republic-1334 | But if so, the tyrant will live most unpleasantly, and the king most pleasantly? |
plato-republic-1334 | But if so, the unjust will be the enemy of the gods, and the just will be their friend? |
plato-republic-1334 | But if they abstained from injuring one another, then they might act together better? |
plato-republic-1334 | But if they are to be courageous, must they not learn other lessons besides these, and lessons of such a kind as will take away the fear of death? |
plato-republic-1334 | But is not this unjust? |
plato-republic-1334 | But is not war an art? |
plato-republic-1334 | But is opinion to be sought without and beyond either of them, in a greater clearness than knowledge, or in a greater darkness than ignorance? |
plato-republic-1334 | But is the just man or the skilful player a more useful and better partner at a game of draughts? |
plato-republic-1334 | But is there not another name which people give to their rulers in other States? |
plato-republic-1334 | But is this equally true of the greatness and smallness of the fingers? |
plato-republic-1334 | But let me ask you another question: Has excess of pleasure any affinity to temperance? |
plato-republic-1334 | But may he not change and transform himself? |
plato-republic-1334 | But next, what shall we say of their food; for the men are in training for the great contest of all-- are they not? |
plato-republic-1334 | But ought the just to injure any one at all? |
plato-republic-1334 | But ought we to attempt to construct one? |
plato-republic-1334 | But shall we be right in getting rid of them? |
plato-republic-1334 | But suppose that he were to retort,''Thrasymachus, what do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | But surely God and the things of God are in every way perfect? |
plato-republic-1334 | But surely, Thrasymachus, the arts are the superiors and rulers of their own subjects? |
plato-republic-1334 | But that which is neither was just now shown to be rest and not motion, and in a mean between them? |
plato-republic-1334 | But the condiments are only necessary in so far as they are good for health? |
plato-republic-1334 | But the good are just and would not do an injustice? |
plato-republic-1334 | But the hero who has distinguished himself, what shall be done to him? |
plato-republic-1334 | But the soul which can not be destroyed by an evil, whether inherent or external, must exist for ever, and if existing for ever, must be immortal? |
plato-republic-1334 | But those who see the absolute and eternal and immutable may be said to know, and not to have opinion only? |
plato-republic-1334 | But we should like to ask him a question: Does he who has knowledge know something or nothing? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what branch of knowledge is there, my dear Glaucon, which is of the desired nature; since all the useful arts were reckoned mean by us? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what do you mean by the highest of all knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what do you say of music, which also entered to a certain extent into our former scheme? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what do you say to flute- makers and flute- players? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what if I give you an answer about justice other and better, he said, than any of these? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what if there are no gods? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what is the next step? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what ought to be their course? |
plato-republic-1334 | But what would you have, Glaucon? |
plato-republic-1334 | But when a man is well, my dear Polemarchus, there is no need of a physician? |
plato-republic-1334 | But when is this fault committed? |
plato-republic-1334 | But when they are directed towards objects on which the sun shines, they see clearly and there is sight in them? |
plato-republic-1334 | But where are the two? |
plato-republic-1334 | But where, amid all this, is justice? |
plato-republic-1334 | But which stories do you mean, he said; and what fault do you find with them? |
plato-republic-1334 | But why do you ask? |
plato-republic-1334 | But why do you ask? |
plato-republic-1334 | But why should we dispute about names when we have realities of such importance to consider? |
plato-republic-1334 | But will he have no sorrow, or shall we say that although he can not help sorrowing, he will moderate his sorrow? |
plato-republic-1334 | But will he not desire to get them on the spot? |
plato-republic-1334 | But will the imitator have either? |
plato-republic-1334 | But will you let me assume, without reciting them, that these things are true? |
plato-republic-1334 | But would any of your guardians think or speak of any other guardian as a stranger? |
plato-republic-1334 | But would you call the painter a creator and maker? |
plato-republic-1334 | But you can cut off a vine- branch with a dagger or with a chisel, and in many other ways? |
plato-republic-1334 | But you see that without the addition of some other nature there is no seeing or being seen? |
plato-republic-1334 | But, if Homer never did any public service, was he privately a guide or teacher of any? |
plato-republic-1334 | By heaven, would not such an one be a rare educator? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can a man help imitating that with which he holds reverential converse? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can any man be courageous who has the fear of death in him? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can any other origin of a State be imagined? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can he have an opinion which is an opinion about nothing? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can sight adequately perceive them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can the same nature be a lover of wisdom and a lover of falsehood? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can there be any greater evil than discord and distraction and plurality where unity ought to reign? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can they have a better place than between being and not- being? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can we any longer doubt, then, that the miser and money- maker answers to the oligarchical State? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can we deny that a warrior should have a knowledge of arithmetic? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can we suppose that he is ignorant of antiquity, and therefore has recourse to invention? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can you tell me what imitation is? |
plato-republic-1334 | Can you tell me whence I derive this inference? |
plato-republic-1334 | Capital, I said; but let me ask you once more: Shall they be a family in name only; or shall they in all their actions be true to the name? |
plato-republic-1334 | Certainly, the same principle holds; but why does this involve any particular skill? |
plato-republic-1334 | Deteriorated, that is to say, in the good qualities of horses, not of dogs? |
plato-republic-1334 | Did this never strike you as curious? |
plato-republic-1334 | Did you ever hear any of them which were not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Did you hear all the advantages of the unjust which Thrasymachus was rehearsing? |
plato-republic-1334 | Did you never hear it? |
plato-republic-1334 | Did you never observe in the arts how the potters''boys look on and help, long before they touch the wheel? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do I take you with me? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do they by attaching to the soul and inhering in her at last bring her to death, and so separate her from the body? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do we admit the existence of opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you agree? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you know of any other? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you know where you will have to look if you want to discover his rogueries? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you know, I said, that governments vary as the dispositions of men vary, and that there must be as many of the one as there are of the other? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you mean that there is no such maker or creator, or that in one sense there might be a maker of all these things but in another not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you mean, for example, that he who is mistaken about the sick is a physician in that he is mistaken? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you not know that all this is but the prelude to the actual strain which we have to learn? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you not know, I said, that the true lie, if such an expression may be allowed, is hated of gods and men? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you not remark, I said, how great is the evil which dialectic has introduced? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you not see them doing the same? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you observe that we were not far wrong in our guess that temperance was a sort of harmony? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you remember? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you see that there is a way in which you could make them all yourself? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you suppose that I call him who is mistaken the stronger at the time when he is mistaken? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you think it right that Hellenes should enslave Hellenic States, or allow others to enslave them, if they can help? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you think that the possession of all other things is of any value if we do not possess the good? |
plato-republic-1334 | Do you think that there is anything so very unnatural or inexcusable in their case? |
plato-republic-1334 | Does he not call the other pleasures necessary, under the idea that if there were no necessity for them, he would rather not have them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Does not like always attract like? |
plato-republic-1334 | Does not the practice of despoiling an enemy afford an excuse for not facing the battle? |
plato-republic-1334 | Does not the timocratical man change into the oligarchical on this wise? |
plato-republic-1334 | Does that look well? |
plato-republic-1334 | Does the injustice or other evil which exists in the soul waste and consume her? |
plato-republic-1334 | Does the just man try to gain any advantage over the just? |
plato-republic-1334 | Each of them, I said, is such as his like is? |
plato-republic-1334 | Except a city?--or would you include a city? |
plato-republic-1334 | First of all, in regard to slavery? |
plato-republic-1334 | First you began with a geometry of plane surfaces? |
plato-republic-1334 | First, then, they resemble one another in the value which they set upon wealth? |
plato-republic-1334 | For example, I said, can the same thing be at rest and in motion at the same time in the same part? |
plato-republic-1334 | For what purpose do you conceive that we have come here, said Thrasymachus,--to look for gold, or to hear discourse? |
plato-republic-1334 | For which the art has to consider and provide? |
plato-republic-1334 | For you surely would not regard the skilled mathematician as a dialectician? |
plato-republic-1334 | Further, I said, has not a drunken man also the spirit of a tyrant? |
plato-republic-1334 | Further, the very faculty which is the instrument of judgment is not possessed by the covetous or ambitious man, but only by the philosopher? |
plato-republic-1334 | Further, there can be no doubt that a work is spoilt when not done at the right time? |
plato-republic-1334 | God forbid, I replied; but may I ask you to consider the image in another point of view? |
plato-republic-1334 | Good, I said; then you call him who is third in the descent from nature an imitator? |
plato-republic-1334 | Has he not, I said, an occupation; and what profit would there be in his life if he were deprived of his occupation? |
plato-republic-1334 | Has not that been admitted? |
plato-republic-1334 | Has not the intemperate been censured of old, because in him the huge multiform monster is allowed to be too much at large? |
plato-republic-1334 | Have I clearly explained the class which I mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | Have we not here a picture of his way of life? |
plato-republic-1334 | Having effected this, they will proceed to trace an outline of the constitution? |
plato-republic-1334 | He can hardly avoid saying Yes-- can he now? |
plato-republic-1334 | He looked at me in astonishment, and said: No, by heaven: And are you really prepared to maintain this? |
plato-republic-1334 | He mentioned that he was present when one of the spirits asked another,''Where is Ardiaeus the Great?'' |
plato-republic-1334 | He roared out to the whole company: What folly, Socrates, has taken possession of you all? |
plato-republic-1334 | He said: Who then are the true philosophers? |
plato-republic-1334 | He who has an opinion has an opinion about some one thing? |
plato-republic-1334 | He will grow more and more indolent and careless? |
plato-republic-1334 | His experience, then, will enable him to judge better than any one? |
plato-republic-1334 | How can that be? |
plato-republic-1334 | How can that be? |
plato-republic-1334 | How can there be? |
plato-republic-1334 | How can they, he said, if they are blind and can not see? |
plato-republic-1334 | How can they, he said, when they are not allowed to apply their minds to the callings of any of these? |
plato-republic-1334 | How can we? |
plato-republic-1334 | How cast off? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do they act? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you distinguish them? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | How many? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How so? |
plato-republic-1334 | How then does a protector begin to change into a tyrant? |
plato-republic-1334 | How was that? |
plato-republic-1334 | How well I remember the aged poet Sophocles, when in answer to the question, How does love suit with age, Sophocles,--are you still the man you were? |
plato-republic-1334 | How will they proceed? |
plato-republic-1334 | How would they address us? |
plato-republic-1334 | How, then, can we be right in supposing that the absence of pain is pleasure, or that the absence of pleasure is pain? |
plato-republic-1334 | How? |
plato-republic-1334 | How? |
plato-republic-1334 | How? |
plato-republic-1334 | How? |
plato-republic-1334 | How? |
plato-republic-1334 | I am sure that I should be contented-- will not you? |
plato-republic-1334 | I assume, I said, that the tyrant is in the third place from the oligarch; the democrat was in the middle? |
plato-republic-1334 | I dare say, Glaucon, that you are as much charmed by her as I am, especially when she appears in Homer? |
plato-republic-1334 | I do not know, do you? |
plato-republic-1334 | I might say the same of the ears; when deprived of their own proper excellence they can not fulfil their end? |
plato-republic-1334 | I presume then that you are going to make one of the interdicted answers? |
plato-republic-1334 | I proceeded to ask: When two things, a greater and less, are called by the same name, are they like or unlike in so far as they are called the same? |
plato-republic-1334 | I repeated, Why am I especially not to be let off? |
plato-republic-1334 | I replied; and if we asked him what due or proper thing is given by medicine, and to whom, what answer do you think that he would make to us? |
plato-republic-1334 | I said; how shall we find a gentle nature which has also a great spirit, for the one is the contradiction of the other? |
plato-republic-1334 | I said; the prelude or what? |
plato-republic-1334 | I should like to know whether you have the same notion which I have of this study? |
plato-republic-1334 | I suppose that you would call justice virtue and injustice vice? |
plato-republic-1334 | I want to know whether ideals are ever fully realized in language? |
plato-republic-1334 | I will explain: The body which is large when seen near, appears small when seen at a distance? |
plato-republic-1334 | I will proceed by asking a question: Would you not say that a horse has some end? |
plato-republic-1334 | I will; and first tell me, Do you admit that it is just for subjects to obey their rulers? |
plato-republic-1334 | If wealth and gain were the criterion, then the praise or blame of the lover of gain would surely be the most trustworthy? |
plato-republic-1334 | Imitation is only a kind of play or sport, and the tragic poets, whether they write in Iambic or in Heroic verse, are imitators in the highest degree? |
plato-republic-1334 | In prescribing meats and drinks would he wish to go beyond another physician or beyond the practice of medicine? |
plato-republic-1334 | In the first place, are they not free; and is not the city full of freedom and frankness-- a man may say and do what he likes? |
plato-republic-1334 | In the next place our youth must be temperate? |
plato-republic-1334 | In these cases a man is not compelled to ask of thought the question what is a finger? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what manner? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what manner? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what particulars? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what point of view? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what respect do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what respect? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what respects? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what way make allowance? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what way shown? |
plato-republic-1334 | In what way? |
plato-republic-1334 | Indeed, Thrasymachus, and do I really appear to you to argue like an informer? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is any better than experience and wisdom and reason? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is he not a true image of the State which he represents? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is it a third, or akin to one of the preceding? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is it not on this wise?--The good at which such a State aims is to become as rich as possible, a desire which is insatiable? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not Polemarchus your heir? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not his case utterly miserable? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not that still more disgraceful? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not that true, Thrasymachus? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not the noble that which subjects the beast to the man, or rather to the god in man; and the ignoble that which subjects the man to the beast?'' |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not the noble youth very like a well- bred dog in respect of guarding and watching? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not this the case? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not this the way-- he is the son of the miserly and oligarchical father who has trained him in his own habits? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not this true? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not this unavoidable? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is not to have lost the truth an evil, and to possess the truth a good? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is that true? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is there any State in which you will find more of lamentation and sorrow and groaning and pain? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is there any city which he might name? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is there anything more? |
plato-republic-1334 | Is there not also a second class of goods, such as knowledge, sight, health, which are desirable not only in themselves, but also for their results? |
plato-republic-1334 | It follows therefore that the good is not the cause of all things, but of the good only? |
plato-republic-1334 | It may also be called temperate, and for the same reasons? |
plato-republic-1334 | Italy and Sicily boast of Charondas, and there is Solon who is renowned among us; but what city has anything to say about you?'' |
plato-republic-1334 | Justice and health of mind will be of the company, and temperance will follow after? |
plato-republic-1334 | Labouring in vain, he must end in hating himself and his fruitless occupation? |
plato-republic-1334 | Last comes the lover of gain? |
plato-republic-1334 | Last of all comes the tyrannical man; about whom we have once more to ask, how is he formed out of the democratical? |
plato-republic-1334 | Let me ask you a question: Are not the several arts different, by reason of their each having a separate function? |
plato-republic-1334 | Let me explain: Can you see, except with the eye? |
plato-republic-1334 | Let us take any common instance; there are beds and tables in the world-- plenty of them, are there not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Like husbandry for the acquisition of corn? |
plato-republic-1334 | Like ourselves, I replied; and they see only their own shadows, or the shadows of one another, which the fire throws on the opposite wall of the cave? |
plato-republic-1334 | Look at the matter thus:--Hunger, thirst, and the like, are inanitions of the bodily state? |
plato-republic-1334 | May I ask, Cephalus, whether your fortune was for the most part inherited or acquired by you? |
plato-republic-1334 | May I have the pleasure, he said, of hearing your opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | May I suppose that you have this distinction of the visible and intelligible fixed in your mind? |
plato-republic-1334 | May it not be defined as a period of about twenty years in a woman''s life, and thirty in a man''s? |
plato-republic-1334 | May not the relation of sight to this deity be described as follows? |
plato-republic-1334 | May there not be the alternative, I said, that we may persuade you to let us go? |
plato-republic-1334 | May we not be satisfied with that? |
plato-republic-1334 | May we not say that these desires spend, and that the others make money because they conduce to production? |
plato-republic-1334 | May we not say that this is the end of a pruning- hook? |
plato-republic-1334 | May we say so, then? |
plato-republic-1334 | Must he not either perish at the hands of his enemies, or from being a man become a wolf-- that is, a tyrant? |
plato-republic-1334 | Must we not ask who are to be rulers and who subjects? |
plato-republic-1334 | Must we not then infer that the individual is wise in the same way, and in virtue of the same quality which makes the State wise? |
plato-republic-1334 | My question is only whether the just man, while refusing to have more than another just man, would wish and claim to have more than the unjust? |
plato-republic-1334 | Need I ask again whether the eye has an end? |
plato-republic-1334 | Neither may they imitate smiths or other artificers, or oarsmen, or boatswains, or the like? |
plato-republic-1334 | Neither must they represent slaves, male or female, performing the offices of slaves? |
plato-republic-1334 | Neither sight nor the eye in which sight resides is the sun? |
plato-republic-1334 | Neither will he ever break faith where there have been oaths or agreements? |
plato-republic-1334 | Neither would you approve of the delicacies, as they are thought, of Athenian confectionary? |
plato-republic-1334 | Neither, I said, can there be any question that the guardian who is to keep anything should have eyes rather than no eyes? |
plato-republic-1334 | Next as to the slain; ought the conquerors, I said, to take anything but their armour? |
plato-republic-1334 | Next, as to war; what are to be the relations of your soldiers to one another and to their enemies? |
plato-republic-1334 | Next, how shall our soldiers treat their enemies? |
plato-republic-1334 | Next, we shall ask our opponent how, in reference to any of the pursuits or arts of civic life, the nature of a woman differs from that of a man? |
plato-republic-1334 | No one will be less likely to commit adultery, or to dishonour his father and mother, or to fail in his religious duties? |
plato-republic-1334 | No, indeed, I replied; and the same is true of most, if not all, the other senses-- you would not say that any of them requires such an addition? |
plato-republic-1334 | Nonsense, said Glaucon: did you not promise to search yourself, saying that for you not to help justice in her need would be an impiety? |
plato-republic-1334 | Nor by reason of a knowledge which advises about brazen pots, I said, nor as possessing any other similar knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | Nor can the good harm any one? |
plato-republic-1334 | Nor may they imitate the neighing of horses, the bellowing of bulls, the murmur of rivers and roll of the ocean, thunder, and all that sort of thing? |
plato-republic-1334 | Nor would you say that medicine is the art of receiving pay because a man takes fees when he is engaged in healing? |
plato-republic-1334 | Nor yet by reason of a knowledge which cultivates the earth; that would give the city the name of agricultural? |
plato-republic-1334 | Nor, if a man is to be in condition, would you allow him to have a Corinthian girl as his fair friend? |
plato-republic-1334 | Not to mention the importers and exporters, who are called merchants? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now are we to maintain that all these and any who have similar tastes, as well as the professors of quite minor arts, are philosophers? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now can we be right in praising and admiring another who is doing that which any one of us would abominate and be ashamed of in his own person? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now in vessels which are in a state of mutiny and by sailors who are mutineers, how will the true pilot be regarded? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now what man answers to this form of government- how did he come into being, and what is he like? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now what opinion of any other Sophist, or of any private person, can be expected to overcome in such an unequal contest? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now you understand me? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now, I beseech you, do tell me, have you ever attended to their pairing and breeding? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now, I said, every art has an interest? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now, are not the best husbandmen those who are most devoted to husbandry? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now, can we find justice without troubling ourselves about temperance? |
plato-republic-1334 | Now, in such a State, can liberty have any limit? |
plato-republic-1334 | O my friend, is not that so? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of course you know that ambition and avarice are held to be, as indeed they are, a disgrace? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of not- being, ignorance was assumed to be the necessary correlative; of being, knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of the painter we say that he will paint reins, and he will paint a bit? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of the three individuals, which has the greatest experience of all the pleasures which we enumerated? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of what kind? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of what nature are you speaking? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of what nature? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of what sort? |
plato-republic-1334 | Of what tales are you speaking? |
plato-republic-1334 | On what principle, then, shall we any longer choose justice rather than the worst injustice? |
plato-republic-1334 | Once more let me ask: Does he who desires any class of goods, desire the whole class or a part only? |
plato-republic-1334 | Once more then, O my friend, we have alighted upon an easy question-- whether the soul has these three principles or not? |
plato-republic-1334 | One of them is ready to follow the guidance of the law? |
plato-republic-1334 | One principle prevails in the souls of one class of men, another in others, as may happen? |
plato-republic-1334 | One woman has a gift of healing, another not; one is a musician, and another has no music in her nature? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or any affinity to virtue in general? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or because a man is in good health when he receives pay you would not say that the art of payment is medicine? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or can such an one account death fearful? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or did he only seem to be a member of the ruling body, although in truth he was neither ruler nor subject, but just a spendthrift? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or drought moisture? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or have the arts to look only after their own interests? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or hear, except with the ear? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or if honour or victory or courage, in that case the judgment of the ambitious or pugnacious would be the truest? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or like shoemaking for the acquisition of shoes,--that is what you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or perhaps he may tell a lie because he is afraid of enemies? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or shall I guess for you? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or that his nature, being such as we have delineated, is akin to the highest good? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or the horseman by his art make them bad horsemen? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or the verse''The saddest of fates is to die and meet destiny from hunger?'' |
plato-republic-1334 | Or when they are on a voyage, amid the perils of the sea? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or will they prefer those whom we have rejected? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or, after all, they may be in the right, and poets do really know the things about which they seem to the many to speak so well? |
plato-republic-1334 | Or, if the master would not stay, then the disciples would have followed him about everywhere, until they had got education enough? |
plato-republic-1334 | Ought I not to begin by describing how the change from timocracy to oligarchy arises? |
plato-republic-1334 | Our State like every other has rulers and subjects? |
plato-republic-1334 | Parents and tutors are always telling their sons and their wards that they are to be just; but why? |
plato-republic-1334 | Reflect: is not the dreamer, sleeping or waking, one who likens dissimilar things, who puts the copy in the place of the real object? |
plato-republic-1334 | Reflect: when a man has an opinion, has he not an opinion about something? |
plato-republic-1334 | Reflecting upon these and similar evils, you held the tyrannical State to be the most miserable of States? |
plato-republic-1334 | Salvation of what? |
plato-republic-1334 | Say, then, is not pleasure opposed to pain? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall I assume that we ourselves are able and experienced judges and have before now met with such a person? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall I give you an illustration of them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall I give you an illustration? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall I tell you whose I believe the saying to be? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall I tell you why? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall we begin by assuring him that he is welcome to any knowledge which he may have, and that we are rejoiced at his having it? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall we begin education with music, and go on to gymnastic afterwards? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall we not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall we, after the manner of Homer, pray the Muses to tell us''how discord first arose''? |
plato-republic-1334 | Shall we, then, speak of Him as the natural author or maker of the bed? |
plato-republic-1334 | Should not their custom be to spare them, considering the danger which there is that the whole race may one day fall under the yoke of the barbarians? |
plato-republic-1334 | Socrates, what do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | Socrates; do you want to know how much I acquired? |
plato-republic-1334 | Something that is or is not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Something that is; for how can that which is not ever be known? |
plato-republic-1334 | Still, I should like to ascertain how astronomy can be learned in any manner more conducive to that knowledge of which we are speaking? |
plato-republic-1334 | Still, the dangers of war can not be always foreseen; there is a good deal of chance about them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Such is the tale; is there any possibility of making our citizens believe in it? |
plato-republic-1334 | Such will be the change, and after the change has been made, how will they proceed? |
plato-republic-1334 | Such, then, are the palms of victory which the gods give the just? |
plato-republic-1334 | Suppose now that by the light of the examples just offered we enquire who this imitator is? |
plato-republic-1334 | Suppose we call it the contentious or ambitious-- would the term be suitable? |
plato-republic-1334 | Suppose we select an example of either kind, in order that we may have a general notion of them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Tell me then, O thou heir of the argument, what did Simonides say, and according to you truly say, about justice? |
plato-republic-1334 | Tell me, Thrasymachus, I said, did you mean by justice what the stronger thought to be his interest, whether really so or not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Tell me: will he be more likely to struggle and hold out against his sorrow when he is seen by his equals, or when he is alone? |
plato-republic-1334 | That is also good, he said; but I should like to know what you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | That is his meaning then? |
plato-republic-1334 | That is quite true, he said; but to what are you alluding? |
plato-republic-1334 | That is to say, justice is useful when money is useless? |
plato-republic-1334 | That since beauty is the opposite of ugliness, they are two? |
plato-republic-1334 | That there are three arts which are concerned with all things: one which uses, another which makes, a third which imitates them? |
plato-republic-1334 | That will be the way? |
plato-republic-1334 | The State which we have been describing is said to be wise as being good in counsel? |
plato-republic-1334 | The existence of such persons is to be attributed to want of education, ill- training, and an evil constitution of the State? |
plato-republic-1334 | The good which oligarchy proposed to itself and the means by which it was maintained was excess of wealth-- am I not right? |
plato-republic-1334 | The imitative artist will be in a brilliant state of intelligence about his own creations? |
plato-republic-1334 | The just man then, if we regard the idea of justice only, will be like the just State? |
plato-republic-1334 | The object of one is food, and of the other drink? |
plato-republic-1334 | The one love and embrace the subjects of knowledge, the other those of opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | The pleasure of eating is necessary in two ways; it does us good and it is essential to the continuance of life? |
plato-republic-1334 | The process is as follows: When a potter becomes rich, will he, think you, any longer take the same pains with his art? |
plato-republic-1334 | The ruler may impose the laws and institutions which we have been describing, and the citizens may possibly be willing to obey them? |
plato-republic-1334 | The soul, I said, being, as is now proven, immortal, must be the fairest of compositions and can not be compounded of many elements? |
plato-republic-1334 | The true lie is hated not only by the gods, but also by men? |
plato-republic-1334 | The true lover of learning then must from his earliest youth, as far as in him lies, desire all truth? |
plato-republic-1334 | The very great benefit has next to be established? |
plato-republic-1334 | The whole period of three score years and ten is surely but a little thing in comparison with eternity? |
plato-republic-1334 | Their pleasures are mixed with pains-- how can they be otherwise? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then I may infer courage to be such as you describe? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then I suppose that opinion appears to you to be darker than knowledge, but lighter than ignorance? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then I suppose that we ought to do good to the just and harm to the unjust? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then a city is not to be called wise because possessing a knowledge which counsels for the best about wooden implements? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then a soul which forgets can not be ranked among genuine philosophic natures; we must insist that the philosopher should have a good memory? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then according to your argument it is just to injure those who do no wrong? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then an evil soul must necessarily be an evil ruler and superintendent, and the good soul a good ruler? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then are we to impose all our enactments on men and none of them on women? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then carpenters, and smiths, and many other artisans, will be sharers in our little State, which is already beginning to grow? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then clearly the next thing will be to make matrimony sacred in the highest degree, and what is most beneficial will be deemed sacred? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then comparing our original city, which was under a king, and the city which is under a tyrant, how do they stand as to virtue? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then everything which is good, whether made by art or nature, or both, is least liable to suffer change from without? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then he can hardly be compelled by external influence to take many shapes? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then he who is a good keeper of anything is also a good thief? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then he who is to be a really good and noble guardian of the State will require to unite in himself philosophy and spirit and swiftness and strength? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then he will no more have true opinion than he will have knowledge about the goodness or badness of his imitations? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then hirelings will help to make up our population? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then how can he who has magnificence of mind and is the spectator of all time and all existence, think much of human life? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then if being is the subject- matter of knowledge, something else must be the subject- matter of opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then if geometry compels us to view being, it concerns us; if becoming only, it does not concern us? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then if the constitutions of States are five, the dispositions of individual minds will also be five? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then if the man is like the State, I said, must not the same rule prevail? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then if there be any city which may be described as master of its own pleasures and desires, and master of itself, ours may claim such a designation? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then in every way the laws will help the citizens to keep the peace with one another? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then in making their laws they may sometimes make them rightly, and sometimes not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then in this case the narrative of the poet may be said to proceed by way of imitation? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then in this kind of State there will be the greatest variety of human natures? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then in time of peace justice will be of no use? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then it will be our duty to select, if we can, natures which are fitted for the task of guarding the city? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then justice, according to your argument, is not only obedience to the interest of the stronger but the reverse? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then knowledge and opinion having distinct powers have also distinct spheres or subject- matters? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then medicine does not consider the interest of medicine, but the interest of the body? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then men who are injured are of necessity made unjust? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then more husbandmen and more artisans will be required? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then must not a further admission be made? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then no intemperance or madness should be allowed to approach true love? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then no motive can be imagined why God should lie? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then on this view also justice will be admitted to be the having and doing what is a man''s own, and belongs to him? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then opinion and knowledge have to do with different kinds of matter corresponding to this difference of faculties? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then opinion is not concerned either with being or with not- being? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then reflect; has the ear or voice need of any third or additional nature in order that the one may be able to hear and the other to be heard? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then shall we propose this as a second branch of knowledge which our youth will study? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then shall we try to find some way of convincing him, if we can, that he is saying what is not true? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then that is not the knowledge which we are seeking to discover? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then that part of the soul which has an opinion contrary to measure is not the same with that which has an opinion in accordance with measure? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the art of war partakes of them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the community of wives and children among our citizens is clearly the source of the greatest good to the State? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the cowardly and mean nature has no part in true philosophy? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the intermediate state of rest will be pleasure and will also be pain? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the just is happy, and the unjust miserable? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the just is like the wise and good, and the unjust like the evil and ignorant? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the just soul and the just man will live well, and the unjust man will live ill? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the lover of wisdom has a great advantage over the lover of gain, for he has a double experience? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the lying poet has no place in our idea of God? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the soul of the thirsty one, in so far as he is thirsty, desires only drink; for this he yearns and tries to obtain it? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the sun is not sight, but the author of sight who is recognised by sight? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the superhuman and divine is absolutely incapable of falsehood? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the tyrant is removed from true pleasure by the space of a number which is three times three? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the tyrant will live at the greatest distance from true or natural pleasure, and the king at the least? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the wise and good will not desire to gain more than his like, but more than his unlike and opposite? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then the world can not possibly be a philosopher? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then there is nothing impossible or out of the order of nature in our finding a guardian who has a similar combination of qualities? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then there must be another class of citizens who will bring the required supply from another city? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then they will quarrel as those who intend some day to be reconciled? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then this is the progress which you call dialectic? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then this new kind of knowledge must have an additional quality? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then to injure a friend or any one else is not the act of a just man, but of the opposite, who is the unjust? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then to them the good will be enemies and the evil will be their friends? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then virtue is the health and beauty and well- being of the soul, and vice the disease and weakness and deformity of the same? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then we have found the desired natures; and now that we have found them, how are they to be reared and educated? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then we have made an enactment not only possible but in the highest degree beneficial to the State? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then we have now, I said, the second form of government and the second type of character? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then we may assume that our athletes will be able to fight with two or three times their own number? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then we may begin by assuming that there are three classes of men-- lovers of wisdom, lovers of honour, lovers of gain? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then we must abstain from spoiling the dead or hindering their burial? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then we shall want merchants? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then what is that joint use of silver or gold in which the just man is to be preferred? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then what is your meaning? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then what will you do with them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then when the person who asks me is not in his right mind I am by no means to make the return? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then who is more miserable? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then why should you mind? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then will not the citizens be good and civilized? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then women must be taught music and gymnastic and also the art of war, which they must practise like the men? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then would you call injustice malignity? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then you never heard of the saying of Phocylides, that as soon as a man has a livelihood he should practise virtue? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then you will make a law that they shall have such an education as will enable them to attain the greatest skill in asking and answering questions? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then you would infer that opinion is intermediate? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then you would not approve of Syracusan dinners, and the refinements of Sicilian cookery? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then, I said, if these and these only are to be used in our songs and melodies, we shall not want multiplicity of notes or a panharmonic scale? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then, I said, no science or art considers or enjoins the interest of the stronger or superior, but only the interest of the subject and weaker? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then, I said, our guardians must lay the foundations of their fortress in music? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then, again, within the city, how will they exchange their productions? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then, do you see any way in which the philosopher can be preserved in his calling to the end? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then, if there be any good which all artists have in common, that is to be attributed to something of which they all have the common use? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then, if women are to have the same duties as men, they must have the same nurture and education? |
plato-republic-1334 | Then, under the influence either of poverty or of wealth, workmen and their work are equally liable to degenerate? |
plato-republic-1334 | There is a thing which you call good and another which you call evil? |
plato-republic-1334 | There is another which is the work of the carpenter? |
plato-republic-1334 | There is the knowledge of the carpenter; but is that the sort of knowledge which gives a city the title of wise and good in counsel? |
plato-republic-1334 | There were two parts in our former scheme of education, were there not? |
plato-republic-1334 | There you are right, he replied; but if any one asks where are such models to be found and of what tales are you speaking-- how shall we answer him? |
plato-republic-1334 | These matters, however, as I was saying, had better be referred to Damon himself, for the analysis of the subject would be difficult, you know? |
plato-republic-1334 | These then may be truly said to be the ends of these organs? |
plato-republic-1334 | These, then, are the two kinds of style? |
plato-republic-1334 | They are like faces which were never really beautiful, but only blooming; and now the bloom of youth has passed away from them? |
plato-republic-1334 | They will use friendly correction, but will not enslave or destroy their opponents; they will be correctors, not enemies? |
plato-republic-1334 | This, I said, is he who begins to make a party against the rich? |
plato-republic-1334 | This, then, will be the first great defect of oligarchy? |
plato-republic-1334 | Thus much of music, which makes a fair ending; for what should be the end of music if not the love of beauty? |
plato-republic-1334 | To be sure, he said; how can he think otherwise? |
plato-republic-1334 | To what do you refer? |
plato-republic-1334 | To what do you refer? |
plato-republic-1334 | True, I said; but would you never allow them to run any risk? |
plato-republic-1334 | True, he replied; but what of that? |
plato-republic-1334 | True, he said; how could they see anything but the shadows if they were never allowed to move their heads? |
plato-republic-1334 | Undoubtedly; and yet if music and gymnastic are excluded, and the arts are also excluded, what remains? |
plato-republic-1334 | Until some one rare and grand result is reached which may be good, and may be the reverse of good? |
plato-republic-1334 | Very good, I said; then what is the next question? |
plato-republic-1334 | Very good, Thrasymachus, I said; and now to take the case of the arts: you would admit that one man is a musician and another not a musician? |
plato-republic-1334 | Very true, Adeimantus; but then, would any one, whether God or man, desire to make himself worse? |
plato-republic-1334 | Very true, I said; that is what I have to do: But will you be so good as answer yet one more question? |
plato-republic-1334 | Very true, he said; but what are these forms of theology which you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | Very true, said Adeimantus; but how does the illustration apply to our enquiry? |
plato-republic-1334 | Was not the selection of the male guardians determined by differences of this sort? |
plato-republic-1334 | Was not this the beginning of the enquiry''What is great?'' |
plato-republic-1334 | We acknowledged-- did we not? |
plato-republic-1334 | We are not wrong therefore in calling them necessary? |
plato-republic-1334 | We can not but remember that the justice of the State consisted in each of the three classes doing the work of its own class? |
plato-republic-1334 | We had to consider, first, whether our proposals were possible, and secondly whether they were the most beneficial? |
plato-republic-1334 | We must recollect that the individual in whom the several qualities of his nature do their own work will be just, and will do his own work? |
plato-republic-1334 | We were saying that the parents should be in the prime of life? |
plato-republic-1334 | We were saying, when we spoke of the subject- matter, that we had no need of lamentation and strains of sorrow? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well said, Cephalus, I replied; but as concerning justice, what is it?--to speak the truth and to pay your debts-- no more than this? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well then, here are three beds: one existing in nature, which is made by God, as I think that we may say-- for no one else can be the maker? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well then, is not- being the subject- matter of opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, I said, and how does the change from oligarchy into democracy arise? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, I said, and in oligarchical States do you not find paupers? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, I said, and is there no evil which corrupts the soul? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, I said, and you would agree( would you not?) |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, I said; but if we suppose a change in anything, that change must be effected either by the thing itself, or by some other thing? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, and are these of any military use? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, and can the eyes fulfil their end if they are wanting in their own proper excellence and have a defect instead? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, and do you think that those who say so are wrong? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, and is not this one quality, to mention no others, greatly at variance with present notions of him? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, and were we not creating an ideal of a perfect State? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, and your guardian must be brave if he is to fight well? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, but can you imagine that God will be willing to lie, whether in word or deed, or to put forth a phantom of himself? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, but has any one a right to say positively what he does not know? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, but if they are ever to run a risk should they not do so on some occasion when, if they escape disaster, they will be the better for it? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, but is there any war on record which was carried on successfully by him, or aided by his counsels, when he was alive? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, but what ought to be the criterion? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, he said, have you never heard that forms of government differ; there are tyrannies, and there are democracies, and there are aristocracies? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, there is another question: By friends and enemies do we mean those who are so really, or only in seeming? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well, you know of course that the greater is relative to the less? |
plato-republic-1334 | Well; and has not the soul an end which nothing else can fulfil? |
plato-republic-1334 | Were not these your words? |
plato-republic-1334 | What about this? |
plato-republic-1334 | What admission? |
plato-republic-1334 | What admissions? |
plato-republic-1334 | What are these corruptions? |
plato-republic-1334 | What are they, he said, and where shall I find them? |
plato-republic-1334 | What are they? |
plato-republic-1334 | What are they? |
plato-republic-1334 | What are they? |
plato-republic-1334 | What are you going to say? |
plato-republic-1334 | What causes? |
plato-republic-1334 | What defect? |
plato-republic-1334 | What did I borrow? |
plato-republic-1334 | What division? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do they say? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you deserve to have done to you? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean, Socrates? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you say? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you say? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you say? |
plato-republic-1334 | What do you think? |
plato-republic-1334 | What else can they do? |
plato-republic-1334 | What else then would you say? |
plato-republic-1334 | What else would you have? |
plato-republic-1334 | What evil? |
plato-republic-1334 | What evil? |
plato-republic-1334 | What evils? |
plato-republic-1334 | What faculty? |
plato-republic-1334 | What good? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is it? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is it? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is it? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is most required? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is that you are saying? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is the difference? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is the process? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is the proposition? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is there remaining? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is to be done then? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is your illustration? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is your notion? |
plato-republic-1334 | What is your proposal? |
plato-republic-1334 | What limit would you propose? |
plato-republic-1334 | What makes you say that? |
plato-republic-1334 | What may that be? |
plato-republic-1334 | What may that be? |
plato-republic-1334 | What may that be? |
plato-republic-1334 | What of this line,''O heavy with wine, who hast the eyes of a dog and the heart of a stag,''and of the words which follow? |
plato-republic-1334 | What point of view? |
plato-republic-1334 | What point? |
plato-republic-1334 | What point? |
plato-republic-1334 | What quality? |
plato-republic-1334 | What quality? |
plato-republic-1334 | What question? |
plato-republic-1334 | What shall he profit, if his injustice be undetected and unpunished? |
plato-republic-1334 | What shall we say to him? |
plato-republic-1334 | What should they fear? |
plato-republic-1334 | What sort of instances do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | What sort of knowledge is there which would draw the soul from becoming to being? |
plato-republic-1334 | What sort of lie? |
plato-republic-1334 | What sort of mischief? |
plato-republic-1334 | What tale? |
plato-republic-1334 | What then is the real object of them? |
plato-republic-1334 | What then? |
plato-republic-1334 | What trait? |
plato-republic-1334 | What was the error, Polemarchus? |
plato-republic-1334 | What was the mistake? |
plato-republic-1334 | What was the omission? |
plato-republic-1334 | What way? |
plato-republic-1334 | What will be the issue of such marriages? |
plato-republic-1334 | What, Thrasymachus, is the meaning of this? |
plato-republic-1334 | What, again, is the meaning of light and heavy, if that which is light is also heavy, and that which is heavy, light? |
plato-republic-1334 | What, are there any greater still? |
plato-republic-1334 | What, he said, is there a knowledge still higher than this-- higher than justice and the other virtues? |
plato-republic-1334 | What, now, I said, if he were able to run away and then turn and strike at the one who first came up? |
plato-republic-1334 | What, then, he said, is still remaining to us of the work of legislation? |
plato-republic-1334 | What? |
plato-republic-1334 | What? |
plato-republic-1334 | When Simonides said that the repayment of a debt was justice, he did not mean to include that case? |
plato-republic-1334 | When a man can not measure, and a great many others who can not measure declare that he is four cubits high, can he help believing what they say? |
plato-republic-1334 | When he is by himself he will not mind saying or doing many things which he would be ashamed of any one hearing or seeing him do? |
plato-republic-1334 | When horses are injured, are they improved or deteriorated? |
plato-republic-1334 | When is this accomplished? |
plato-republic-1334 | When they make them rightly, they make them agreeably to their interest; when they are mistaken, contrary to their interest; you admit that? |
plato-republic-1334 | Where must I look? |
plato-republic-1334 | Where then? |
plato-republic-1334 | Where, then, is justice, and where is injustice, and in what part of the State did they spring up? |
plato-republic-1334 | Whereas he who has a taste for every sort of knowledge and who is curious to learn and is never satisfied, may be justly termed a philosopher? |
plato-republic-1334 | Whereas the bad and ignorant will desire to gain more than both? |
plato-republic-1334 | Whereas the physician and the carpenter have different natures? |
plato-republic-1334 | Whereas true love is a love of beauty and order-- temperate and harmonious? |
plato-republic-1334 | Which appetites do you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | Which are they? |
plato-republic-1334 | Which is a just principle? |
plato-republic-1334 | Which of us has spoken truly? |
plato-republic-1334 | Which years do you mean to include? |
plato-republic-1334 | Who can be at enmity with one who loves them, who that is himself gentle and free from envy will be jealous of one in whom there is no jealousy? |
plato-republic-1334 | Who is he? |
plato-republic-1334 | Who is it, I said, whom you are refusing to let off? |
plato-republic-1334 | Who is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | Who then are those whom we shall compel to be guardians? |
plato-republic-1334 | Who was that? |
plato-republic-1334 | Whose is that light which makes the eye to see perfectly and the visible to appear? |
plato-republic-1334 | Whose? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why do you ask such a question, I said, when you ought rather to be answering? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why do you say so? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why great caution? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why indeed, he said, when any name will do which expresses the thought of the mind with clearness? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why is that? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why not, as Aeschylus says, utter the word which rises to our lips? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why not? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why should they not be? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why so? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why so? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why so? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why so? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why, I said, do you not see that men are unwillingly deprived of good, and willingly of evil? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why, I said, what was ever great in a short time? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why, in the first place, although they are all of a good sort, are not some better than others? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why, what else is there? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why, where can they still find any ground for objection? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why, yes, I said, of course they answer truly; how can the Muses speak falsely? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why, yes, he said: how can any reasonable being ever identify that which is infallible with that which errs? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why, you do not mean to say that the tyrant will use violence? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why? |
plato-republic-1334 | Why? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will any one deny the other point, that there may be sons of kings or princes who are by nature philosophers? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will any private training enable him to stand firm against the overwhelming flood of popular opinion? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will he know from use whether or no his drawing is correct or beautiful? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will he not also require natural aptitude for his calling? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will he not be called by them a prater, a star- gazer, a good- for- nothing? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will he not fancy that the shadows which he formerly saw are truer than the objects which are now shown to him? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will he not have the notions of good and evil which the public in general have-- he will do as they do, and as they are, such will he be? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will he not think that heaven and the things in heaven are framed by the Creator of them in the most perfect manner? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will he not utterly hate a lie? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will horsemen carry torches and pass them one to another during the race? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will not such an one from his early childhood be in all things first among all, especially if his bodily endowments are like his mental ones? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will not the guardians be the smallest of all the classes who receive a name from the profession of some kind of knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will the creature feel any compunction at tyrannizing over them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will the just man or citizen ever be guilty of sacrilege or theft, or treachery either to his friends or to his country? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will they disbelieve us, when we tell them that no State can be happy which is not designed by artists who imitate the heavenly pattern? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will they doubt that the philosopher is a lover of truth and being? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will they not be sophisms captivating to the ear, having nothing in them genuine, or worthy of or akin to true wisdom? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will they not be vile and bastard? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will they not produce corn, and wine, and clothes, and shoes, and build houses for themselves? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will you admit so much? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will you enquire yourself? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will you explain your meaning? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will you repay me, then, what you borrowed in the argument? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will you say whether you approve of my proposal? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will you tell me? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will you tell me? |
plato-republic-1334 | Will you then kindly answer, for the edification of the company and of myself? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would any one deny this? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would he allow imitation to be the ruling principle of his life, as if he had nothing higher in him? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would he not rather say or do the same as his like in the same case? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would not he who is fitted to be a guardian, besides the spirited nature, need to have the qualities of a philosopher? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would that be your way of speaking? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would they not have been as unwilling to part with them as with gold, and have compelled them to stay at home with them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would you agree with me in thinking that the corrupting and destroying element is the evil, and the saving and improving element the good? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would you call one of them virtue and the other vice? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would you have me put the proof bodily into your souls? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would you know the measure of the interval which separates them? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would you like, for the sake of clearness, to distinguish which are the necessary and which are the unnecessary pleasures? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would you say six or four years? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would you say that all men are equal in excellence, or is one man better than another? |
plato-republic-1334 | Would you say that knowledge is a faculty, or in what class would you place it? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, I said, a jest; and why? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, I said; and the higher principle is ready to follow this suggestion of reason? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, I said; and this being true of one must be equally true of all number? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, I said; and when a man dies gloriously in war shall we not say, in the first place, that he is of the golden race? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, I said; but if this definition of justice also breaks down, what other can be offered? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, Socrates, he said, and if you were providing for a city of pigs, how else would you feed the beasts? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, but do not persons often err about good and evil: many who are not good seem to be so, and conversely? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, he replied, such is very often the case; but what has that to do with us and our argument? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, he said, that sort of thing is certainly very blameable; but what are the stories which you mean? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, he said; but what are the characteristics of this form of government, and what are the defects of which we were speaking? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, he said; how can I deny it? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, that is very true, but may I ask another question?--What do you consider to be the greatest blessing which you have reaped from your wealth? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes, the greatest; but will you explain yourself? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yes; and is not this true of the government of anything? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yet if he is not the maker, what is he in relation to the bed? |
plato-republic-1334 | Yet of all the organs of sense the eye is the most like the sun? |
plato-republic-1334 | You are aware, I suppose, that all mythology and poetry is a narration of events, either past, present, or to come? |
plato-republic-1334 | You are further aware that most people affirm pleasure to be the good, but the finer sort of wits say it is knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | You have answered me, I replied: Well, and may we not further say that our guardians are the best of our citizens? |
plato-republic-1334 | You know that they live securely and have nothing to apprehend from their servants? |
plato-republic-1334 | You mean geometry? |
plato-republic-1334 | You mean that they would shipwreck? |
plato-republic-1334 | You mean that you do not understand the nature of this payment which to the best men is the great inducement to rule? |
plato-republic-1334 | You mean to ask, I said, what will be our answer? |
plato-republic-1334 | You mean to say that the people, from whom he has derived his being, will maintain him and his companions? |
plato-republic-1334 | You mean when money is not wanted, but allowed to lie? |
plato-republic-1334 | You mean, I suspect, to ask whether tragedy and comedy shall be admitted into our State? |
plato-republic-1334 | You recognise the truth of what I have been saying? |
plato-republic-1334 | You remember what people say when they are sick? |
plato-republic-1334 | You remember, I said, how the rulers were chosen before? |
plato-republic-1334 | You say that perfect injustice is more gainful than perfect justice? |
plato-republic-1334 | You think that justice may be of use in peace as well as in war? |
plato-republic-1334 | You will admit that the same education which makes a man a good guardian will make a woman a good guardian; for their original nature is the same? |
plato-republic-1334 | You would agree with me? |
plato-republic-1334 | You would allow, I said, that there is in nature an upper and lower and middle region? |
plato-republic-1334 | You would argue that the good are our friends and the bad our enemies? |
plato-republic-1334 | You would compare them, I said, to those invalids who, having no self- restraint, will not leave off their habits of intemperance? |
plato-republic-1334 | You would not be inclined to say, would you, that navigation is the art of medicine, at least if we are to adopt your exact use of language? |
plato-republic-1334 | You would not deny that those who have any true notion without intelligence are only like blind men who feel their way along the road? |
plato-republic-1334 | and are not the best judges in like manner those who are acquainted with all sorts of moral natures? |
plato-republic-1334 | and does not the actual tyrant lead a worse life than he whose life you determined to be the worst? |
plato-republic-1334 | and he who has tyrannized longest and most, most continually and truly miserable; although this may not be the opinion of men in general? |
plato-republic-1334 | and how does he live, in happiness or in misery? |
plato-republic-1334 | and how shall we manage the period between birth and education, which seems to require the greatest care? |
plato-republic-1334 | and is no difference made by the circumstance that one of the fingers is in the middle and another at the extremity? |
plato-republic-1334 | and must he not be represented as such? |
plato-republic-1334 | and you would agree that to conceive things as they are is to possess the truth? |
plato-republic-1334 | and''What is small?'' |
plato-republic-1334 | beat his father if he opposes him? |
plato-republic-1334 | he said; are they not capable of defending themselves? |
plato-republic-1334 | he said; ought we to give them a worse life, when they might have a better? |
plato-republic-1334 | or any greater good than the bond of unity? |
plato-republic-1334 | or is the subject- matter of opinion the same as the subject- matter of knowledge? |
plato-republic-1334 | or that he who errs in arithmetic or grammar is an arithmetician or grammarian at the time when he is making the mistake, in respect of the mistake? |
plato-republic-1334 | or the knowledge of all other things if we have no knowledge of beauty and goodness? |
plato-republic-1334 | or will he be carried away by the stream? |
plato-republic-1334 | or will he have right opinion from being compelled to associate with another who knows and gives him instructions about what he should draw? |
plato-republic-1334 | or will you make allowance for them? |
plato-republic-1334 | or would you include the mixed? |
plato-republic-1334 | or, rather, how can there be an opinion at all about not- being? |
plato-republic-1334 | or, suppose them to have no care of human things-- why in either case should we mind about concealment? |
plato-republic-1334 | shall we condescend to legislate on any of these particulars? |
plato-republic-1334 | were you not saying that he too makes, not the idea which, according to our view, is the essence of the bed, but only a particular bed? |
plato-republic-1334 | would he not desire to have more than either the knowing or the ignorant? |
plato-republic-1334 | you are incredulous, are you? |
plotinus-six-1904 | A Number, a Measure, belonging to Movement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | A certain mass then; and if mass, then Magnitude? plotinus-six-1904 But, given Magnitude and the properties we know, what else can be necessary to the existence of body?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | But,it will be said,"what reason can there be for their not acting upon the man once they are present; inaction must mean absence?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | How,he asks,"can these corporeal and visible entities continue eternally unchanged in identity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is Time, then, within ourselves as well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Well, a Sage let him remain,they say,"still, having no sensation and not expressing his virtue in act, how can he be happy?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | ( 16) What intelligent mind can doubt the immortality of such a value, one in which there is a life self- springing and therefore not to be destroyed? |
plotinus-six-1904 | ( 18) But how does the soul enter into body from the aloofness of the Intellectual? |
plotinus-six-1904 | ( A)... How, then, does Unity give rise to Multiplicity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | A God, a Celestial Spirit, a state of mind? |
plotinus-six-1904 | A thing is admitted to possess its natural colour: why not its motion also? |
plotinus-six-1904 | ARE ALL SOULS ONE?. |
plotinus-six-1904 | ARE THE STARS CAUSES? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Above all, has Relation- for example, that of right and left, double and half- any actuality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Admitted, then- it will be said- for the nobler forms of life; but how can the divine contain the mean, the unreasoning? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Admitting that human Souls have descended under constraint of the All- Soul, are we to think the constrained the nobler? |
plotinus-six-1904 | After the Purification, then, there is still this orientation to be made? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, are those powers, entering the universe of sense, still within the First or not? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, can we use integration and disintegration to explain blackness and whiteness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, how can Matter be a first- principle, seeing that it is body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, how can they deny that the Lord of Providence is here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, if Time is, admittedly, endless, how can number apply to it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, if it created the fire of the Universe by thinking of fire, why did it not make the Universe at a stroke by thinking of the Universe? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, is Possession to be restricted to an animate possessor, or does it hold good even of a statue as possessing the objects above mentioned? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, there is movement: all bodily movement is uniform; failing an incorporeal soul, how account for diversity of movement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, what meaning can sitting and standing have apart from sitter and stander? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, whence does Matter derive its unifying power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, why is not beauty classed as a relative? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again, would perception be vested in that leading principle alone, or in the other phases as well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Again: if the Soul is a body, how can we account for its virtues- moral excellence[ Sophrosyne], justice, courage and so forth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | All these noble qualities are to be reverenced and loved, no doubt, but what entitles them to be called beautiful? |
plotinus-six-1904 | All would remain in unity; how could there be any diversity of things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | An Entelechy is not a thing of parts; how then could it be present partwise in the partible body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And Friendship? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And Grief- how or for what could it grieve? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And again, where could it have come from? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And are the distinct Qualities in the Authentic Realm to be explained in the same way? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And as regards vegetal forms? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And can any increase bring joy, where nothing, not even anything good, can accrue? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And can this be right? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And can we imagine it altered by its own progression as it rises, stands at centre, declines? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And can we imagine the stars, divine beings, bestowing wickedness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And disease- how does that imply a Reason- Principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And do both the sets of categories we have been examining imply that only some principles are genera and some genera principles? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And does not that mean memory? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And does the Kosmos contain only these spirits, God being confined to the Intellectual? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And does this Reason- Principle, Nature, spring from a contemplation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And does this movement belong to the material part or to the Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And especially, can Being be divided independently, that is without drawing upon the other genera? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And first of the Evil of soul: Virtue, we may know by the Intellectual- Principle and by means of the philosophic habit; but Vice? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And hold it, where? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how can Action be a State? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how comes gold to be a beautiful thing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how comes misery if neither sin nor injustice exists? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how could the Soul lend itself to any admixture? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how could the Source"happen to be"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how do we possess the Divinity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how does the secondarily good[ the imaged Good] derive from The Good, the Absolute? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how does this image set to its task immediately after it comes into being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how, at this, account for the unity of the knowledge brought in by diverse senses, by eyes, by ears? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And how[ by the theory of a divine archetype of each individual] are the differences caused by place to be explained? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if all the constituents of this amalgam are genera, how do they produce species? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if both orders of image act upon both orders of soul, what difference is there in the souls; and how does the fact escape our knowledge? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if freedom turns on calculation with desire, does this include faulty calculation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if it falls under no mode of Being, what can it actually be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if so do the Civic Virtues give us no help at all? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if so, by what process does the Soul create in accordance with these Thoughts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if so, is the one divided or does it remain entire and yet produce variety? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if the coming was unconstrained, why find fault with a world you have chosen and can quit if you dislike it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if this is the case with a particular body, why not with the entire universe? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if thus in misery the evil is augmented by time why should not time equally augment happiness when all is well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if thus the Reason- Principle of the universe is the creator of evil, surely all is injustice? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if to that dimmer soul, when and how has it come to be present; if to the Couplement, again when and how? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And if, again, it does not, how is it the source of the manifold? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And indeed if the divine did not exist, the transcendently beautiful, in a beauty beyond all thought, what could be lovelier than the things we see? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And is it conceivable that the Soul, valid to sustain for a certain space of time, could not so sustain for ever? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And is it not clear that all may have to yield, once Contemplative- Wisdom comes into action? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And is it possible to be a Sage, Master in Dialectic, without these lower virtues? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And is it strictly true to say that Matter is the substrate of Form? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And is not life justified even so if it is a training ground with its victors and its vanquished? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And is this Providence over them to be understood of their existence in that other world only or of their lives here as well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And lightning by night, and the stars, why are these so fair? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And men? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And since its being is derived, what must that power be from which the Soul takes the double beauty, the borrowed and the inherent? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And suppose it sizeless; then, what end does it serve? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And suppose it to be true that the Soul is the appraiser, using Magnitude as the measuring standard, how does this help us to the conception of Time? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the God? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the Proficient[ the Sage], how does he stand with regard to magic and philtre- spells? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the Soul of the All- are we to think that when it turns from this sphere its lower phase similarly withdraws? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the Souls that attain to the highest? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the animals, in what way or degree do they possess the Animate? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the desiring faculty, similarly, as it runs wild or accepts control? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the multiplicity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the outcome of this Reason- Principle entering into the underlying Matter, what is that? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And the principle that reasons out these matters? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And this declension is it not certainly sin? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And this element- soul is described as possessing consciousness and will and the rest- what can we think? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And this governing unity must always desire the one thing: what could bring it to wish now for this and now for that, to its own greater perplexing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And this inner vision, what is its operation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And this is...? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And towards the Intellectual- Principle what is our relation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what becomes of blasphemy against the divine? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what can we imagine it lights upon to become the object of such a tendency? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what certitude can it have that its knowledge is true? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what consistency is there in this school when they proceed to assert that Providence cares for them, though for them alone? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what contact could there be with the utterly alien? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what could lead it onward if there were no separate being in previous actuality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what could these divine splendours and beauties be but the Ideas streaming from him? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what do we say to the question whether there is one only mode of presence of the entire soul or different modes, phase and phase? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what do we take when we thus point the Intelligence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what else is there to attribute to it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what happens when the virtues in their very nature differ in scope and province? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what is it essentially in each of these respects? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what is that? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what is that? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what is the garden? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what is there pleasant in the memory of pleasure? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what is there to hinder this unification? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what is this state implanted in Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what is your lesson? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what kind of thing is there of which it could say,"I find the extent of this equal to such and such a stretch of my own extent?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what makes them so? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what of lower things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what of the soul''s resistance to bodily states? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what of virtue and vice? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what part is played by the individual form? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what will such a Principle essentially be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And what, of a Nature contrary to its own, could enter into it when it is[ the Supreme and therefore] immune? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And when did it take place? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And when will it destroy the work? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And whence is this resistance supposed to come? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And where? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And who can accept a soul described as partless and massless and yet, for all that absence of extension, extending over a universe? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And why are they not untouched by Matter like the Gods? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And why is fire the first creation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And why may not this[ sharing of archetype] occur also in beings untouched by differentiation, if indeed there be any such? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And why not our very bodies, also? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And why should there be any difference as a given star sees certain others from the corner of a triangle or in opposition or at the angle of a square? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And why should this one spirit, Love, be the Universe to the exclusion of all the others, which certainly are sprung from the same Essential- Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And why, by a Soul entering the Kosmos? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And would those emanants be, each in itself, whole or part? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And yet- what reflection of that world could be conceived more beautiful than this of ours? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And, after all, why should it thus produce at any given moment rather than remain for ever stationary? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And, again, which phase makes it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And, if so, is this resistance to actualization due to its being precluded[ as a member of the Divine or Intellectual world] from time- processes? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And, if the starting- point, is it a kindred thing or of another genus? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And, if this were so, how explain our memories or our recognition of familiar things when we have no stably identical soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And, the cardinal question; by what conceivable process could they affect what is attributed to them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | And, what are we to think of the new forms of being they introduce- their"Exiles"and"Impressions"and"Repentings"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Another point: God has care for you; how then can He be indifferent to the entire Universe in which you exist? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Another point: why is natural ability to be distinguished from that acquired by learning? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are first- principles to be identified with genera, or genera with first- principles? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are the evils in the Universe necessary because it is of later origin than the Higher Sphere? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are there first- principles? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are these planets to be thought of as soulless or unsouled? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are they Ideas added to the other Ideas? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we actually to eliminate the beautiful on the pretext that there is a more beautiful? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we asked to accept as the substratum some attribute or quality present to all the elements in common? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we meant to gather that the Ideas came into being before the Intellectual- Principle so that it"sees them"as previously existent? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we that higher or the participant newcomer, the thing of beginnings in time? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we then to consider numbers, and numbers only, as constituting the category of Quantity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we then to dismiss absolute limitlessness and think merely that there is always something beyond? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we then to posit a new species for these two motions, adding to them, perhaps, alteration? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we then to take it that the monads in the pentad and decad differ while the unity in the pentad is the same as that in the decad? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to assign this beauty- and the same question applies to deformity in the soul- to the Intellectual order, or to the Sensible? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to be told that it is a question of a first Image followed by a second? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to consider it as a distinct genus, or to refer it to one of the genera already established? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to determine the good by the respective values of things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to put it that virtue comes in to restore the disordered soul, taming passions and appetites? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to rest all on pursuit and on the soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to suppose it throve on the disease? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to suppose that, when the man originates the desire, the Desiring- Faculty moves to the order? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to take some portion of Time and find its numerical statement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to think of it as a common property seen alike in all its parts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to think of them as containers of Nature present within them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we to think that this second body, in keeping its soul with a like care, is keeping the same soul as the first? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we told that Motion is necessarily in time, inasmuch as it involves continuity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we told that in a body, a total of parts, every member is also a body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we, then, looking to the brute realm, to hold that there are as many Reason- Principles as distinct creatures born in a litter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we, then, to rank the individual soul, as containing these Reason- Principles, with Sensible Substance? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Are we, then, to refer memory to the perceptive faculty and so make one principle of our nature the seat of both awareness and remembrance? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As a beginning, what is the origin of the Ideas in general? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As being most appropriate? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As for Possession, if the term is used comprehensively, why are not all its modes to be brought under one category? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As for Relation, manifestly an offshoot, how can it be included among primaries? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As for air- air unchanged, retaining its distinctive quality- how could it conduce to the subsistence of a dense material like earth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As having, perhaps, contained them previously? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As itself possessing them or not? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As partibility goes with body, so impartibility with the bodiless: what partition is possible where there is no magnitude? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As the one is a real existence why not the rest? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As what then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | As what, then, is its unity determined? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Aware so far of itself, can it be supposed to halt at that? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Because there is war, we perform some brave feat; how is that our free act since had there been no war it could not have been performed? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Because they possess Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides how are we to reconcile this unity with the distinction of reasoning soul and unreasoning, animal soul and vegetal? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, how are figure and the shape of a given thing to be regarded as a power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, how can it be reasonable for what is found only in a limited number of cases to form a distinct generic category? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, how could powers thus cut off subsist apart from the foundations of their being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, how could such a soul be a bond holding the four elements together when it is a later thing and rises from them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, how does"here"differ from"at Athens"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, how would these resultant fires be distinct, when fire is a continuous unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, if they are simultaneous, why is not actuality given the primacy? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, if we are not to regard them as varieties of magnitude, to what genus are we to assign them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, is there any universal necessity that the existence of one of two contraries should entail the existence of the other? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, is this attitude, this concept itself, a unity or a manifold? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Besides, what would this sense- perception profit the soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Body may communicate qualities or conditions to another body: but- body to Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But Sensible Substance is never found apart from magnitude and quality: how then do we proceed to separate these accidents? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But The Good is without parts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But a graver problem confronts us at the outset: Are the ten found alike in the Intellectual and in the Sensible realms? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But a universe from an unbroken unity, in which there appears no diversity, not even duality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But after what mode does Actualization exist in the Intellectual Realm? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But all the rest must be somewhere; and where but in the First? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But apart from the philosophical separation how does Soul stand to body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But are we able to affirm Vice by any vision we can have of it, or is there some other way of knowing it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But are we really obliged to posit the existence of such genera? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But are we to picture this kind of life as something foreign imported into his nature? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But are we to think of man as including this form of life, the perfect, after the manner of a partial constituent of his entire nature? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But are we, in view of this counter- motion, to recognize the presence of two distinct motions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But body, a non- existence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But by what process was the immunity lost? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But can these inferior kinds of virtue exist without Dialectic and philosophy? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But could it precede Being itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But do not we ourselves assert that the Beings There are essence and Act? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But do variations of judgement affect that very highest in us? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does even this suffice for our First? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does not Likeness by way of Virtue imply Likeness to some being that has Virtue? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does not Quantity exist, and Quality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does not the include that phase of our being which stands above the mid- point? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does not this make it absurd to introduce Souls as responsible causes, some acting for good and some for evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does not this precisely mean that it never ceases to be itself, in other words that its one form is an invincible formlessness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does the Life- Form contain the configurations by the mere fact of its life? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does the entire body of the earth similarly receive anything from the soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does this Base, of the Intellectual Realm, possess eternal existence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does this Power possess the Virtues? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does this Soul- phase in the vegetal order, produce nothing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But does this collective Intellectual- Principle include each of the particular Principles as identical with itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But earth; how is there earth There: what is the being of earth and how are we to represent to ourselves the living earth of that realm? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But failure There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But first we must ask whether Life is a good, bare Life, or only the Life streaming Thence, very different from the Life known here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But from the Divine Beings thus at rest within themselves, how did this Time first emerge? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But has it not, besides itself entering Matter, brought other beings down? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But has our discussion issued in an Intellectual- Principle having a persuasive activity[ furnishing us with probability]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But has the Universe, then, no sensation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But has the light gone inward? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how a disposer with nothing to dispose? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how account, at this, for its extension over all the heavens and all living beings? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how admit a Principle void of self- knowledge, self- awareness; surely the First must be able to say"I possess Being?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how and what does the Intellectual- Principle see and, especially, how has it sprung from that which is to become the object of its vision? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how are Order and this orderer one and the same? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how are the five genera to be regarded? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how are we to classify such terms as"not white"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how are we to differentiate the continuous, comprising as it does line, surface and solid? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how are you to see into a virtuous soul and know its loveliness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can I form the conception of the sizelessness of Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can Matter be common to both spheres, be here and be There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can a mere failure be a power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can air, the yielding element, contain earth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can it be a Form in cases where the motion leads to deterioration, or is purely passive? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can perception and sensation[ implied in ensoulment] be supposed to occur in the earth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can that higher soul have sense- perception? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can the Intellectual- Principle be a product of the Intellectual Object? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can the unextended reach over the defined extension of the corporeal? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can they all be powers? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can this follow on the conjunction when no unity has been produced by the two? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can we conceive a thing having existence without having magnitude? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how can we identify what has never had any touch of Form? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how come these animals of earth to be There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how comes the soul not to keep that ground? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how could Intellect and pleasure combine into one mutually complementary nature? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how could that Principle have such perception, be aware of things of sense? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how could that be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how did this intruder find entrance? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how do we come to know this? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how do we explain likings and aversions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how do you come to have a number to place? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how does it arise from The First? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how does it thus contain the good within itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how does the body come to be separated? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how does the perfection[ goodness] of numbers, lifeless things, depend upon their particular unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how does this spirit come to be the determinant of our fate? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how explain the alternation of timidity and daring in the initiative faculty? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how explain the dyad and triad? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how explain the permanence There, while the content of this sphere- its elements and its living things alike- are passing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how explain the unlimited? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how from amid perfect rest can an Act arise? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how is the ascent to be begun? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how is this to be accomplished? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how lies the course? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how reconcile this unity with the existence of a reasoning soul, an unreasoning, even a vegetal soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how then can number, observed upon things, rank among Real Beings? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how"by the Soul"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how, at that, can it remain a unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how, if not in movement, can it be otherwise than at rest? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how, seeing that the veritable source must be a unity, simplex utterly? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But how? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if Matter by very essence is evil how could it choose the good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if Matter is devoid of quality how can it be evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if Number thus preceded the Beings, then it is not included among them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if Quality is determined by formation and characteristic and Reason- Principle, how explain the various cases of powerlessness and deformity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if Soul is sinless, how come the expiations? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if a man feel himself to be losing his reason? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if all come into existence simultaneously, what else is produced but that amalgam of all Existents which we have just considered[ Intellect]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if all this is true, what room is left for evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if he falls into his enemies''hands, into prison? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if he go unburied? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if he has been hidden away, not with costly ceremony but in an unnamed grave, not counted worthy of a towering monument? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if his nearest be taken from him, his sons and daughters dragged away to captivity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if it is not in time, what causes it to engender time rather than eternity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if life is a good, is there good for all that lives? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if one same object both acts and is acted upon, how do we then explain the active? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if perception does not go by impression, what is the process? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if reasoning soul is the man, why does it not constitute man upon its entry into some other animal form? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if sensation is a movement traversing the body and culminating in Soul, how the soul lack sensation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if so, how can it still be described as indivisible? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if souls in the Supreme operate without reasoning, how can they be called reasoning souls? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if the determinant is the air, and the impression is simply of air- movements, what accounts for the differences among voices and other sounds? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if the mingled strand of life is to us, though entwined with evil, still in the total a good, must not death be an evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if the reclining belongs thus to the category of Relation, why not the recliner also? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if these considerations are sound, why has Quality more than one species? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if they are not in the category of Action, where then in our classification must they fall? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if this Reason- Principle[ Nature] is in act- and produces by the process indicated- how can it have any part in Contemplation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if this be the significance of potentiality, may we describe it as a Power towards the thing that is to be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if we reject even the idea of its really containing at least the patterns upon it, how is it, in any sense, a recipient? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But if, wherever the circling body be, it possesses the Soul, what need of the circling? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But in what mode are these secondaries, and Intellectual- Principle itself, within the First? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But in what sense can we call the virtues purifications, and how does purification issue in Likeness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But in what sense do we even deal with it when we have no hold upon it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But in what way is it that source? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But in what way is the content of Intellectual- Principle participant in good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is Absence this privation itself, or something in which this Privation is lodged? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is an ignorant man a being of knowledge because he is so potentially? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is its vision parcelwise, thing here and thing there? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is not such a void precisely what the Soul experiences when it has no intellection whatever? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is not the Form of Quality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is not this impossible when the object to be thus divided and treated as a thing of grades, is a pure unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is perpetuity enough in itself to constitute an Eternal? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is that conceivable? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is there not something to be said for the memory of the various forms of beauty? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is this Form a good to the thing as being apt to it, does the striving aim at the apt? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is this existence to be taken as identical with that of the stone? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is this handling the result of calculation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is this lower extremity of our intellective phase fettered to body for ever? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But is this simultaneous withdrawal or frank obliteration? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But knowledge- must not this imply presence to the alien? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But magic spells; how can their efficacy be explained? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But might it not be the Intelligible object itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But movement, where? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But must not Privation cease to have existence, when what has been lacking is present at last? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But of what nature is this sovereign principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But of what nature would this contrary be, the contrary to universal existence and in general to the Primals? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But of what soul; of that which we envisage as the more divine, by which we are human beings, or that other which springs from the All? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But on the dissolution of the body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But on this reasoning must not Matter owe its evil to having in some degree participated in good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But ourselves- how does it touch us? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But relatively to that higher, the Soul is a potentiality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But such a process would appear to introduce into the Intellectual that element of change against which we ourselves have only now been protesting? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But suppose that he himself is offered a victim in sacrifice? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But suppose that we identify alteration with Motion on the ground that Motion itself results in difference: how then do we proceed to define Motion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But supposing you do thus"seek no further,"how do you experience it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But surely Potentiality exists in the Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But surely he may affirm merely the goodness, adding nothing: the goodness would be taken without the being and all duality avoided? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But surely not where they exercise no action? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But surely the being qualified by"white"is the same as that having no qualification? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But surely the light has gone inward too? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But take the case where a person with a capacity for education becomes in fact educated: is not potentiality, here, identical with actualization? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But taking Primal Intellection and its intellectual object to be a unity, how does that give an Intellective Being knowing itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But taking Rectitude to be the due ordering of faculty, does it not always imply the existence of diverse parts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But that they are the only primary genera, that there are no others, how can we be confident of this? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But that would be in the nature of grasping a pure unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But the Being of the individual? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But the Movement within the Soul- to what are you to( relate) refer that? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But the Souls that enter into brute bodies, are they controlled by some thing less than this presiding Spirit? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But the Universe outside; how is it aligned towards the Good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But the beauty in the germ, in the particular Reason- Principle- is this the same as the manifested beauty, or do they coincide only in name? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But the memory of friends, children, wife? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But the"We"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But then, how do we account for the powers? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But then, if The Good is an essence, and still more, if It is that which transcends all existence, how can It have any contrary? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But then, where is the water? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But these Reason- Principles, contained in the Soul, are they Thoughts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But these principles producing other forms than man, of what phase of soul are they activities? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But they have no need of Him? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But this Unoriginating, what is it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But this account leaves still a question as to the source and seat of the judgement: does it belong to the Soul or to the Couplement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But this power which determines memory is it also the principle by which the Supreme becomes effective in us? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But this raises the question:"What motive could lead the Logos to produce evil?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | But this science, this Dialectic essential to all the three classes alike, what, in sum, is it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But this would imply an act of providence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But this would mean that after all there are not as many Reason Principles as separate beings? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But those whose descent from the Intellectual is complete, how is it with them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But time is referred to Quantity; what then is the need for a separate category of Date? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But to what nature is This good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But was not the Soul possessed of all this always, or had it forgotten? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But we do not thus sunder Intelligence, one intelligence in this man, another in that? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But we ourselves, what are We? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But we see also that it produces animals; why then should we not argue that it is itself animated? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what accordance is there between the material and that which antedates all Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what approach have we to the knowing of Good and Evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what are we to posit as its species? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what are we to understand by this Zeus with the garden into which, we are told, Poros or Wealth entered? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what becomes of the soul''s infinity if it is thus fixed? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what can there be higher than that which is its own master? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what difference can there be between phase and phase of Indefiniteness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what differences can there be in unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what does it effect now? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what if a man temperamentally good happens to enter a disordered body, or if a perfect body falls to a man naturally vicious? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what if accepting its existence, we think of that existence as leaving still the possibility that it were not a thing to be embraced? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what if he be put beyond himself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what if it is a pattern or condition? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what if one be deceived? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what if we are invited to accept the theory of knowledge by likeness( rejecting knowledge by the self- sensitiveness of a living unity)? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what if[ the superficial appearance such as] the visible whiteness in ceruse is constitutive? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is it that awakens all this passion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is that whose entry supplies every such need? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the Nature of this Spirit- of the Supernals in general? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the Nature of this Transcendent in view of which and by way of which the Ideas are good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the action of this fear upon the Mind? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the cause of this initial personality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the common element in them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the comprehensive principle of co- ordination? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the constant element in alteration, in growth and birth and their opposites, in local change? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the difference between the Wisdom thus conducting the universe and the principle known as Nature? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the function of the active in connection with those non- living powers which we have classed as qualities? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the root of this evil state? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is the significance of the Lots? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is their common basis, seeing that the First are the source from which the Second derive their right to be called substances? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is there so grievous in magnitude? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is this acting by it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is this escape? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what is this flight? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what led to this provision? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what must we do? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what of chastisements, poverty, illness, falling upon the good outside of all justice? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what of murder? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what of sorrows, illnesses and all else that inhibit the native activity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what of that"Number within us having its own manner of being"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what of the Infinite Number we hear of; does not all this reasoning set it under limit? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what of the decad? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what of the memory of mental acts: do these also fall under the imaging faculty? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what order of beings will attain the Term? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what participation can the Celestials have in Matter, and in what Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what perception? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what place could there be for the other elements? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what place is left for the particular souls, yours and mine and another''s? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what precludes the Intellectual- Principle from being present, unalloyed, within the soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what really was it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what sort of an entity have we there; what is this body which of its own nature possesses soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what sort of thing is the Line in the Intellectual and what place does it hold? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what way of remembering the Supreme is left if the souls have turned to the sense- known kosmos, and are to fall into this sphere of process? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what will emerge from the relation of like to like? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But what, we may ask, have Matter and Form in common? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But when any material thing is severed, must not the Matter be divided with it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But when he is out of himself, reason quenched by sickness or by magic arts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But when there is no pain, what occurs? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But whence does He draw that will seeing that essence, source of will, is inactive in Him? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But whence does this science derive its own initial laws? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But whence that circular movement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But where does this thing lie? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why are not all the powers of this unity present everywhere? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why are they not at man''s level of reason: why also the difference from man to man? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why are they thus good in themselves? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why does not one same soul enter more than one body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why does the existence of the Principle of Good necessarily comport the existence of a Principle of Evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why even of them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why have we to call in Philosophy to make the Soul immune if it is thus immune from the beginning? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why is it not merely present everywhere but in addition nowhere- present? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why is not the soul in one man aware, then, of the judgement passed by another? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why is the Intellectual- Principle not the generating source? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why not, since it is a phase of Life, a Reason- Principle and a creative Power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why should it not be simply a dyad? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why should one order of Celestial descend to body and another not? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why should the Form which makes a thing good be a good to that thing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But why, thus, two phases of desire; why should not the body as a determined entity[ the living total] be the sole desirer? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But will not each item in that multiplicity be an object of intellection to us? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But would not all this mean that the First does not even live? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But would not this indicate that the Authentic is diverse, multiple? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But would not this make virtue a state of the Divine also? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But would this mean that if there were no Matter nothing would exist? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, Memory of what sort of experiences? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, admitting this one soul at every point, how is there a particular soul of the individual and how the good soul and the bad? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, again, if life is good, how can death be anything but evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, at least, in a true entry? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, first what prevents every one of the Celestials from being an Eros, a Love? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, first, if multiplicity holds a true place among Beings, how can it be an evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, having fire[ warmth] and water, it will certainly have vegetation; how does vegetation exist There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, if all this be true, how can evil fall within the scope of seership? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, if the stars announce the future- as we hold of many other things also- what explanation of the cause have we to offer? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, in sum, do we abandon the teaching that all the elements enter into the composition of every living thing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, is there any such likeness between the loveliness of this world and the splendours in the Supreme? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, it may be asked, why not regard Motion as the negation of Stability? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, itself thus sharing in the movement, how can it be a Measure of Movement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, meanwhile, what happens to it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, since the expression"this place"must be taken to mean the All, how explain the words"mortal nature"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, soul reached, why need we look higher; why not make this The First? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, surely, this excuses them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, this being so, the power will belong, not to the positions but to the beings holding those positions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, thus, the wicked disappear? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, to begin with, why at this should not the affirmation of Being pass equally as an attitude of mind so that Being too must disappear? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, to return to activity proper and the action, is there any reason why these should be referred to Relation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, waiving this objection, how deal with qualities perceived by the same sense- organ? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But, we ask, how, possibly, can these affections pass from body to Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | But[ if the line is a quantity] why is not the product of three lines included in Quantity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | By being a distinct form of the Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | By memory of what it has seen? |
plotinus-six-1904 | By the variety of sense- organs? |
plotinus-six-1904 | By very nature and for ever? |
plotinus-six-1904 | By what faculty in us could we possibly know Evil? |
plotinus-six-1904 | By what image thus, can we represent it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | By what process? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can He, then, be master of being what He is or master to stand above Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can a power merely physical make rich or poor? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can he think it an evil to die beside the altars? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can it be aware of knowing its members and yet remain in ignorance of its own knowing self? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can it be identified with the[ divine or] Intellectual Substance itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can it be that the fact of motion existing elsewhere creates the Passion, which was not Passion in the agent? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can it be that they are also in a manner quantitative? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can it be waiting for certain souls still here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can it bring about such conditions as in no sense depend upon the interaction of corporeal elements? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can it have self- knowledge in the sense[ dismissed above as inadequate] of knowing its content while it ignores itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can there be Unmeasure apart from an unmeasured object? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can there be question as to whether the gods have voluntary action? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can we conceive it stealing out from stones and rocks or whatever else envelops it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Can we distinguish between Actuality[ an absolute, abstract Principle] and the state of being- in- act? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Conferring- but how? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Consciousness of the Good as existent or non- existent? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Consider, however, the proposition"Socrates- or some action- exists at this time"; what can be the meaning here other than"in a part of time"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Could He then have made Himself otherwise than as He did? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Could anyone, not fallen to utter folly, bear with such an idea? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Could either welfare or happiness be present under such conditions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Could he have quitted the world in the calm conviction that nothing of all this could happen? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Country too, and all that the better sort of man may reasonably remember? |
plotinus-six-1904 | D.( 12) Soul belongs, then, to another Nature: What is this? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Do all qualities constitute differentiae, or not? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Do not all troubles- long- lasting pains, sorrows, and everything of that type- yield a greater sum of misery in the longer time? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Do these considerations suffice to a clear understanding of the Intellectual Sphere, or must we make yet another attempt by another road? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Do they form particulars by being broken up into parts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Do we infer that fire and water are not Substance? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does each individual Soul, then, contain within itself such a Love in essence and substantial reality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does it all come down, then, to one phase of the self knowing another phase? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does it amount to an utter absence of Knowledge, as if the Soul or Mind had withdrawn? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does it consist of fire only, or is it mainly of fire with the other elements, as well, taken up and carried in the circuit by the dominant Principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does it exist then only in the things participating in it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does it follow that if a man as he walks produces footprints, he can not be considered to have performed an action? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does it follow that whenever alteration proceeds from Quality, it will be activity and Action, the quale remaining impassive? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does not Measure exist apart from unmeasured things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does not this imply potentiality even in the Intellectual Existences? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does the Intellectual Realm include no member of this spirit order, not even one? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does the higher realm contain all of the lower? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does the similarity with the Prior consist, then, in a voluntary resting upon it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does this apply to triangularity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does this imply that the nature of Being is not good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does this indicate a Necessity which has brought itself into existence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does this mean that the First is to be described as happening to be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Does this mean that the Soul reasons by possession[ by contact with the matters of enquiry]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Earth, too? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Enough on that point: we come now to the question of memory of the personality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Even granted that it is entirely unaffected by its lower, why, still, should it not see like an eye, ensouled as it is, all lightsome? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Evil to What? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Finally, how by this theory would there be beauty in the Intellectual- Principle, essentially the solitary? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Finally, how is it possible to class learning and being taught as integrations? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Finally, one or many, what would such a Principle be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Fire, again: is earth perhaps necessary there since fire is by its own nature devoid of continuity and not a thing of three dimensions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | First then: In what sense, precisely, is any given particular called and known to be a unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | First, what is it, what the mode of its being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Firstly, what is the seat of Sense- Perception? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For Movement is aiming, and the Primal aims at nothing; what could the Summit aspire to? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For how could they declare a Decad save in the light of numbers within themselves? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For if once it makes away of its own will, why should it not always escape? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For instance, health and freedom from pain; which of these has any great charm? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For of what will they be substrates, when that which could make them substrates is eliminated? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For sight it would not need eyes- though if light is indispensable how can it see? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For what can reasoning be but a struggle, the effort to discover the wise course, to attain the principle which is true and derives from real- being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For what conceivably turns a man to the external? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For what could be added to the fullest life to make it the best life? |
plotinus-six-1904 | For what is body but earth, and, taking fire itself, what[ but soul] is its burning power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Form- Idea, pure and simple, they can not be: for without Matter how could things stand in their mass and magnitude? |
plotinus-six-1904 | From Intellect? |
plotinus-six-1904 | From self- contemplation, then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | From what source then did Matter receive ensoulment? |
plotinus-six-1904 | From what source, then, we retort, does Matter itself derive existence and being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Further, how can States constitute a single genus, when there is such manifold diversity among them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Further, how explain that under this illumination the Matter of the Kosmos produces images of the order of Soul instead of mere bodily- nature? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Further, if Eternity is Repose, what becomes of Eternal Movement, which, by this identification, would become a thing of Repose? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Further, if what enters must be an Ideal- Principle how could it set Matter aflame? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Further, if"boxer"is in the category of Quality, why not"agent"as well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Further, is the questing determined by the hope of some acquisition or by sheer delight? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Further, why should any distress of theirs work harm to us? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Furthermore, what being will it have when we separate it from its other components? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Given a Movement measured, are we to suppose the measure to be a magnitude? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Given the power to contemplate the Authentic, who would run, of choice, after its image? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Glory? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Has It, even, no Intellection of Itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Has anything happened to it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Has it, perhaps, actuality in some cases only, as for instance in what is termed"posterior"but not in what is termed"prior"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Have we any means of calculating disconnected and lawless Movement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Here can be no deceit; where could she come upon truer than the truth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Here, it is obvious, goodness depends upon order, rhythm, but what equivalent exists There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Here, surely, it must be soul alone? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How are we to classify the straight line? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How are we to explain the omnipresence of the soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How are we to gain the open sea? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can Time be in any sense a State? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can a lessening of the life- quality produce an increase such as Sense- Perception? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can it be the Matter of real things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can it convey what it does not possess, and yet if it does possess how is it simplex? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can it, so, maintain itself as a unity, an identity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can other things exist over and above this all- including amalgam? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can reason abdicate and declare nearer to good than itself something lying in a contrary order? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can such an allotment be approved? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can the Act, necessarily a simple entity, be both Act and Passion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can the elements of a thing be brought within the same genus as the thing itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can there any contrary to the Absolute Good, when the absolute has no quality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can there be a difference of power between one triangular configuration and another? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can there be the exercise of power from man to man; under what law, and within what limits? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can this be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can this fact be explained, since both the liquid and the solid are bodily substances? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can this highest have need of any other? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can we allow power to colour and none to configuration? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can we group together three yards long"and"white"- Quantity and Quality respectively? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can we so dispart Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can we talk of it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can we think any longer of that"Thus He happened to be"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How can"yesterday,""last year,""in the Lyceum,""in the Academy,"be States at all? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How comes it that the same surface causes produce different results? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How comes it then that everyone speaks of soul as being in body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How comes the total to be unitary and any particular number to be brought under unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How could any form or degree of life come about by a blend of the elements? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How could anything be present in anything else unless in virtue of a source existing independently of association? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How could chance, recognised as the very opposite of reason, be its Author? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How could it pass out of being, a thing that once has been? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How could suffering, for example, be seated in this Couplement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How could the Man have come to desire at all unless through a prior activity in the Desiring- Faculty? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How could there be any statement of difference unless all sense- impressions appeared before a common identity able to take the sum of all? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How do physical powers form a distinct species? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How do they occur in the stars? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How do you form the concept of any absence of quality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How does Motion produce species of Motion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How does it occur that Matter sometimes turns into bodies, while another part of it turns into Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How does the mind pronounce? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How else can He know either that they are here, or that in their sojourn here they have not forgotten Him and fallen away? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How explain either the action of any single star independently or, still more perplexing, the effect of their combined intentions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How explain that in a world organized in good, the efficient agents[ human beings] behave unjustly, commit sin? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How far is it true that equality and inequality are characteristic of Quantity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How have We Sense- Perception? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How in sum can the things of this realm be also There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How indeed are we to define Quality but by the aspect which a substance presents? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How is its plurality a unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How is its unity a plurality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How is the self to make the partition? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How is what is termed the"dividing"effected- especially the dividing of the genera Being and unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How lies the path? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How make this one assertion of Him of whom all other assertion can be no more than negation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then can a multitude of essential beings be really one? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then can an Existent be relative to a Non- existent, except accidentally? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then can the Form take a lower rank? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then can this one motion be both Action and Passion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then can we debate which is the cause of the other, where the nature is one? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then can we deny to it either Being or anything at all that may exist effectively, anything that may derive from it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then did they ever fall from it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then do the four genera complete Substance without qualifying it or even particularizing it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then do we explain desire and other forms of aspiration? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then do we go to work? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then does it produce what it does not contain? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then does the universal Intellect produce the particulars while, in virtue of its Reason- Principle, remaining a unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then shall we distinguish relations? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then will the moved, the patient, participate in the motion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How would it set to work? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, for instance, did it come to make fire before anything else? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then, are we to distinguish black from white? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then, are we to form any conception of its being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then, are we to recognise Passivity, since clearly it is not to be found in the Act from outside which the recipient in turn makes his own? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then, can anyone deny that it is a clear image, beautifully formed, of the Intellectual Divinities? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then, do we characterize the unity[ thus diverse] in Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then, do we come to use the term? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then, do we ourselves come to be speaking of it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then, is it present? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | How, therefore, can it be actually anything? |
plotinus-six-1904 | IS THERE AN IDEAL ARCHETYPE OF PARTICULAR BEINGS? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Identity with what God? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If He made the mid- world first, what end was it to serve? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If Soul is so lovely in its own right, of what quality must that prior be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If a fire is to warm something else, must there be a fire to warm that fire? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If all things belong to the produced, which of them can be thought of as the Supreme? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If any memory at all remained, what other desire could it have than to retrace the way? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If any one says,"Still; what precludes the reasoning soul from observing its own content by some special faculty?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | If by The Good we mean the principle most wholly self- sufficing, utterly without need of any other, what can it be but this? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If from eternity, then the Soul must be essentially a fallen thing: if at some one moment, why not before that? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If in that realm also there must be a unity apart from anything that can be called one thing, why should there not exist another unity as well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If in the other world, how came they to this? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If in this world, why are they not already raised from it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it be allowed that in this state, resting as it were in a slumber, he remains a Sage, why should he not equally remain happy? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it be taken into the All- Soul- what evil can reach it There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it had to direct itself to a memberless unity, it would be dereasoned: what could it say or know of such an object? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it is a matter of delight, why here rather than in something else? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it is a reality, in what way does it differ from its original? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it is an Intellection, then we ask first"What justifies the name?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it quits the place, what has driven it out? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it repents of its work, what is it waiting for? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If it stays, how does the disease disappear, with the cause still present? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If not every pneuma is a soul, but thousands of them soulless, and only the pneuma in this"certain state"is soul, what follows? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If on the contrary the objects of Intellectual- Principle are without intelligence and life, what are they? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If other guides of conduct must be called in to meet a given need, can this virtue hold its ground even in mere potentiality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If so, which of these two would be Time, the measured movement or the measuring magnitude? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If the meaning is simply that Souls exhibit the Ideal- Form of the Universe, what is there distinctive in the teaching? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If the severance of the air by such bodies leaves it unaffected, why must there be any severance before the images of sight can reach us? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If the soul in me is a unity, why need that in the universe be otherwise seeing that there is no longer any question of bulk or body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If then goodness is similarly observed in every part of Substance or Being, or in most parts, why is goodness not a genus, and a primary genus? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If then we do not propose to divide Quality in this[ fourfold] manner, what basis of division have we? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If then, we may ask, in the analogue the faculty of sensation is treated as relative to the sensible object, why not the sensory act as well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If there be no distinctions, what is there to do, what direction in which to move? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If there is acquisition, what is it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If this is a state of some peculiar kind, what precisely is its differentia? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If this is the soul once it has returned to its self, how deny that it is the nature we have identified with all the divine and eternal? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If this is true of every one of the stars, why should it not be so of the earth, a living part of the living All? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If this principle were not beautiful, what other could be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If thus virtue whose manifestation requires action becomes inevitably a collaborator under compulsion, how can it have untrammelled self- disposal? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If we answer"The Making Principle,"there comes the question,"making by what virtue?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | If we subtract them- magnitude, figure, colour, dryness, moistness- what is there left to be regarded as Substance itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If we thus exonerate the Reason- Principle from any part in wickedness do we not also cancel its credit for the good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If you cut the root to pieces, or burn it, where is the life that was present there? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If, moreover, Quality itself be devoid of Quality, how can Matter, which is the unqualified, be said to have it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If, on the contrary, the continuous possesses Quantity as an accident, what is there common to both continuous and discrete to make them quantities? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If, then, it is the presence of soul that brings worth, how can a man slight himself and run after other things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If, then, it were to make foolish assertions, affirming itself to be what it is not and can not be, to what should we ascribe this folly? |
plotinus-six-1904 | If, then, neither the Intellectual- Principle nor the Intelligible Object can be the First Existent, what is? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In a word, is powerlessness a power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In general terms: When a potentiality has taken a definite form, does it retain its being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In light, thick and lean? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In other words, how do the various grades of Being, as we call them, arise from the four primaries? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In other words, they have seen God and they do not remember? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In the Supreme, then, what is it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In the moved? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In the mover? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In the sense, perhaps, of sustaining things as bestower of the unity of each single item? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In their substrates? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what mode then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what respect, then, do they differ? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what sense can Matter be conceived as a genus, and what will be its species? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what sense is the particular manifestation of Being a unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what sense, at that, can we hold our goodness to be our own free act, our fine conduct to be uncompelled? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what sense, then, do we assert this Unity, and how is it to be adjusted to our mental processes? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what sense, then, is it said to elude form? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what substantial- form[ hypostasis] then is all this to be found- not as accident but as the very substance itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In what thought is this love to find its guide? |
plotinus-six-1904 | In which genus, Matter or Form, are we to rank the composite of both? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is Dialectic, then, the same as Philosophy? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is Likeness, then, attained, perhaps, not by these virtues of the social order but by those greater qualities known by the same general name? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is The Good, then, inherent in the Ideas essentially? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is Time, perhaps, a Measure in this sense? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is every part of the soul, in any one body, soul entire, soul perfectly true to its essential being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is everything, then, to be attributed to the act of the Reason- Principles? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is he, in virtue of his non- essential ignorance, potentially an instructed being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it We or the Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it a question of part in the sense that, taking one living being, the soul in a finger might be called a part of the soul entire? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it alike for all, or is there a distinct method for each class of temperament? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it because each member of it is an Idea or because of their beauty or how? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it because in us the governing and the answering principles are many and there is no sovereign unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it because the All necessarily comports the existence of Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it enough to put faith in the soul''s choice and call that good which the soul pursues, never asking ourselves the motive of its choice? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it existent only in the defining thought, so to speak? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it not a true purification to turn away towards the exact contrary of earthly things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it not potentially musical, and everything else that it has not been and becomes? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it possible that fluid be blended with fluid in such a way that each penetrate the other through and through? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it possible to think that Happiness increases with Time, Happiness which is always taken as a present thing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it something which, while distinct from body, still belongs to it, for example a harmony or accord? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it suggested that its mere Alienism is a quality in Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it that Action starts from within and is directed upon an outside object, while Passion is derived from without and fulfilled within? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it the Actualization of a statue, where the combination is realized because the Form- Idea has mastered each separate constituent of the total? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it the capacity to serve as a base? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it the extent of the subordinate Movement[= movement of things of earth]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it the same division, or is it different in the two cases? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it the unity of origin in a unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it to be identified with Bring[ the Absolute], while to some differentia of Being is ascribed the production of Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it, then, some phenomenon or connection of Movement? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is it, then, suspended at some one point, or rocking to and fro? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is memory vested in the faculty by which we perceive and learn? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is mere personal existence good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is not the potentially wise Socrates the same man as the Socrates actually wise? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is she ripe, perhaps, to bring forth, now that in her pangs she has come so close to what she seeks? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is soul to be identified with unity on the ground that unless it were one thing it could not be soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is space, pure and simple, all that is necessary? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is the Bronze a power towards a statue? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is the Reason- Principle itself a reasoning living being or merely a maker of that reasoning life- form? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is the differentiating element to be found in the varying resistance of the material of the body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is the potentiality, itself, in actualization? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is the solution, perhaps, that man is potentially both good and bad but becomes the one or the other by force of act? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is then that"being"distinct from what else goes to complete the essence[ or substance] of Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is then this"centre"of our souls the Principle for which we are seeking? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is there none? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is there some One Principle from which all take their grace, or is there a beauty peculiar to the embodied and another for the bodiless? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is this the appropriate parallel? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is this unity, then, connate and coexistent to the Beings? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is, then, becoming ill identical with becoming well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Is, then, this Privation simply a non- existence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Isolated, self- acting, how is it possible? |
plotinus-six-1904 | It comes to this: we ask"What is Time?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | It could not be necessary to knowledge: surely the consciousness of wisdom suffices to beings which have nothing to gain from sensation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | It derives from a Contemplation and some contemplating Being; how are we to suppose it to have Contemplation itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | It has nothing to say as yet; it accepts and waits; unless, rather, it questions within itself"Who is this? |
plotinus-six-1904 | It is indubitable that Potentiality exists in the Realm of Sense: but does the Intellectual Realm similarly include the potential or only the actual? |
plotinus-six-1904 | It may be suggested that the decad is nothing more than so many henads; admitting the one henad why should we reject the ten? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Its decline could consist only in its forgetting the Divine: but if it forgot, how could it create? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Its eternity and universal reach entail neither measure nor measurelessness; given either, how could it be the measure of things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Its mere body, perhaps? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Knowledge, too; in their unbroken peace, what hinders them from the intellectual grasp of the God- Head and the Intellectual Gods? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Life, pure, is never a burden; how then could there be weariness There where the living is most noble? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Likeness to what Principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Love is represented as homeless, bedless and barefooted: would not that be a shabby description of the Kosmos and quite out of the truth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Love, again, is called the Dispenser of beautiful children: does this apply to the Universe? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Matter, on which all this universe rises, a non- existence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May not it change and so come to destruction? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May the truth be this: that similarity is predicable of Quantity only in so far as Quantity possesses[ qualitative] differences? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May we not take it that there may be identical reproduction from one Period to another but not in the same Period? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May we not, then, consider straightness as a differentia of"line"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May we put it that a thing desirable to one is good to that one and that what is desirable to all is to be recognised as The Good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May we stop, content, with that? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May we suppose the Soul to be appropriated on the lower ranges to some individual, but to belong on the higher to that other sphere? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May we think that the mode of the soul''s presence to body is that of the presence of light to the air? |
plotinus-six-1904 | May we, perhaps, identify Eternity with Repose- There as Time has been identified with Movement- Here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Mentally, to our approach? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Might not one[ archetypal] man suffice for all, and similarly a limited number of souls produce a limitless number of men? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Must we then suppose a common faculty of apprehension[ one covering both sense perceptions and ideas] and assign memory in both orders to this? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Next, is this image a real- being, or, as they say, an Intellection? |
plotinus-six-1904 | No doubt strength and grace of form go well enough with the idea of rarefied body; but what can this rarefied body want with moral excellence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | No doubt there is the passage"Whatever Intellect sees in the entire Life- Form"; thus seeing, must not the Intellectual- Principle be the later? |
plotinus-six-1904 | No one says that it has no nature; and if it has any nature at all, why may not that nature be evil though not in the sense of quality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | No: How could there be a true entry into that which, by being falsity, is banned from ever touching truth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | No: it exceeds it by two; we do not say that it differs: how could it differ by a"two"in the"three"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | None the less the soul, even in the Intellectual Realm, is under the dispensation of a variety confronting it and a content of its own? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Nothing, we admit; but are we entitled therefore to think of it as a phase of soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now Movement has Being as an accident and therefore should have Reality as an accident; or is it something serving to the completion of Reality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now comes the question of the soul leaving the body; where does it go? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now comes the question what sort of thing does the Intellectual- Principle see in seeing the Intellectual Realm and what in seeing itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now how do these things come to be here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now if continuous magnitude derives its quantity from number, and number is not a genus, how can magnitude hold that status? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now if in body, whose very nature is partition, there is no incursion of the alien, how can there be any in the order in which no partition exists? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now if, thus, it enters into other substances from something gleaming, could it exist in the absence of its container? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now what could bring fear to a nature thus unreceptive of all the outer? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now what does this tell us? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now what in all these objects of desire is the fundamental making them good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now what is the beauty here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now what is the foundation of reasoned plan? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now what other[ Divine] Kinds could there be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now whence came that Darkness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now, can it know those objects alone or must it not simultaneously know itself, the being whose function it is to know just those things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now, can we think that the star- grouping over any particular birth can be the cause of what stands already announced in the facts about the parents? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now, in the first place, if the Soul has not actually come down but has illuminated the darkness, how can it truly be said to have declined? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Now, what is this that gives grace to the corporeal? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Of all things the best, must it not be The Good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Of the vegetal soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Of those that advance these wild pretensions, who is so well ordered, so wise, as the Universe? |
plotinus-six-1904 | On instinct which the Sage finally rectifies in every respect? |
plotinus-six-1904 | On the other hand, why do we not find in the category of Quantity"great"and"small"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | On what subject can we more reasonably expend the time required by minute discussion and investigation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Once again, where is Sense- Perception seated? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Once more, how does the particular Intellect come to this differentiation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Once more, then, what constitutes the goodness of Life? |
plotinus-six-1904 | One thing confers beauty and another takes it: is that which takes beauty to be regarded as patient? |
plotinus-six-1904 | One, in the sense of being one Reason- Principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or Form? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or again Time and Place? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or again, do both classes overlap, some principles being also genera, and some genera also principles? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or are all found in the Sensible and some only in the Intellectual? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or are they no more than necessary concomitants to the Ideas? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or does it reside in the faculty by which we set things before our minds as objects of desire or of anger, the passionate faculty? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or is it perhaps rather the case that while not all genera are first- principles, all first- principles are at the same time genera? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or is it, perhaps, sometimes to be thought of as a God or Spirit and sometimes merely as an experience? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or is its actuality in no case conceivable? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or is the converse true? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or is there, perhaps, no responsibility? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or is this unity not something different from the mere sum of these Principles? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or may we not appropriate that principle- which belongs to us as we to it- and thus attain to awareness, at once, of it and of ourselves? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or must we confine Passion to purely qualitative change? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or of the intrusion of anything alien? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or what are we to think? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or what do we gain by seeing the Ideas themselves if we see only a particular Idea and nothing else[ nothing"substantial"]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or what enables it to pronounce that the object is good, beautiful, or just, when each of these ideas is to stand apart from itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or what other earth than this could have been modelled after that earth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or will both be regarded as motions or as involving Motion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or will the part of the parts have none? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or would this school reject the word Sister? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or, if it does, what, at any rate, are we to think of good and bad fortune, rich men and poor, gentle blood, treasure- trove? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Or, indeed, what operative tendency could it have even to That since a prior separation is the necessary condition of tendency? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Perhaps activity, action and agent should all be embraced under a single head? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Perhaps in what has already been uttered, there lies the charm if only we tell it over often? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Perhaps, then, it reaches to earth but is not master over all? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Perhaps, then, those are in the right who found happiness not on the bare living or even on sensitive life but on the life of Reason? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Pleasure and distress, fear and courage, desire and aversion, where have these affections and experiences their seat? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Possibly, however, they act not by choice but under stress of their several positions and collective figures? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Quality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Quantity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Reason acquits plant and animal and, their maker; how can it complain because men do not stand above humanity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Reasoning beings, all very well; but this host of the unreasoning, what is there august in them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Reference, then, to something outside or to something contained within itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Relation, and all else included by our various forerunners? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Secondly, what must a thing be to take Indefiniteness as an attribute? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Secondly: Does unity as used of Being carry the same connotation as in reference to the Absolute? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Secondly: Will all activities be related to passivity, or will some- for example, walking and speaking- be considered as independent of it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Shall we deny that it is a magnitude? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Should we, perhaps, distinguish between compulsion in the act and freedom in the preceding will and reasoning? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Since the Supreme has no interval, no self- differentiation what can have this intuitional approach to it but itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Since then the All- Soul- to use the more familiar term- since Aphrodite herself is so beautiful, what name can we give to that other? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Since there is no Universe nobler than this, is it not clear what this must be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Since, then, partition goes with place- each part occupying a place of its own- how can the placeless be parted? |
plotinus-six-1904 | So far, so good: but what of the passage in the Philebus taken to imply that the other souls are parts of the All- Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | So it is with all the compounds of earth and fire, even with water and air added to them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | So that Matter here[ as only an image of Indefiniteness] would be less indefinite? |
plotinus-six-1904 | So this Principle is not the only effective force in all men? |
plotinus-six-1904 | So with planning; where one only of two things can be, what place is there for plan? |
plotinus-six-1904 | So with the numbers themselves: how can they constitute the category of Quantity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | So, the Sage would have desired misfortune? |
plotinus-six-1904 | So, the initiative faculty; is it not, itself, altered as one varies between timidity and boldness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Something happens to A; does that make it happen to B? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Sorrow, too, and anger and pleasure, desire and fear- are these not changes, affectings, present and stirring within the Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Soul too? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Source and spring of so much, how describe its goodness and greatness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Space, again, in the strict sense is unembodied, and is not, itself, body; why, then, should it need soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Speech, time, motion- in what sense are these quantities? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still more, what does it matter when they are devoured only to return in some new form? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still the one life has known pleasure longer than the other? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still, how account for the many souls, many intelligences, the beings by the side of the Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still, how can a Reason- Principle[ the Intellectual], characteristically a manifold, a total, derive from what is obviously no Reason- Principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still, how did the inferior Principle ever come into being, and how does the higher fall to it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still, how is this possible to us who exist in Time? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still, is not this Principle subject to its essential Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still, must not the nature of this Undetermined be annulled by the entry of Determination, especially where this is no mere attribute? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still, this integral omnipresence admitted, why do not all things participate in the Intellectual Order in its entirety? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Still; we perceive by means of the perceptive faculty and are, ourselves, the percipients: may we not say the same of the intellective act? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Such a likeness in the particulars would make the two orders alike: but what is there in common between beauty here and beauty There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Such a power, author of Intellectual- Principle, author of being- how does it lend itself to chance, to hazard, to any"So it happened"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Such designing was not even possible; how could the plan for a universe come to one that had never looked outward? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Suppose this Passion to be treated as of itself producing pain: have we not still the duality of agent and patient, two results from the one Act? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Suppose, on the other hand, we ignore the genera and combine the particulars: what then becomes of the ignored genera? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Supposing however that the actual does come later than the potential, how must the theory proceed? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Surely the Soul is potentially the living- being of this world before it has become so? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Surely the bodily modification and other experience that have accompanied the sundering, must have occurred, identically, within the Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Surely the undetermined could be brought to quality and pattern in the one comprehensive act? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Surely the very contrary? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Surely they must be morally good: what could prevent them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Take Substance, for Substance must certainly be our starting- point: what are the grounds for regarding Substance as one single genus? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Take the learner: how can he be regarded as passive, seeing that the Act of the agent passes into him[ and becomes his Act]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Taking it that the presentment of fancy is not a matter of our will and choice, how can we think those acting at its dictation to be free agents? |
plotinus-six-1904 | That Life, the various, the all- including, the primal and one, who can consider it without longing to be of it, disdaining all the other? |
plotinus-six-1904 | That is to say that the dominant is the spirit which takes possession of the human being at birth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | That of causation or of indication? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The Intellectual- Principle taken separately, perhaps? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The Soul''s virtue, then, is this alignment? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The Universe is a thing of variety, and how could there be an inferior without a superior or a superior without an inferior? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The being of a stone? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The duality, thus, is a unity; but how is this unity also a plurality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The elements are sizeless, and how conceive an attribute where there is neither base nor bulk? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The emanation, then, must be less good, that is to say, less self- sufficing: now what must that be which is less self- sufficing than The One? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The extent of the Movement of the All, then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The nourishing faculty as dependent from the All belongs also to the All- Soul: why then does it not come equally from ours? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The phase that decides to be the knower or that which is to be the known? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The predictions of the seers are based on observation of the Universal Circuit: how can this indicate the evil with the good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The question may here be asked:"What deficiency has grammar compared with a particular grammar, and science as a whole in comparison with a science?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | The question thus becomes,"What principle is the giver of wisdom to the soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The suffering member is one thing, the sense of suffering is another: how does this happen? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The symmetry of being accordant with each other? |
plotinus-six-1904 | The will was included in the essence; they were identical: or was there something, this will for instance, not existing in Him? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then Matter is simply Alienism[ the Principle of Difference]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then again, all the virtues are a beauty of the soul, a beauty authentic beyond any of these others; but how does symmetry enter here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then again, if it steps in where no cause of sickness exists, why should there be anything else but illness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then again, what is the origin of that pattern world? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then free and alone at last, what will it have to remember? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then has it perhaps such a consciousness as we have of our own inner conditions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then how can the knowing phase know itself in the known when it has chosen to be the knower and put itself apart from the known? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then it is the Desiring- Faculty that takes the lead? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then the Reason- Principle has measured things out with the set purpose of inequality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then the Soul has let this image fall? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then there is growth under a time- law, and within a definite limit: how can this belong strictly to body? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then what prevents our ranking the sphere also as a quality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then why are these conditions sought and their contraries repelled by the man established in happiness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then why are they Substance? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then why does not Motion remain in it, once having come? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then yet again, the one word Intellection covers two distinct Acts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then, at least he must say"I am good?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then, everything, in the intellectual is in actualization and so all There is Actuality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Then, since the fire of the sidereal system has attained its goal, why does it not stay at rest? |
plotinus-six-1904 | There has been no coming so that you can put it to the question"How does this come to be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | There is vision, then, in this approach of the Mind towards Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | These higher beings, too, obey their own nature; where then is their freedom? |
plotinus-six-1904 | They are measures; but how do measures come to be quantities or Quantity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Thirdly: Will all those related to passivity be classed as motions and the independent as Acts, or will the two classes overlap? |
plotinus-six-1904 | This Magnitude- Absolute, then, enters and beats the Matter out into Magnitude? |
plotinus-six-1904 | This Principle, of which the sun is an image, where has it its dawning, what horizon does it surmount to appear? |
plotinus-six-1904 | This is what our discussion has aimed at from the first:"What, essentially, is Time?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | This pneuma- orderless except under soul- how can it contain order, reason, intelligence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | This question, however, applies to all the categories: are the two spheres irreconcilable, or can they be co- ordinated with a unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To be a dwelling- place for Souls? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To begin with, how is Number consistent with infinity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To begin with, what must be intended when we assert that something is in our power; what is the conception here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To essay its power of knowing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To itself? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To return, then: how and why has the All- Soul produced a kosmos, while the particular souls simply administer some one part of it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To return: How is that Power present to the universe? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To the man in this state, what is the Good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To what Divine Being, then, would our Likeness be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To what could its Intellection be directed? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To what order of beings does it belong? |
plotinus-six-1904 | To what, then, is the highest degree due? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Touch conveys a direct impression of a visible object; what gives us the same direct impression of an object of hearing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Turn to what is attractive in methods of life or in the expression of thought; are we to call in symmetry here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Under the presence of all; agreed: but with the dominance of the very same? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Under what form can we think of repose in the Intellectual Principle as contrasted with its movement or utterance? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Very good: but is it not different before and after acquiring the memory? |
plotinus-six-1904 | We come, so, to the question whether Purification is the whole of this human quality, virtue, or merely the forerunner upon which virtue follows? |
plotinus-six-1904 | We marshal demonstration as to the nature of everything else; is the good to be dismissed as choice? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Well, but take the unhappy man: must not increase of time bring an increase of his unhappiness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Well, in hearing magnitude is known incidentally; but how? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Well- in the play of this very moment am I engaged in the act of Contemplation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What Act indeed, could be vested in Activity''s self? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What Being has raised so noble a fabric? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What Earlier or Later would there be, what long- lasting or short- lasting? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What Soul could contain Evil unless by contact with the lower Kind? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What answer can be made by those declaring soul to be corporeal? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What answer do we give to him who, with no opinion of his own to assert, asks us to explain this presence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What answer is to be made? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What are we to conceive as rising in the neighbourhood of that immobility? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What art is there, what method, what discipline to bring us there where we must go? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What can be imagined to give us a wisdom higher than belongs to the Supernals? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What can defensive horns serve to There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What can justify this assigning of parts to the soul, the distinguishing one part from another? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What can we conceive to escape the self- knowledge of a principle which admittedly knows the place it holds and the work it has to do? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What can we look for when we have reached the furthest? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What chance brought it here, gave it being?" |
plotinus-six-1904 | What conditions, then, are we to think of as existing in that realm which is prior to Nature and transcends the Principles of Nature? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could The Good have wished to be other than what it is? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could an Idea have, as cause, over and above the Intellectual- Principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could be more fitting than that we, living in this world, should become Like to its ruler? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could even intellection need and add to itself for the purpose of its act? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could exist at all except as one thing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could it aim at, what desire? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could it do with intellection? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could it have been planning to gain by world- creating? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What could the Garden of Zeus indicate but the images of his Being and the splendours of his glory? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What definition are we to give to Eternity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What do we learn from this philosopher? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What does all this come to? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What does it hold from the Absolute Good to entitle it to the name? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What does the understanding say? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What does this imply? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What does this suggest? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What driving or hoisting goes to produce all that variety of colour and pattern? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What explains the purposeful arrangement thus implied? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What external, then, can call it to the question, and from what source of truth could the refutation be brought? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What fire could be a nobler reflection of the fire there than the fire we know here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What form, then, does virtue take in one so lofty? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What future, in fact, could bring to that Being anything which it now does not possess; and could it come to be anything which it is not once for all? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What geometrician or arithmetician could fail to take pleasure in the symmetries, correspondences and principles of order observed in visible things? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What ground would lie ready to the Soul''s operation but the Supreme in which it has its Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What happened then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What has really occurred when, as we say, vice is present? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What have they to do within God? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What if pain grow so intense and so torture him that the agony all but kills? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What in their nature led them downwards to the inferior? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What indeed could he be seeking? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What into? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is Love? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is it that identifies them with their inherent Substance? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is it to recall yesterday''s excellent dinner? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is it, then, which makes a mountain small and a grain of millet large? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is our answer? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is that which makes them all motions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is that which, often taken for Being[ for the Existent], is in our view Becoming and never really Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is the Act of the Intellect, what is the mental approach, in such a case? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is the advantage in existence over utter non- existence- unless goodness is to be founded upon our love of self? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is the difference between this existence and existence in the other categories? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is the differentia of Matter? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is the indwelling, inseparable something which constitutes Man as here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is the source of their existence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is this other place and how it is accessible? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is this"I"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What is this? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What made it judge fire a better first than some other object? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What more is called for than a laugh? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What movement of atoms could compel one man to be a geometrician, set another studying arithmetic or astronomy, lead a third to the philosophic life? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What number or measure would apply? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What of poverty and riches, glory and power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What of the feebleness that brings men under slavery to the passions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What of the suspension of consciousness which drugs or disease may bring about? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What place can be named to which He does not reach? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What profit is there in it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What quantity, or what difference of quality, can apply to a thing defined as a self- consistent whole of unbroken unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What sort of consciousness can be conceived in it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What sort of piety can make Providence stop short of earthly concerns or set any limit whatsoever to it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What source is there for any such multiplicity of leading principles as might result in contest and hesitation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What species does it engender? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What species of rest are we to oppose to this convalescence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What symmetry can there be in points of abstract thought? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What symmetry is to be found in noble conduct, or excellent laws, in any form of mental pursuit? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What the Hercules standing outside the Shade spoke of we are not told: what can we think that other, the freed and isolated, soul would recount? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then can be thought to have happened when soul, utterly clean from body, first comes into commerce with the bodily nature? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then can this"part"be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then distinguishes it unless that it deals with objects of less extension? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then do we mean when we speak of freedom in ourselves and why do we question it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then does it effect out of its greatness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then in itself is this one soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then in these instances can be the meaning of correlatives apart from our conception of their juxtaposition? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is happiness? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is its characteristic Act and what the intellection which makes knower and known here identical? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is our course, what the manner of our flight? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is the All? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is the actual cause? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is the real distinction between Action and Passion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is the veritable nature of Number? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is there of his content that is not Himself, what that is not in Act, what not his work? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is there to prevent man having been the object of planning There? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is this in which each particular entity participates, the author of being to the universe and to each item of the total? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then is this thing of extension? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then must The Unity be, what nature is left for it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then will be the common ground in habit, disposition, passive quality, figure, shape? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then will it produce[ in this Matter] by virtue of that power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then, in sum, is to be thought of Love and of his"birth"as we are told of it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What then, we ask, if he had died without witnessing the wrong? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What understanding can there be failing some point of contact? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What view are we to take of that which is opposed to Motion, whether it be Stability or Rest? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What view, then, shall we take of privations? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What will This be; under what character can we picture It? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What will this be? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What would Providence have to provide for? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What would be the principle of such a Measure? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What would constitute such a medium? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What would the quiescence of the one phase be as against the energy of the others? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What would then exist but Eternity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What would these be here? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, after all this, remains to stand for the"We"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, by this explanation, would be the essential movement of the kosmic soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, are the several entities observable in this plurality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, are these spirits? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, are we to say of such cases as thought and opinion which originate within but are not directed outwards? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, can this be, this something in virtue of which we declare the entire divine Realm to be Eternal, everlasting? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, distinguishes Quality in the Intellectual Realm from that here, if both are Acts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, does Eternity really mean to those who describe it as something different from Time? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, in the case of fire is the Reality which precedes the qualified Reality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is Philosophy? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is that content? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is the achieved Sage? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is the content- inevitably separated by our minds- of this one Intellectual- Principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is the evil Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is the ground for denying that becoming is a motion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is the meaning of"existence"as applied to fire, earth and the other elements? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is the soul''s Being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is the spirit[ guiding the present life and determining the future]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is there that can pronounce upon the nature of this all- unity? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is this Kind, this Matter, described as one stuff, continuous and without quality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is this essential of Man? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is this indetermination in the Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, is this something that shows itself in certain material forms? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, makes them thoughts? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, must Evil be to the Soul? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, of the"Number of the Infinite"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, precisely is Virtue, collectively and in the particular? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, we have to ask, is the constant element in the first three entities? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, then, will be the Soul''s discourse, what its memories in the Intellectual Realm, when at last it has won its way to that Essence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, we may be asked, is the limit of this progression? |
plotinus-six-1904 | What, we retort, is the limit of beauty, or of heat? |
plotinus-six-1904 | When in the one subject, a positive can add nothing, how can the negative take away? |
plotinus-six-1904 | When warmth comes in to make anything warm, must there needs be something to warm the source of the warmth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | When we attain to this state and become This alone, what can we say but that we are more than free, more than self- disposing? |
plotinus-six-1904 | When we come to the source of all reason, order and limit, how can we attribute the reality there to chance? |
plotinus-six-1904 | When we predicate Being of a particular, do we thereby predicate of it unity, and does the degree of its unity tally with that of its being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | When you see that you yourselves are beautiful within, what do you feel? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Whence are we to understand the certainty of this knowledge to come to it or how do its objects carry the conviction of their reality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Whence comes the power? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Whence does it create but from the things it knew in the Divine? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Whence must such a sequent arise? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Whence the three dimensions? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Whence, in short, is soul''s entity derived? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where are we to place wrong- doing and sin? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where at that would be its worth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where but in the mind? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where lies the need of decad to a thing which, by totalling to that power, is decad already? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where limitation is unthinkable, what fear can there be of absence at any point? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where then is it to find them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where, for example, Sophrosyne would allow certain acts or emotions under due restraint and another virtue would cut them off altogether? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where, then, are they and what spatial distinction keeps them apart? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where, then, does Motion reside, when there is one thing that moves and another that passes from an inherent potentiality to actuality? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where, then, is the necessity of this bandit war of man and beast? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Where, then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Who has begotten such a child, this Intellectual- Principle, this lovely abundance so abundantly endowed? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Who then is Aphrodite, and in what sense is Love either her child or born with her or in some way both her child and her birth- fellow? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Who was there to call a halt to a power capable at once of self- concentration and of outflow? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Wholly and solely? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why are not beauty, goodness and the virtues, together with knowledge and intelligence, included among the primary genera? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why are the most living portraits the most beautiful, even though the others happen to be more symmetric? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why do we not add unity to them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why else do certain groupments, in contradistinction to others, terrify at sight though there has been no previous experience of evil from them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why eyes or eyebrows? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why feet of a certain length? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why has it a first participant, a second, and so on? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why is Quality, again, not included among the Primaries? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why is the living ugly more attractive than the sculptured handsome? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why is the potential more truly real than the actual? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why must the Soul wait till the representations of the plan be made actual? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why must the seat of our intellectual action be also the seat of our remembrance of that action? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not bisect the unity, Motion, and so make Action and Passion two species of the one thing, ceasing to consider Action and Passion as two genera? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not distinct categories for"in Matter,""in a subject,""a part in a whole,""a whole in its parts,""a genus in its species,""a species in a genus"? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not halt, then- it will be asked- at Intellectual- Principle and make that The Good? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not resort to analogy? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not suppose a quantity of happiness equivalent to a quantity of time? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not, however, absolve the question by assigning self- cognisance to this phase? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not: what difference is there? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why not? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why should Reason elaborate yet another Reason, or Intelligence another Intelligence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why should not the Kosmos draw light also from the yet greater powers contained in the total of existence? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why should not the material of the Universe be similarly embraced in a Kosmic Type in which earth, fire and the rest would be included? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why should the one of the two be the measure rather than the other? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why should there be in the future a change that has not yet occurred? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why should they desire to live in the archetype of a world abhorrent to them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why should this down- shining take place unless such a process belonged to a universal law? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why should those fiery globes be receptive of soul, and the earthly globe not? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why then are magnitudes classed as quantities? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why then do not all souls[ i.e., the lower, also, as those of men and animals] thus circle about the Godhead? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why then do we not class as a relative whatever may be produced from this relation? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why then does man alone reason here, the others remaining reasonless? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why, for example, should killing be involuntary in the failure to recognise a father and not so in the failure to recognise the wickedness of murder? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why, then, are water and air not ensouled as earth is? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why, then, did we not in discussing the Intellectual realm assert that Stability was the negation of Motion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why, then, does not Reality reside, equally, in this sphere? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why, then, is not"boxer"a relative, and"boxing"as well? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why, then? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Why? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Would it, then, be sound to define Time as the Life of the Soul in movement as it passes from one stage of act or experience to another? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Would not all this imply that the divine power does not reach to earth? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Would not this be Intellect making itself unintelligent? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yes, but if the well- being has lasted a long time, if that present spectacle has been a longer time before the eyes? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet The One is not an Intellectual- Principle; how then does it engender an Intellectual- Principle? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet how can the Couplement have sensation independently of action in the Sensitive- Faculty, the Soul left out of count and the Soul- Faculty? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet how can there be question of the unreasoning or unintellective when all particulars exist in the divine and come forth from it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet how, unless the body be first in the appropriate condition? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet its Being is not limited; what is there to set bounds to it? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet never to attain? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet surely the one must somehow be included[ among the genera]? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet the universe has at once extension and beauty? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet what was that there to present the idea of the horse it was desired to produce? |
plotinus-six-1904 | Yet, is not God what He is? |
plotinus-six-1904 | You are wronged; need that trouble an immortal? |
plotinus-six-1904 | [ But why does such a failing appear impossible to us? |
plotinus-six-1904 | [ Why have they not this motion?] |
plotinus-six-1904 | and how can an essential being, while remaining its one self, bring forth others? |
plotinus-six-1904 | and if the potential exists there, does it remain merely potential for ever? |
plotinus-six-1904 | and may the same be said of every part of the part? |
plotinus-six-1904 | and what is it apart from that act of making? |
plotinus-six-1904 | and[ if only a quality has entered] why is there a change of volume? |
plotinus-six-1904 | how can it be brought under the causing principle indicated? |
plotinus-six-1904 | how differentiate colours in general from tastes and tangible qualities? |
plotinus-six-1904 | how divide this genus? |
plotinus-six-1904 | or does one of them presuppose that all that belongs to the class of genera belongs also to the class of principles? |
plotinus-six-1904 | or is there some other criterion? |
plotinus-six-1904 | or must they be referred to these? |
plotinus-six-1904 | or, again, must some of these be regarded as types of integration and disintegration? |
plotinus-six-1904 | or- a difference of no importance if any such penetration occurs- that one of them pass completely through the other? |
plotinus-six-1904 | what causes of enmity can there be among them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | what differences are we to employ, and from what genus shall we take them? |
plotinus-six-1904 | whence did it take its being? |
plotinus-six-1904 | where exists the author of this beauty and life, the begetter of the veritable? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what God? |
augustine-city-4013 | For by hope,says the apostle,"we are saved: but hope that is seen is not hope: for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what hast thou,saith the apostle,"that thou hast not received? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what,he says,"have I in heaven, and what have I desired from Thee upon earth?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall not He that sleeps also rise again? |
augustine-city-4013 | Wert Thou angry at the rivers, O Lord? augustine-city-4013 ( This was intimated by the words He uttered, when the man, stupefied by fear, had hid himself,Adam, where art thou?" |
augustine-city-4013 | --how can we be justified in so speaking, when we can point out such manifold diversity both in the habits, doings, and destinies of twins? |
augustine-city-4013 | 26? |
augustine-city-4013 | 6? |
augustine-city-4013 | Again, I ask, what kind of prayers of men does he suppose are presented to the good gods by the demons? |
augustine-city-4013 | Again, is the body alone the man, having a relation to the soul such as the cup has to the drink? |
augustine-city-4013 | All whom, if not all those of whom he was speaking, just as if he had said,"Both you and them?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Also, as to their being aerial in body, how much value is to be set on that, since a soul of any kind whatsoever is to be set above every body? |
augustine-city-4013 | Amidst these temptations, therefore, of all which it has been summarily said in the divine oracles,"Is not human life upon earth a temptation?" |
augustine-city-4013 | An adulteress, or chaste? |
augustine-city-4013 | And He accused him of it in the interrogation,"Why are thou wroth, and why is thy countenance fallen?" |
augustine-city-4013 | And a little after he says,"And what of this, that we unite the gods in marriage, and that not even naturally, for we join brothers and sisters? |
augustine-city-4013 | And as to these three answers which I formerly recommended when in the case of any creature the questions are put, Who made it? |
augustine-city-4013 | And consequently, even if some of these virgins killed themselves to avoid such disgrace, who that has any human feeling would refuse to forgive them? |
augustine-city-4013 | And did a single nation worship Romulus among its gods, unless it were forced through fear of the Roman name? |
augustine-city-4013 | And has Saturn been permitted to obtain at least in the heavens, what he could not obtain in his own kingdom nor in the Capitol? |
augustine-city-4013 | And hence the apostle, having quoted this testimony from the prophet, adds,"Where is the wise? |
augustine-city-4013 | And how can it come to pass that a nature, good though mutable, should produce any evil-- that is to say, should make the will itself wicked? |
augustine-city-4013 | And how can that be the truest philosophy which does not possess this way? |
augustine-city-4013 | And how is this, unless because the will is in this place used strictly, and signifies that will which can not have evil for its object? |
augustine-city-4013 | And how so, unless because contentment, when the word is used in its proper and distinctive significance, means something different from joy? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if I should speak of my mind or understanding, what is our understanding in comparison of its excellence? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if he abjured the tenets of his school, how much more ought we Christians to abominate and avoid an opinion so unfounded and hostile to our faith? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if he is not in death, what is this consumption itself? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if in the more recent times, how much more in the ages before the world- renowned deluge? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if it is to be restored, who would not shrink from such deformity? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if the soul is not a body, how should God, its Creator, be a body? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if they can not confer this benefit on men, what good can their friendly mediation do? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if this escape be lawfully secured by suicide, why not then specially? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if this may justly be said of all the ungodly, how much more of him? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if this which is called civil be not natural, what merit has it that it should be admitted? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if two gladiators entered the arena to fight, one being father, the other his son, who would endure such a spectacle? |
augustine-city-4013 | And if, when it has all been consumed, a man is not in death but after death, when is he in death unless when life is being consumed away? |
augustine-city-4013 | And in what incorruptible body will they more suitably rejoice than in that in which they groaned when it was corruptible? |
augustine-city-4013 | And is not suicide the proper mode of preventing not only the enemy''s sin, but the sin of the Christian so allured? |
augustine-city-4013 | And is this not a great misery of human life, that we are involved in such ignorance as, but for God''s mercy, makes us a prey to these demons? |
augustine-city-4013 | And no nation to which the knowledge of it has already come, or may hereafter come, ought to demand, Why so soon? |
augustine-city-4013 | And of the citizens what shall I say? |
augustine-city-4013 | And since I am if I am deceived, how am I deceived in believing that I am? |
augustine-city-4013 | And so in the same work of Cicero''s, Scipio says,"Whom has it not aspersed? |
augustine-city-4013 | And that other great pestilence, which raged so long and carried off so many; what shall I say of it? |
augustine-city-4013 | And the lower earth, by whatever divinity it may be distinguished, what else can it be than earth? |
augustine-city-4013 | And then the evangelist adds,"Peter was grieved because He said unto him the third time,"Lovest thou( amas) me?" |
augustine-city-4013 | And therefore He said elsewhere to the Jews,"If I by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do your sons cast them out? |
augustine-city-4013 | And therefore that has not, and shall not, be brought about which His enemies said or say,"When shall He die, and His name perish?" |
augustine-city-4013 | And this is still more apparent in the words which followed:"For while one saith, I am of Paul, and another, I am of Apollos, are ye not men?" |
augustine-city-4013 | And this vice, what else is it called than pride? |
augustine-city-4013 | And those words of his in his heart,"Shall a son be born to me that am an hundred years old? |
augustine-city-4013 | And was I, a poor creature compared to Him, to make bones of it? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what account do they give of Julian, whom they do not number in the ten? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what are fear and sadness but a volition of aversion from the things which we do not wish? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what causes this but their own wills, in cases at least such as we are supposing, where the temperament is identical? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what does the term new covenant imply but the revealing of the old? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what else does the eighth day mean than Christ, who rose again when the week was completed, that is, after the Sabbath? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what has Saturn''s receiving of a lump of earth instead of Jupiter to do with this, that the seeds were covered in the soil by the hands of men? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what is a lie if this desire be not? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what is meant by the term"hunter"but deceiver, oppressor, and destroyer of the animals of the earth? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what is not subject to it? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what is that which is done? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what is the oath of God, the true and faithful, but a confirmation of the promise, and a certain reproof to the unbelieving? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what is the origin of our evil will but pride? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what is there which hunger would not make animals eat? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what means"all?" |
augustine-city-4013 | And what shall I say of those who suffer from demoniacal possession? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what shall we say of their wives, their children, and their possessions? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what took place in Persia of late? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what was the end of the kings themselves? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what was the manner of its restoration? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what wisdom could there be in Egypt before Isis had given them letters, whom they thought fit to worship as a goddess after her death? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what words can tell the difference between what we now call health and future immortality? |
augustine-city-4013 | And what, then, is the use of Vitumnus and Sentinus? |
augustine-city-4013 | And when God enjoins any act, and intimates by plain evidence that He has enjoined it, who will call obedience criminal? |
augustine-city-4013 | And where, then, will be its beauty, which assuredly ought to be much greater in that immortal condition than it could be in this corruptible state? |
augustine-city-4013 | And wherefore slew he him? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who are they who do not worship the beast and his image, if not those who do what the apostle says,"Be not yoked with unbelievers?" |
augustine-city-4013 | And who can adequately describe either the horrible atrocities which the pirates first committed, or the wars they afterwards maintained against Rome? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who is not terrified by this repetition, and by the threat of that punishment uttered so vehemently by the lips of the Lord Himself? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who is quite sure that no such thing can happen to the wise man in this life? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who is so foolish as to suppose that the things offered to God are needed by Him for some uses of His own? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who is there so wise that he has no conflict at all to maintain against his vices? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who will deny that God is the supreme good? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who will dispute that the rest are justly called"light?" |
augustine-city-4013 | And who will say that what was in all time, was not always? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who would not shrink from the alternative, and elect to die, if it were proposed to him either to suffer death or to be again an infant? |
augustine-city-4013 | And who, unless he is quite mad, could bear the thought that parts of God can become lascivi ous, iniquitous, impious, and altogether damnable? |
augustine-city-4013 | And why can not He cause the body to rise again, and live for ever? |
augustine-city-4013 | And why did he not, unless because he did not believe that the souls, even though separate from the body, were superior to those gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | And why have they not reckoned them as gods, I do not say among those select gods, but not even among those, as it were, plebeian gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | And why is it that there is a god who has power to terrify the inferior gods, and none who has power to free them from fear? |
augustine-city-4013 | And why may not injustice, at least that of foreign nations, also be a goddess, if Fear and Dread and Ague have deserved to be Roman gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | And why need I speak of the advantageousness, the common participation in which, according to the definition, makes a people? |
augustine-city-4013 | And why so, if not because that which is by nature fitting and decent is so done as to be accompanied with a shame- begetting penalty of sin? |
augustine-city-4013 | And yet where was this host of divinities, when, long before the corruption of the primitive morality, Rome was taken and burnt by the Gauls? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are not those things found in books on divine things, which grave poets have deemed unworthy of their verses? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are there not many senators in the other countries who do not even know Rome by sight? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are there two Venuses, the one a virgin, the other not a maid? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are these small tokens of the foretold truth which we see fulfilled in Christ? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are these the health- giving deities of the cities, more ridiculous than the things which are laughed at in the theatres? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are they at conception as yet without destinies, because they can only have them if they be born? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are they, therefore, inclined to say that the birds are superior to us, and the demons superior to the birds? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are we thus insanely to countenance the foolish error of the Manichæans? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are we to say that God Himself is not free because He can not sin? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are ye ashamed to be corrected? |
augustine-city-4013 | Are you, after all, to fulfill the prediction of that man whom you would not allow even to be present?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Art Thou come to destroy us before the time?" |
augustine-city-4013 | As for those who insult over them in their trials, and when ills befall them say,"Where is thy God?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Behold, He cometh, saith the Lord Almighty, and who shall abide the day of His entry, or who shall stand at His appearing?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Behold, is not the whole land before thee? |
augustine-city-4013 | Besides, it might be asked regarding the hair itself, whether all that the barber has cut off shall be restored? |
augustine-city-4013 | Besides, this too has to be inquired into, whether, if the good angels made their own will good, they did so with or without will? |
augustine-city-4013 | Besides, what was there to hinder any one from asserting that Romulus or Hercules, or any such man, was a god? |
augustine-city-4013 | But Scipio, were he alive, would possibly reply:"How could we attach a penalty to that which the gods themselves have consecrated? |
augustine-city-4013 | But a question not to be shirked arises: Whether in very truth death, which separates soul and body, is good to the good? |
augustine-city-4013 | But are these two different individuals who were called by the same name? |
augustine-city-4013 | But do you suppose it is as much admired by those who own it and are familiar with its properties as by those to whom it is shown for the first time? |
augustine-city-4013 | But does He bring them down to hell and bring them up again? |
augustine-city-4013 | But had it done so, what then had become of Orcus, the brother of Jupiter and Neptune, whom they call Father Dis? |
augustine-city-4013 | But how do they know what faith is, of which it is the prime and greatest function that the true God may be believed in? |
augustine-city-4013 | But how do they prove that the resurrection is an undesirable thing? |
augustine-city-4013 | But how is it, that she who was no partner to the crime bears the heavier punishment of the two? |
augustine-city-4013 | But how long would he who misliked the fellowship of his own twin- brother endure a stranger? |
augustine-city-4013 | But how much more abundantly shall the saints enjoy this gift when God shall be all in all? |
augustine-city-4013 | But how so? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if I make such a reply, it will be said to me, How, then, are they not co- eternal with the Creator, if He and they always have been? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if any one loves his own wife, and loves her as Christ would have him love her, who can doubt that he has Christ for a foundation? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if created, was it created along with themselves, or did they exist for a time without it? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if equal in other things, who would hesitate to prefer the continent man to the married? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if purity be nothing better than these, why should the body be perilled that it may be preserved? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if she is a goddess, why may she not be said to confer virtue itself, inasmuch as it is a great felicity to attain virtue? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if so, why not extend it also to the plants, and all that is rooted in and nourished by the earth? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if they contend that the prosperity of the other also is to be attributed to the aid of the gods, I ask of which? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if this distinction has been made by the few wise, why has Virtus been preferred to Venus, when reason by far prefers the former? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if this is utterly impossible, how shall we contrive to feel no bitterness in the death of those whose life has been sweet to us? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if thou hast received it, why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received it?" |
augustine-city-4013 | But if we cease to admire them because they are now familiar, how much less must they admire them who procure them very easily and send them to us? |
augustine-city-4013 | But if, when it has forsaken it, the man is not even then in death, but after death, who shall say when he is in death? |
augustine-city-4013 | But in what way shall the good go out to see the punishment of the wicked? |
augustine-city-4013 | But is it not manifest that vanity rather than reason regulated the choice of some of their false gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | But is it not the infirmities of the flesh which hamper it in its service? |
augustine-city-4013 | But is not the virtue of the horoscope very great? |
augustine-city-4013 | But is there a fear that even another''s lust may pollute the violated? |
augustine-city-4013 | But it may be replied, Who is this God, or what proof is there that He alone is worthy to receive sacrifice from the Romans? |
augustine-city-4013 | But on the third interrogation the Lord Himself no longer says,"Hast thou a regard( diligis) for me,"but"Lovest thou( amas) me?" |
augustine-city-4013 | But perhaps it is the unprecedented birth of a body from a virgin that staggers you? |
augustine-city-4013 | But since both males and females have money[ pecuniam], why has he not been called both Pecunius and Pecunia? |
augustine-city-4013 | But since they call Jupiter the king of all, who will not laugh to see his star so far surpassed in brilliancy by the star of Venus? |
augustine-city-4013 | But the question arises, whether, when their eyes are open, they shall see Him with the bodily eye? |
augustine-city-4013 | But the rest of this psalm runs thus:"Where are Thine ancient compassions, Lord, which Thou swarest unto David in Thy truth? |
augustine-city-4013 | But then, how did He promise; for the promise was made to men, and yet they had no existence before eternal times? |
augustine-city-4013 | But they who are angry, what would they do to me were I to say what Sallust says? |
augustine-city-4013 | But those two theologies, the first and the third,--to wit, those of the theatre and of the city,--has he distinguished them or united them? |
augustine-city-4013 | But to whom does not Judas here occur, who, from being His disciple, became His betrayer? |
augustine-city-4013 | But to wish to distinguish the natural from the civil, what else is that but to confess that the civil itself is false? |
augustine-city-4013 | But was not this, then, the plainest proof that they were no true gods, nor in any respect worthy of receiving divine honours from the republic? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what can human misery do, or how or where can it reach forth, so as to attain blessedness, if divine authority does not lead it? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what can those who think this say of the persecution in which the Lord Himself was crucified? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what can we make of men who glory in having such a citizen, but dread having a city like him? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what did even Apuleius find to praise in the demons, except subtlety and strength of body and a higher place of habitation? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what do they say to the apostle who speaks of a resurrection of souls? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what does a man wish, that he thinks Fortune also a goddess and worships her? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what does it matter to us? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what is the blessing itself? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what is"in the midst of the earth?" |
augustine-city-4013 | But what kind of sense is it that remains when a man becomes deaf and blind? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what man is at present able to live as he wishes, when it is not in his power so much as to live? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what need is there of striving about that? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what shall I say of his son Cainan, who, though by our version 170 years old, was by the Hebrew text seventy when he beget Mahalaleel? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what shall men do who can not find anything wise to say, because they are interpreting foolish things? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what was the nature of the punishment? |
augustine-city-4013 | But what was this to Saul, when, if any such thing was threatened, it would be threatened against David himself, whose son Solomon was? |
augustine-city-4013 | But when death is past, how can that which no longer is be either good or evil? |
augustine-city-4013 | But when he says,"in the end,"what does it mean, except even to the end? |
augustine-city-4013 | But whence do they receive this, except from Him of whom it is here immediately said,"Giving the vow to him that voweth?" |
augustine-city-4013 | But where have we heard Him? |
augustine-city-4013 | But where is the theatre but in the city? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who are the dead which were in the sea, and which the sea presented? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who are you, that we should deign to speak with you even about your own gods, much less about our God, who is"to be feared above all gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who believed that Romulus was a god except Rome, which was itself small and in its infancy? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who can collect or enumerate all the contrasts of this kind? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who can conceive, not to say describe, what degrees of honor and glory shall be awarded to the various degrees of merit? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who can determine to what extent they were partakers of that wisdom before they fell? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who can enumerate all the great grievances with which human society abounds in the misery of this mortal state? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who can number the multitude of portents recorded in profane histories? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who can number the multitudes who have chosen death in the most cruel shapes rather than deny the divinity of Christ? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who could enumerate all the human births that have differed widely from their ascertained parents? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who does not recognize it as ruin, when there occurs an evident and indubitable transgression of the commandment? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who that now views these things with a believing eye does not see that they are fulfilled? |
augustine-city-4013 | But who that was weak and unlearned could escape the deceits of both the princes of the state and the demons? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why did God choose then to create the heavens and earth which up to that time He had not made? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why did not the flesh of the other? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why different temples, different altars, different rituals? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why do they worship Altor? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why had not virtue sufficed? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why has Janus received no star? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why has that Salacia, according to this interpretation, lost the lower part of the sea, seeing that she was represented as subject to her husband? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why is Faith believed to be a goddess, and why does she herself receive temple and altar? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why may I not draw from my reasoning a double inference? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why not also with respect to conception, which takes place undoubtedly with one act of copulation? |
augustine-city-4013 | But why not the disposition of both? |
augustine-city-4013 | But will they perhaps remind us of the schools of the philosophers, and their disputations? |
augustine-city-4013 | But yet another question is mooted: How did Heber and his son Peleg each found a nation, if they had but one language? |
augustine-city-4013 | But, further, is it not obvious that the gods have abetted the fulfilment of men''s desires, instead of authoritatively bridling them? |
augustine-city-4013 | But, is it possible that anything should happen in vain, however hidden be its cause, in so grand a government of divine providence? |
augustine-city-4013 | But, since they are true and real, who doubts that when they are loved, the love of them is itself true and real? |
augustine-city-4013 | But, were it true, what were the advantage of knowing it? |
augustine-city-4013 | By them He is to be feared with that terror in which they cried to the Lord,"Hast Thou come to destroy us?" |
augustine-city-4013 | By what means? |
augustine-city-4013 | Can any one be faithful in his love, even to a human friend, if he knows that he is destined to become his enemy? |
augustine-city-4013 | Can any one think it was fulfilled in the peace of Solomon''s reign? |
augustine-city-4013 | Can anything be said but what was alleged in the case of Regulus''death? |
augustine-city-4013 | Can the mind of men be so much averse to the light of truth as not to perceive that the sayings this woman pours forth exceed her measure? |
augustine-city-4013 | Certainly, if they are blessed, they envy no one( for what more miserable than envy? |
augustine-city-4013 | Cicero, in the Consolation on the death of his daughter, has spent all his ability in lamentation; but how inadequate was even his ability here? |
augustine-city-4013 | Could He be unwilling to be the constructor of works, the idea and plan of which called for His ineffable and ineffably to be praised intelligence? |
augustine-city-4013 | Could the kingdom of men then be propagated and increased by the king of the gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | Did I say fell? |
augustine-city-4013 | Did ever the walls of any of their temples echo to any such warning voice? |
augustine-city-4013 | Did he not fulfill his wicked intention of killing his brother even after he was warned by God''s voice? |
augustine-city-4013 | Did not Seth himself hope to call on the name of the Lord God, of whom it was said,"For God hath appointed me another seed instead of Abel?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Did not he persecute the Church, who forbade the Christians to teach or learn liberal letters? |
augustine-city-4013 | Did not Æneas see"Dying Priam at the shrine, Staining the hearth he made divine?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Did the flesh of the one cause the desire as he looked? |
augustine-city-4013 | Did the rest remain childless? |
augustine-city-4013 | Do they not assert that their own gods so live in bodies of fire, and that Jove himself, their king, so lives in the physical elements? |
augustine-city-4013 | Do they not often occur even in honorable friendships? |
augustine-city-4013 | Do they not own that all things which they say begin in this world also come to an end in this world? |
augustine-city-4013 | Do they reply that the Roman empire could never have been so widely extended, nor so glorious, save by constant and unintermitting wars? |
augustine-city-4013 | Do we now move our feet and hands when we will to do the things we would by means of these members? |
augustine-city-4013 | Do you count your senate- house worthy of so much higher a regard than the Capitol? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does each fill either, and are both of this couple in both of these elements, and in each of them at the same time? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does he receive the adoration of worshippers in a different form from that in which he moves about the stage for the amusement of spectators? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does he say that it was a moderate degree of error which resulted in their discovery of the art of making gods, or was he content to say"they erred?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Does it not include faith also? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does not the canonical epistle of the Apostle Jude declare that he prophesied? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does not this artifice expose them, and prove that they are detestable devils? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does not this destroy all beauty and grace in the body, whether at rest or in motion? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does not this show what vitiated nature inclines and tends to by its own weight, and what succor it needs if it is to be delivered? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does the Diana of the theatre carry arms, whilst the Diana of the city is simply a virgin? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does the society of wicked men pollute our life if they insinuate themselves into our affections, and win our assent? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does this not mean that, in His own eternity, and in His co- eternal word, that which was to be in its own time was already predestined and fixed? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does this not prove themselves to be most unjust and wicked? |
augustine-city-4013 | Does, then, the keeping of faith provoke the gods to anger? |
augustine-city-4013 | For He who says,"Ye can not be immortal, but by my will ye shall be immortal,"what else does He say than this,"I shall make you what ye can not be?" |
augustine-city-4013 | For Paul says very plainly to the Corinthians,"For whereas there is among you envying and strife, are ye not carnal, and walk according to man?" |
augustine-city-4013 | For did not Abel hope to call upon the name of the Lord God when his sacrifice is mentioned in Scripture as having been accepted by God? |
augustine-city-4013 | For do not their lands pay tribute? |
augustine-city-4013 | For had so impious a man, with so great and so impious a host, entered the city, whom would he have spared? |
augustine-city-4013 | For he does not say, Shall He in anger shut up His tender mercies for a long period? |
augustine-city-4013 | For how can a man love those more than Christ whom he loves only for Christ''s sake? |
augustine-city-4013 | For how can he be happy, if he is nothing? |
augustine-city-4013 | For how could I justly be blamed and prohibited from loving false things, if it were false that I loved them? |
augustine-city-4013 | For how could true felicity be there, where there was not true piety? |
augustine-city-4013 | For how do we distinguish between living and dead bodies, except by seeing at once both the body and the life which we can not see save by the eye? |
augustine-city-4013 | For how else could it be said that the flood began on the twenty- seventh day of the second month? |
augustine-city-4013 | For how shall one find how to finish anything, if he has forgotten what it was which he had begun? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if He had already gone down, why does He say,"Come, and let us go down and confound?" |
augustine-city-4013 | For if Vesta is Venus, how can virgins rightly serve her by abstaining from venery? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if Victory is a goddess, why is not Triumph also a god, and joined to Victory either as husband, or brother, or son? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if a nature is the cause of an evil will, what else can we say than that evil arises from good or that good is the cause of evil? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if he is not in life, what is it which is consumed till all be gone? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if not yet safe, how could it be happy? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if that be natural, what fault has it that it should be excluded? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if the number of souls can be indefinitely increased, what reason is there to deny that what had never before been created, could be created? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if their life has solaced us with the charms of friendship, can it be that their death should affect us with no sadness? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if there is to be equality, where shall those abortions, supposing that they rise again, get that bulk which they had not here? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if there is, where is it, since it is in no one, and no one can be in it? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if they did, then how were they blessed in that boasted place of bliss, Paradise? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if they had any regard to consistency, why did they not rather erect on that site a temple of Discord? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if they themselves are created, how can we say that their good will was eternal? |
augustine-city-4013 | For if they were not to know that they had been miserable, how could they, as the Psalmist says, for ever sing the mercies of God? |
augustine-city-4013 | For in what books have they collected that number who learned letters from Isis their mistress, not much more than two thousand years ago? |
augustine-city-4013 | For ought those who dwell in the ends of the earth not to do judgment and justice? |
augustine-city-4013 | For they were not silent when with Him, but inquired of Him, saying,"Lord, wilt Thou at this time present the kingdom to Israel, or when?" |
augustine-city-4013 | For thus it is written:"And the Lord said unto Cain, Why are thou wroth, and why is thy countenance fallen? |
augustine-city-4013 | For to this power what is added about the resurrection refers,"Who shall awake him?" |
augustine-city-4013 | For to what but to felicity should men consecrate themselves, were felicity a goddess? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what a man sees, why does he yet hope for? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what are desire and joy but a volition of consent to the things we wish? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what are robberies themselves, but little kingdoms? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what do they make of those watery clouds, between which and the seas air is constantly found intervening? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what does it profit a man that he is baptized, if he is not justified? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what does the term old covenant imply but the concealing of the new? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what does this opinion really amount to but this, that no god whatever is to be worshipped or prayed to? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what else do those images, forms, ages, sexes, characteristics of the gods show? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what else does circumcision signify than a nature renewed on the putting off of the old? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what else is going on in all his days, hours, and moments, until this slow- working death is fully consummated? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what else is it that is sung in His person in the 3d Psalm,"I laid me down and took a sleep,[ and] I awaked, for the Lord shall sustain me?" |
augustine-city-4013 | For what else is victory than the conquest of those who resist us? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what had Minerva herself first lost, that she should perish? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what historian of the past should we credit more than him who has also predicted things to come which we now see fulfilled? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what is Saturn also? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what is it which makes the will bad, when it is the will itself which makes the action bad? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what is more beautiful than fire flaming, blazing, and shining? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what is more loquacious than vanity? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what is there which more intimately concerns a body than its sex? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what mean those multifarious threats which are used to restrain the folly of children? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what mysteries can purify, if those of the sun and moon, which are esteemed the chief of the celestial gods, do not purify? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what other creator could there be of time, than He who created those things whose movements make time? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what other end do we propose to ourselves than to attain to the kingdom of which there is no end? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what pain or desire can the flesh feel by itself and without the soul? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what part of him could be contemned if he himself should be worshipped? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what purpose did it constitute it but for scenic plays? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what survives of that primitive morality which the poet called Rome''s safeguard? |
augustine-city-4013 | For what tigress does not gently purr over her cubs, and lay aside her ferocity to fondle them? |
augustine-city-4013 | For when, where, how, in this life can these primary objects of nature be possessed so that they may not be assailed by unforeseen accidents? |
augustine-city-4013 | For where she is present, what good thing can be absent? |
augustine-city-4013 | For wherefore were they both sick of the same disease, and at the same time, and not the one after the other in the order of their birth? |
augustine-city-4013 | For whether do they, by following this goddess, acquire seed, being in want of it, or, by following her, lose seed when they have it? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who but God the Creator of all things has given to the flesh of the peacock its antiseptic property? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who can carefully and intelligently consider these things without recognizing them accomplished in Christ? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who can find words to tell its uses throughout the whole world? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who can say with certainty that the devils do not suffer in their bodies, when they own that they are grievously tormented? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who could readily give a name to the lust of ruling, which yet has a powerful influence in the soul of tyrants, as civil wars bear witness? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who counts exaltation ruin, though no sooner is the Highest forsaken than a fall is begun? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who does not know that the wicked exult with joy? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who gave the kingdom even to Jupiter but Felicity? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who is so blind as not to see that if it were happy it would not be fled from? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who is so little acquainted with the truth as to say that God has no cognisance of sensible objects? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who knows the will of God concerning this matter? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who shows more hatred to the saints? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who that is affected by fear or grief can be called absolutely blessed? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who will dare to believe or say that it was not in God''s power to prevent both angels and men from sinning? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who will doubt that it is a far better thing to have a good mind, than ever so great a memory? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who will trouble himself to learn how many thousand men the several tribes of Israel contained? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who wishes anything for any other reason than that he may become happy? |
augustine-city-4013 | For who wishes to receive from any god anything else than felicity, or what he supposes to tend to felicity? |
augustine-city-4013 | For why are these things practised, if not because the faithful, even though dead, are His members? |
augustine-city-4013 | For why are those arts so severely punished by the laws, if they are the works of deities who ought to be worshipped? |
augustine-city-4013 | For why do we praise the grief of Æneas( in Virgil[ 142]) over the enemy cut down even by his own hand? |
augustine-city-4013 | For why does he not say at first what he will say afterwards, when some one shall put the question to him, What he means by fate? |
augustine-city-4013 | For why is it that we remember with difficulty, and without difficulty forget? |
augustine-city-4013 | For why not the one as well as the other? |
augustine-city-4013 | For why should not it also be so, if Victory is a goddess? |
augustine-city-4013 | For why should there be any punishment where there is nothing to punish? |
augustine-city-4013 | For without Him what have we accomplished, save to perish in His anger? |
augustine-city-4013 | For without a good will, what were they but evil? |
augustine-city-4013 | Had all these murdered persons, then, despised auguries? |
augustine-city-4013 | Had she herself born seven, although she had been barren? |
augustine-city-4013 | Had they neither public nor household gods to consult when they left their homes and set out on that fatal journey? |
augustine-city-4013 | Has He therefore a body, the eyes of which give Him this knowledge? |
augustine-city-4013 | Has not hunger driven men to eat human flesh, and that the flesh not of bodies found dead, but of bodies slain for the purpose? |
augustine-city-4013 | Has not the madness of thirst driven men to drink human urine, and even their own? |
augustine-city-4013 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
augustine-city-4013 | Have not the fierce pangs of famine driven mothers to eat their own children, incredibly savage as it seems? |
augustine-city-4013 | Have they any privilege of learning what the others are not privileged to learn? |
augustine-city-4013 | Have they fought then? |
augustine-city-4013 | He says,"Mine enemies speak evil of me; When shall he die, and his name perish? |
augustine-city-4013 | Her guards perhaps? |
augustine-city-4013 | How can they say that all these had their different constellations, which they see coming to so different ends? |
augustine-city-4013 | How can those whose own spirit is unclean cleanse the spirit of man? |
augustine-city-4013 | How did they expect to raise this lofty mass against God, when they had built it above all the mountains and the clouds of the earth''s atmosphere? |
augustine-city-4013 | How do we know this? |
augustine-city-4013 | How does it not conflict, when it is entirely a different thing to say that one goddess has many names, and to say that there are many goddesses? |
augustine-city-4013 | How even can they be said to have been created, if we are to understand that they have always existed? |
augustine-city-4013 | How is it, then, that the goddess Fortune is sometimes good, sometimes bad? |
augustine-city-4013 | How many Fortunes are there then? |
augustine-city-4013 | How many accidents do farmers, or rather all men, fear that the crops may suffer from the weather, or the soil, or the ravages of destructive animals? |
augustine-city-4013 | How shall Christ exalt the horn of His Christ? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, I say, can good be the cause of evil? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, are all the sons of the three branches of Noah''s family enumerated as founding a nation each, if Heber and Peleg did not so? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, are they intermediate, when they have three things in common with the lowest, and only one in common with the highest? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, can a good thing be the efficient cause of an evil will? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, can that be good to the good, which could not have happened except to the evil? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, could that be a glorious war which a daughter- state waged against its mother? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, did the image of Minerva remain standing? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, do they attempt to refer the gods to heaven, and the goddesses to earth? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, does he live as he wishes who does not live as long as he wishes? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, has it no will, and not rather a good will? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, is it that everywhere Christ is celebrated with such firm belief in His resurrection and ascension? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, shall the soul rejoice in truth, whose joy is founded on falsehood? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, was she invoked to defend the city and the citizens, she who could not defend her own defenders? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, then, were these not evils which made life miserable, and a thing to be escaped from? |
augustine-city-4013 | How, therefore, is she good, who without any discernment comes-- both to the good and to the bad? |
augustine-city-4013 | However, it may justly be asked, whether our subjection to these affections, even while we follow virtue, is a part of the infirmity of this life? |
augustine-city-4013 | However, where virtue and felicity are, what else is sought for? |
augustine-city-4013 | I am willing to admit it; but is Romulus any more the son of Mars? |
augustine-city-4013 | I ask, then, whether this thing was superior, inferior, or equal to it? |
augustine-city-4013 | I found also that verse in the Gospel:"Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye even so unto them?" |
augustine-city-4013 | I grant that there are many things in one man; are there therefore in him many men? |
augustine-city-4013 | If Peter the enchanter made the world so love Christ, what did Christ the innocent do to make Peter so love Him? |
augustine-city-4013 | If Regulus acted thus, what tortures are not to be despised for the sake of good faith toward that country to whose beatitude faith itself leads? |
augustine-city-4013 | If a demon, is he mightier than an angel who serves the God by whom the world was made? |
augustine-city-4013 | If a god, is he greater than the God who made the world? |
augustine-city-4013 | If against His will, how is He blessed? |
augustine-city-4013 | If bad, how could a bad will give birth to a good one? |
augustine-city-4013 | If good, who is so left to himself as to say that a good will makes a will bad? |
augustine-city-4013 | If it is considered unseemly to emend anything which Plato has touched, why did Porphyry himself make emendations, and these not a few? |
augustine-city-4013 | If it is happy, let the wise man remain in it; but if these ills drive him out of it, in what sense is it happy? |
augustine-city-4013 | If it is not credible, how is it that it has already received credence in the whole world? |
augustine-city-4013 | If seventy years in those times meant only seven of our years, what man of seven years old begets children? |
augustine-city-4013 | If such darkness shrouds social life, will a wise judge take his seat on the bench or no? |
augustine-city-4013 | If the binding and shutting up of the devil means his being made unable to seduce the Church, must his loosing be the recovery of this ability? |
augustine-city-4013 | If the commands of a general make so great a difference, shall the commands of God make none? |
augustine-city-4013 | If the further question be asked, What was the efficient cause of their evil will? |
augustine-city-4013 | If the poets have Jupiter with a beard and Mercury beardless, have not the priests the same? |
augustine-city-4013 | If these are sacred rites, what is sacrilege? |
augustine-city-4013 | If they do not declare the will of the Father, what divine revelations can they make? |
augustine-city-4013 | If this is purification, what is pollution? |
augustine-city-4013 | If thou offerest rightly, but dost not rightly distinguish, hast thou not sinned? |
augustine-city-4013 | If willingly, how is He righteous? |
augustine-city-4013 | If with, was the will good or bad? |
augustine-city-4013 | If, then, it is one goddess( though, if the truth were consulted, it is not even that), why do they nevertheless separate it into many? |
augustine-city-4013 | If, then, it was not from eternity, who, I ask, made it? |
augustine-city-4013 | If, then, the latter be believed, why not also the former? |
augustine-city-4013 | If, then, the soul has always existed, are we to say that its wretchedness has always existed? |
augustine-city-4013 | If, therefore, Janus is the world, and Janus is a god, will they say, in order that Jupiter may be a god, that he is some part of Janus? |
augustine-city-4013 | If, therefore, its greater dignity has deserved a higher place, why is Saturn higher in the heavens than Jupiter? |
augustine-city-4013 | In answer to which he says,"And, really, what truer do the dreams of Titus Tatius, or Romulus, or Tullus Hostilius appear to thee? |
augustine-city-4013 | In brief, why is God angry at those who do not worship Him, since these offenders are parts of Himself? |
augustine-city-4013 | In comparison of all things which are contained by heaven and earth, what are all things together which are possessed by men under the name of money? |
augustine-city-4013 | In like manner, in one goddess there are many things; are there therefore also many goddesses? |
augustine-city-4013 | In respect of these truths, I am not at all afraid of the arguments of the Academicians, who say, What if you are deceived? |
augustine-city-4013 | In short, to say all in a word, what but disobedience was the punishment of disobedience in that sin? |
augustine-city-4013 | In this vanity, then, was it not by the just and righteous judgment of God that man, made like to vanity, was destined to pass away? |
augustine-city-4013 | In which number will they put it? |
augustine-city-4013 | Indeed, to worship conquered gods as protectors and champions, what is this but to worship, not good divinities, but evil omens? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is God powerless to do everything that is special to the Christian''s creed, but powerful to effect everything the Platonists desire? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is felicity one thing, fortune another? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is innocence a sufficient protection against the various assaults of demons? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it because he was conquered? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it because in the one case Menelaus[ 127] was aggrieved, while in the other Vulcan[ 128] connived at the crime? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it because it is fruitful? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it because it would be improper to set the daughter before the father? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it because they are all worshipped under the general name of Virtue itself? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it not also in the houses of Christ, that is, in the churches, that the"enlargement"of the nations dwells? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it not because Christ came in lowliness, and ye are proud? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it not better to commit a wickedness which penitence may heal, than a crime which leaves no place for healing contrition? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it not for this purpose that wives are married with such ceremony? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it not rather proof of a feeble mind, to be unable to bear either the pains of bodily servitude or the foolish opinion of the vulgar? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it not that the depth of the human heart expressed what it perceived? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it not then obvious that we love in ourselves the very love wherewith we love whatever good we love? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it perhaps the case that when she is bad she is not a goddess, but is suddenly changed into a malignant demon? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is it right that the actors of these poetical and God- dishonoring effusions be branded, while their authors are honored? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is not Saturn old and Apollo young in the shrines where their images stand as well as when represented by actors''masks? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is not even some part of the gods to be preferred to the whole of humanity? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is the Priapus of the priests less obscene than the Priapus of the players? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is the body of the wise man exempt from any pain which may dispel pleasure, from any disquietude which may banish repose? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is the stage Apollo a lyrist, but the Delphic Apollo ignorant of this art? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is the wave, then, which comes to the shore and returns to the main, two parts of the world, or two parts of the soul of the world? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is there a mistake here in the order of the elements, or is not the mistake rather in their reasonings, and not in the nature of things? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is there found a god who listens to the envious man, and frightens the gods from doing good? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is this the innocence of the gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is this their concord? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is this to give every one his due? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is this to interpret or to deprecate? |
augustine-city-4013 | Is this, then, the glory of Brutus-- this injustice, alike detestable and profitless to the republic? |
augustine-city-4013 | It may perhaps be replied, Why not always, since that which is in all time may very properly be said to be"always?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Justice being taken away, then, what are kingdoms but great robberies? |
augustine-city-4013 | Let no man then so understand the words of the Psalmist,"Shall God forget to be gracious? |
augustine-city-4013 | Let the Apostle James summarily reply to them:"If any man say he has faith, and have not works, can faith save him?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Let this further question be answered: What part of the earth does a part of the soul of the world permeate in order to make the god Tellumo? |
augustine-city-4013 | Lo, then, since the whole physical world is complete in these four or three elements, where shall Minerva be? |
augustine-city-4013 | Man, it is true, has not this power; but is this any reason for supposing that God could not give it to such creatures as He wished to possess it? |
augustine-city-4013 | Manifestly these things are ruled and governed by the one God according as He pleases; and if His motives are hid, are they therefore unjust? |
augustine-city-4013 | Moreover, how can he give eternal life who can not give happiness? |
augustine-city-4013 | Must the criminal be confined only for so long a time as he spent on the offence for which he is committed? |
augustine-city-4013 | Must we call them flatterers of the fortunate, rather than helpers of the wretched? |
augustine-city-4013 | Must we then conclude that there is thus no death of the body at all? |
augustine-city-4013 | Must we therefore reckon it a breaking of this commandment,"Thou shalt not kill,"to pull a flower? |
augustine-city-4013 | Must we, then, say that the one was tempted by a secret suggestion of the evil spirit? |
augustine-city-4013 | Nay, how could they but grant to them the highest civic honors? |
augustine-city-4013 | Nay, whom has it not worried? |
augustine-city-4013 | Nevertheless, what saith the Scripture? |
augustine-city-4013 | Next, I ask, how is it that the Roman empire had already immensely increased before any one worshipped Felicity? |
augustine-city-4013 | Now, if this be the case( for what else ought we to believe concerning the gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | Now, since God by the words,"Adam, where art thou?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Now, when victory remains with the party which had the juster cause, who hesitates to congratulate the victor, and style it a desirable peace? |
augustine-city-4013 | O happy life, which seeks the aid of death to end it? |
augustine-city-4013 | Of this vast material for misery the earth is full, and therefore it is written,"Is not human life upon earth a trial?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Of what character, therefore, are those gods who contend with Plato himself about those scenic plays? |
augustine-city-4013 | Oh infatuated men, what is this blindness, or rather madness, which possesses you? |
augustine-city-4013 | On the other hand, if such things are not restored to the body, they must perish; how, then, they say, shall not a hair of the head perish? |
augustine-city-4013 | On the other hand, if there is no death before or after, what do we mean when we say"after death,"or"before death?" |
augustine-city-4013 | On the second day, then? |
augustine-city-4013 | On what pretext can you at once adore him who exacts, and brand him who acts these plays? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or could not God, who ordered them to be preserved in order to replenish the race, restore them in the same way He had created them? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or do you call it happy because you are at liberty to escape these evils by death? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or does this not happen with those celestials because God, whose will, as Plato says, overpowers all powers, has willed it should not be so? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or does, Jupiter send her too, whither he pleases? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or have they really done this, and has the fact been suppressed by the historians of these events? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or how many men are there who are aware of the vast advantage that lies hid in this knowledge? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or if empire is the gift of Jove, why may not victory also be held to be his gift? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or is it lawful for gods to have intercourse with women, unlawful for men to have intercourse with goddesses? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or is it possible that not only individuals, but even entire communities, perish while the gods are propitious to them? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or is there a reason for Concord being a goddess while Discord is none? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or must we suppose that the reason why she is not among the select is simply this, that even Fortune herself has had an adverse fortune? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or rather, are there three, one the goddess of virgins, who is also called Vesta, another the goddess of wives, and another of harlots? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or shall God refuse to listen to so many of His beloved children, when their holiness has purged their prayers of all hindrance to His answering them? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or was it no longer happy? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or was it the disposition? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or were they, perhaps, changed at birth, either he into a male, or she into a female, because of the difference in their horoscopes? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or what need is there of Jove himself in this affair, if Victory favors and is propitious, and always goes to those whom she wishes to be victorious? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or when, in the midst of a serious pestilence, lightning struck the Roman camp and killed many? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or who would rather choose to die than profess belief in his divinity? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or will they deny that they were divinely aided because they did not last long? |
augustine-city-4013 | Or will they say that these things were credible, and therefore were credited? |
augustine-city-4013 | Otherwise how were it true"Adam was not deceived?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Ought not men of intelligence, and indeed men of every kind, to be stirred up to examine the nature of this opinion? |
augustine-city-4013 | Over his brother, does He mean? |
augustine-city-4013 | Over what, then, but sin? |
augustine-city-4013 | Panthus,''scaped from death by flight, Priest of Apollo on the height, His conquered gods with trembling hands He bears, and shelter swift demands?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Perhaps they were present, but asleep? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall He in anger shut up His tender mercies?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall I bring forward either Plato or the peripatetic Strato, one of whom made God to be without a body, the other without a mind?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall I come before Him with burnt- offerings, with calves of a year old? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall I give my first- born for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall eternal life be hoped for from these, by which this short and temporal life is polluted? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall it be said that the Christians have or dained those laws by which magic arts are punished? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall not he that sleeps also rise again?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall there be present as many angels as men, and shall each man hear his life recited by the angel assigned to him? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall we say of the successfully tempted man that he corrupted his own will, since he was certainly good before his will became bad? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall we say that both statements are true? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall we then say that they were made the third day? |
augustine-city-4013 | Shall we therefore deny that this man is descended from that one man who was first created? |
augustine-city-4013 | She who is the goddess, is she always good? |
augustine-city-4013 | Since, then, God was not ignorant that man would fall, why should He not have suffered him to be tempted by an angel who hated and envied him? |
augustine-city-4013 | Since, therefore, Janus is the world, and Jupiter is the world, wherefore are Janus and Jupiter two gods, while the world is but one? |
augustine-city-4013 | So long, therefore, as we are beset by this weakness, this plague, this disease, how shall we dare to say that we are safe? |
augustine-city-4013 | Some one will say, But do you believe all this? |
augustine-city-4013 | Suppose it ever so unlike, can it ever be so much so as no longer to be water? |
augustine-city-4013 | Take away outward show,[ 217] and what are all men after all but men? |
augustine-city-4013 | The point of time in which the souls of the good and evil are separated from the body, are we to say it is after death, or in death rather? |
augustine-city-4013 | The possessions of the hidden man of the heart, which in the sight of God are of great price? |
augustine-city-4013 | The son of Cain, therefore, that is, the son of possession( and of what but an earthly possession? |
augustine-city-4013 | The verse runs:"Shall God forget to be gracious? |
augustine-city-4013 | Their faith? |
augustine-city-4013 | Their godliness? |
augustine-city-4013 | Then follows,"And Jacob begat Judah and his brethren:"was Judah the first begotten? |
augustine-city-4013 | Then it is happy in the midst of these very evils on account of which you say we must quit it? |
augustine-city-4013 | Then what is"to judge His people,"but to separate by judgment the good from the bad, as the sheep from the goats? |
augustine-city-4013 | Then"Isaac begat Jacob;"why did he not say Esau, who was the first- born? |
augustine-city-4013 | Then, as if it were said to him,"What then do you believe, feel, know? |
augustine-city-4013 | Then, why did he do so? |
augustine-city-4013 | Thereafter it follows,"Who is the man that shall live, and shall not see death? |
augustine-city-4013 | This consent, then, this evil will which he presented to the evil suasive influence,--what was the cause of it, we ask? |
augustine-city-4013 | This direful longing for the light, Whence comes it, say, and why?" |
augustine-city-4013 | This only I briefly said in my heart:"O Lord, what prayers of Thy people dost Thou hear if Thou hearest not these?" |
augustine-city-4013 | This was obscure before it took place; but what believer does not find it out now that it is done? |
augustine-city-4013 | To the same purpose is that written,"He who is bad to himself, to whom can he be good?" |
augustine-city-4013 | To what do these miracles witness, but to this faith which preaches Christ risen in the flesh, and ascended with the same into heaven? |
augustine-city-4013 | To what do they refer that? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was Venus not sufficient alone, who is even said to be named from this, that without her power a woman does not cease to be a virgin? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was it after sin he was made so? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was it because his will was a nature, or because it was made of nothing? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was it more disgraceful to be a victor contrary to orders, than to submit to a victor contrary to the received ideas of honor? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was it perhaps because he could not see her among so great a crowd? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was it to this he was driven by"his country''s love, and unextinguished thirst of praise?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Was it, I would ask, fortitude or weakness which prompted Cato to kill himself? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was not persecution so hot against the Christians( if even yet it is allayed) that some of the fugitives from it came even to Roman towns? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was she enraged at her husband for taking Venilia as a concubine, and thus drove him from the upper part of the sea? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was the empire, therefore, more great than happy? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was the seed kept from being devoured, like other things, by being covered with the soil? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was the vanity of the fable which made Jupiter king not able to reach the stars? |
augustine-city-4013 | Was then that which is holy made death unto me? |
augustine-city-4013 | Were not both Aristippus and Antisthenes there, two noble philosophers and both Socratic? |
augustine-city-4013 | Were the sacred rites more efficient at their first institution than during their subsequent celebration? |
augustine-city-4013 | What am I to do? |
augustine-city-4013 | What am I to say now about the hair and nails? |
augustine-city-4013 | What am I to say of the other senses? |
augustine-city-4013 | What becomes of the opinion that she has received her very name from fortuitous events? |
augustine-city-4013 | What better thing, then, could the Trojans have done? |
augustine-city-4013 | What blessings shall we receive in that kingdom, since already we have received as the pledge of them Christ''s dying? |
augustine-city-4013 | What can be stranger than this? |
augustine-city-4013 | What can human learning, though manifold, avail thee in this perplexity? |
augustine-city-4013 | What can more manifestly favor them who say that all those gods were men? |
augustine-city-4013 | What can seem safer than a man sitting in his chair? |
augustine-city-4013 | What can suffice the man whom virtue and felicity do not suffice? |
augustine-city-4013 | What can the most excellent human talent do here? |
augustine-city-4013 | What curious designs do we think these are, save that the proud must fall, and the humble rise? |
augustine-city-4013 | What did Abraham mean by marrying Keturah after Sarah''s death? |
augustine-city-4013 | What does the lightest of substances do in this ponderosity? |
augustine-city-4013 | What does this soul, which is finer than all else, do in such a mass of matter as this? |
augustine-city-4013 | What else but perjury corrupted the judgments pronounced by so many of the senators? |
augustine-city-4013 | What else corrupted the people''s votes and decisions of all causes tried before them? |
augustine-city-4013 | What else? |
augustine-city-4013 | What fleet or flight shall convey us thither? |
augustine-city-4013 | What fury of foreign nations, what barbarian ferocity, can compare with this victory of citizens over citizens? |
augustine-city-4013 | What good is to be thought of their sacred rites which are concealed in darkness, when those which are brought forth into the light are so detestable? |
augustine-city-4013 | What incredible thing is it, then, if some one soul be assumed by Him in an ineffable and unique manner for the salvation of many? |
augustine-city-4013 | What injury could any spiritual or material elevation do to God? |
augustine-city-4013 | What instruction could be sought either from Mercury or Minerva, when Virtue already possessed all in herself? |
augustine-city-4013 | What interpretation does that give rise to? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is Genius? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is it but that the fame of Him shall illuminate believers? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is it, then, that Cicero feared in the prescience of future things? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is the guile of the simple, what the fiction of the man who does not lie, but a profound mystery of the truth? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is there established by laws so sure and inflexible? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is there so arranged by the Author of the nature of heaven and earth as the exactly ordered course of the stars? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is this but either between the two testaments, or between the two thieves, or between Moses and Elias talking with Him on the mount? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is this but that He should both be announced before His coming hither and after His return hence? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is this but that"He stood"for succor,"and the earth was moved"to believe? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is this but the hand of Him who distinguishes those who worship from those who despise Him? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is this but the trophy of the cross? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is this but to fight strenuously for their own conjectures, while they carelessly neglect the teaching of Scripture? |
augustine-city-4013 | What is this but what is also said in the psalm,"Be Thou exalted, O God, above the heavens; and Thy glory above all the earth?" |
augustine-city-4013 | What is"The abyss uttered its voice?" |
augustine-city-4013 | What kind of god, therefore, is that which no man would make but one erring, incredulous, and averse to the true God? |
augustine-city-4013 | What life, I pray? |
augustine-city-4013 | What man can equal the eagle or the vulture in strength of vision? |
augustine-city-4013 | What man can go out of his own house without being exposed on all hands to unforeseen accidents? |
augustine-city-4013 | What more is required? |
augustine-city-4013 | What more monstrous than this absurdity? |
augustine-city-4013 | What more useful than fire for warming, restoring, cooking, though nothing is more destructive than fire burning and consuming? |
augustine-city-4013 | What need is there to seek further proofs in the law or the prophets of this same thing? |
augustine-city-4013 | What need we say more? |
augustine-city-4013 | What produces it in the man in whom it exists? |
augustine-city-4013 | What profit hath a man of all his labor which he hath taken under the sun?" |
augustine-city-4013 | What punishment, then, shall be sufficient when the gods are the objects of so wicked and outrageous an injustice? |
augustine-city-4013 | What says Varro himself, whom we grieve to have found, although not by his own judgment, placing the scenic plays among things divine? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall I say concerning Virtus? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall I say of that virtue which is called prudence? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall I say of the Cynocephali, whose dog- like head and barking proclaim them beasts rather than men? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall I say of these judgments which men pronounce on men, and which are necessary in communities, whatever outward peace they enjoy? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall I say of torture applied to the accused himself? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall we call her? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall we reply to this? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall we say of imprisonment? |
augustine-city-4013 | What shall we say, besides, of the idea that Felicity also is a goddess? |
augustine-city-4013 | What should she possess, what should she fill? |
augustine-city-4013 | What solidity, what consistency, what sobriety has this disputation? |
augustine-city-4013 | What then becomes of what the stars have already decreed at the hour of birth? |
augustine-city-4013 | What then shall these rewards be, if such be the blessings of a condemned state? |
augustine-city-4013 | What was there in the hearts of these exultant people but the faith of Christ, for which Stephen had shed his blood? |
augustine-city-4013 | What was thought of Jupiter himself by those who placed his wet nurse in the Capitol? |
augustine-city-4013 | What will He give to those whom He has predestined to life, who has given such things even to those whom He has predestined to death? |
augustine-city-4013 | What wonder if those do not look up at heavenly things whose back is always bowed down that they may grovel among earthly things? |
augustine-city-4013 | What wonder is it if, entangled in these circles, they find neither entrance nor egress? |
augustine-city-4013 | What wonder, then, if those whose eyes are dimmed that they see not do not see these manifest things? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, I say, was the need of this, seeing that the whole of Cain''s posterity were destroyed in the deluge? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, are those sacred rites, for the performance of which holiness has chosen such men as not even the obscenity of the stage has admitted? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, becomes of that definition of fortune? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, did he represent but Jesus, who, before He was offered up, was crowned with thorns by the Jews? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, do so many earthly bodies do in the air, since the air is the third element from the earth? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, do they say is signified by the castrated Atys himself, and whatever remained to him after his castration? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, does He mean by"your sins,"but those sins from which not even you who are justified and sanctified can be free? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, does it do in an earthly body? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, hinders God from ordaining the same of terrestrial bodies? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, if by some secret judgment of God you were held fast and not permitted to die, nor suffered to live without these evils? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, is the difference between good and evil demons? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, is the local position of those good demons, who, above men but beneath the gods, afford assistance to the former, minister to the latter? |
augustine-city-4013 | What, then, says Æneas himself,--Æneas who is so often designated"pious?" |
augustine-city-4013 | What, therefore, do they mean when they say that, if the hour of the conception be found, many things can be predicted by these astrologers? |
augustine-city-4013 | When could Cunina take thought about war, whose oversight was not allowed to go beyond the cradles of the babies? |
augustine-city-4013 | When could Nodotus give help in battle, who had nothing to do even with the sheath of the ear, but only with the knots of the joints? |
augustine-city-4013 | When the heavens, the higher and more secure part of the world, perish, shall the world itself be preserved? |
augustine-city-4013 | When this Æsculapius, to whom especially he was speaking, had answered him, and had said,"Dost thou mean the statues, O Trismegistus?" |
augustine-city-4013 | When, then, is he in death so that we can say he is dying? |
augustine-city-4013 | When, therefore, could Segetia take care of the empire, who was not allowed to take care of the corn and the trees? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where else can such confusion reign, but in devils''temples? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where is the man who lives with them in the style in which it becomes us to live with them? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where is their own intelligence hidden and buried while the malignant spirit is using their body and soul according to his own will? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where were they when Valerius the consul was killed while defending the Capitol, that had been fired by exiles and slaves? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where were they when the Gauls took, sacked, burned, and desolated Rome? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where will they find room for the fear of these gods when angry, who use such means of gaining their favor when propitious? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where, but in the haunts of deceit? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where, then, is his fortitude? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where, then, is the justice of man, when he deserts the true God and yields himself to impure demons? |
augustine-city-4013 | Where, then, was the wisdom of entrusting Rome to the Trojan gods, who had demonstrated their weakness in the loss of Troy? |
augustine-city-4013 | Wherefore also, when Saul persecuted His body, that is, His believing people, He Himself saith from heaven,"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Wherefore do they worship Rusor? |
augustine-city-4013 | Wherefore was Venilia also joined to him? |
augustine-city-4013 | Which of the fathers in that Egyptian slavery, but Aaron, was his father, who, when they were set free, was chosen to the priesthood? |
augustine-city-4013 | Which of the three remaining sects must be chosen? |
augustine-city-4013 | Which then can more readily be believed to work miracles? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who are to be understood as full of bread except those same who were as if mighty, that is, the Israelites, to whom were committed the oracles of God? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can accept or suffer them to be spoken? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can at this age beget children according to the ordinary and familiar course of nature? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can away with such foolishness and absurdity? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can believe such follies, unless the demons have practised their deceit upon him? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can enumerate all the blessings we enjoy? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can equal in length of life the serpents, which are affirmed to put off old age along with their skin, and to return to youth again? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can equal in strength the lion or the elephant? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can equal the dog in acuteness of smell? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can equal the hare, the stag, and all the birds in swiftness? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can number the deities to whom the guardianship of Rome was entrusted? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can presume to understand these words of any other than Christ, who is speaking to the lost sheep of the house of Israel? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can speak and say, See, this is new? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who can weigh them? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who could believe this? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who denies it? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who does not know what passes between husband and wife that children may be born? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who does not see that the intermediate position is abandoned in proportion as they tend to, and are depressed towards, the lowest extreme? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who does not see to which he gives the palm? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who else than the world do they believe to have this power, to which it has been said:"Almighty Jove, progenitor and mother?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Who gave to chaff such power to freeze that it preserves snow buried under it, and such power to warm that it ripens green fruit? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who has considered them more attentively? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who has declared to them these things? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who has discovered them more learnedly? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who has distinguished them more acutely? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who has investigated those things more carefully than Marcus Varro? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who instituted the theatre but the state? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who is so left to himself as to say so? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who is so wretched a creature as to expect purification by a way in which men are contaminating, demons contaminated, and gods contaminable? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who kept the weight of water in the sieve? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who of you is so silly as to think so? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who ought to be, or who are more friendly than those who live in the same family? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who outside of Curubis knows of this, or who but a very few who might hear it elsewhere? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who prevented any drop from falling from it through so many open holes? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who that has enmity has it not in his soul? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who then refrained himself from praising God? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who will accuse so religious a submission? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who will deny that at that time the republic had become extinct? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who would not recall these to spiritual understanding if he could, or confess that they should be recalled by him who is able? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who would not, then, in company with the infants presented for baptism, run to the grace of Christ, that so he might not be dismissed from the body? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who would say so? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who, I say, can listen to such things? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who, e.g., would not rather have bread in his house than mice, gold than fleas? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who, then, but the most miserable will deny that he is blessed, who enjoys that which he loves, and loves the true and highest good? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who, then, is Janus, with whom Varro commences? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who, then, will be bold enough to suggest that the angels were made after the six days''creation? |
augustine-city-4013 | Who, therefore, is the Christ of His Christ? |
augustine-city-4013 | Whom has it spared? |
augustine-city-4013 | Whose the grief, but of the offspring of Æneas, the descendants of Ascanius, the progeny of Venus, the grandsons of Jupiter? |
augustine-city-4013 | Whose was the loss on both sides? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why all these punishments, save to overcome ignorance and bridle evil desires-- these evils with which we come into the world? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why allege to me the mere names and words of"glory"and"victory?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Why did Numa appoint so many gods and so many goddesses without this one? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why did Romulus himself, ambitious as he was of founding a fortunate city, not erect a temple to this goddess before all others? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why did he not persuade him to die along with himself? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why did he supplicate the other gods for anything, since he would have lacked nothing had she been with him? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why did they give her up to be destroyed, not by the Greek heroes, but by the basest of the Romans? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why do men murmur in difficult and sad emergencies, as if the gods had retired in anger? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why do they have separate temples, separate altars, different rites, dissimilar images? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why do they vainly attempt to refer these to the world? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why do we not credit the assertion of divinity, that the soul is not co- eternal with God, but is created, and once was not? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why do you still ascribe to these latter the honor of declaring divine truth? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why do you thus seek such a plausible reason for escaping from the Christian faith, if not because, as I again say, Christ is humble and ye proud? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why does any baptized person hold his hand from taking his own life? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why does this stream of mercy flow to all the human race, and dry up as soon as it reaches the angelic? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why has temperance not deserved to be a goddess, when some Roman princes have obtained no small glory on account of her? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why have prudence and wisdom merited no place among the gods? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why have we thought it worth while to mention this? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why is it that the sea is assigned to Neptune, the earth to Pluto? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why is it that you refuse to be Christians, on the ground that you hold opinions which, in fact, you yourselves demolish? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why is it, then, that when the Christian faith is pressed upon you, you forget, or pretend to ignore, what you habitually discuss or teach? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why is the bed- chamber filled with a crowd of deities, when even the groomsmen[ 246] have departed? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why may not man, too, be a similar thing? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why must a kingdom be distracted in order to be great? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why not, then, the world also? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why then do they still exclaim that this which God has promised, which the world has believed on God''s promise as was predicted, is an impossibility? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why then do they themselves not believe? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why was it left to Lucullus to dedicate a temple to so great a goddess at so late a date, and after so many Roman rulers? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, also, is Juno united to him as his wife, who is called at once"sister and yoke- fellow?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, indeed, not something better than is made for Jupiter himself? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, are not men rather held to be gods, who render it fruitful by cultivating it; but though they plough it, do not adore it? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, are there so few of them? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, are there two goddesses, when it is one wave which comes and returns? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, are these things in the minds of demons which are not in beasts? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, are two names given her? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, can an animal of earth not live in the second element, that is, in water, while it can in the third? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, did they not also aid him, so as to restrain him from so many enormities? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, do they not assign to the father of Jove a seat, if not of higher, at least of equal honor? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, do they say that the beginnings of things pertain to him, but the ends to another whom they call Terminus? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, do we not rather believe the divinity in those matters, which human talent can not fathom? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, does he think that they ought to be honored? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, have they made to you two goddesses? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, is it added,"In the midst of the earth?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, is not that rule of justice observed concerning Jove himself toward Saturn? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, is the ether given to Jove, the air to Juno? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, was he called Ruminus, when they who may perchance inquire more diligently may find that he is also that goddess Rumina? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, was it said,"The flesh of the ungodly,"unless because both the fire and the worm are to be the punishment of the flesh? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, then, would they have it to be a goddess? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, therefore, did he appoint as gods for the Romans, Janus, Jove, Mars, Picus, Faunus, Tibernus, Hercules, and others, if there were more of them? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why, they say, are those miracles, which you affirm were wrought formerly, wrought no longer? |
augustine-city-4013 | Why? |
augustine-city-4013 | Will I eat the flesh of bulls, or drink the blood of goats?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Will any man do so when it is written of him,"And he begat sons and daughters, and all the days of Seth were 912 years, and he died?" |
augustine-city-4013 | Will not the body be raised to heaven by virtue of so excellent a nature as this? |
augustine-city-4013 | Will some one say that these miracles are false, that they never happened, and that the records of them are lies? |
augustine-city-4013 | Will some one say that, when Fimbria stormed Troy, the gods were already resident in Rome? |
augustine-city-4013 | Will some one say, Why, then, was this divine compassion extended even to the ungodly and ungrateful? |
augustine-city-4013 | Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of rivers of oil? |
augustine-city-4013 | Will they say that Scripture follows no such usage? |
augustine-city-4013 | Will they then say that Jupiter is the soul of the world, and Janus the body--that is, this visible world? |
augustine-city-4013 | Wilt thou rather believe that these are deities, and receive them into heaven? |
augustine-city-4013 | With this goddess favorable and propitious, even if Jove was idle and did nothing, what nations could remain unsubdued, what kingdom would not yield? |
augustine-city-4013 | With what intention, then, did he who wrote this record make no mention of subsequent generations? |
augustine-city-4013 | With what justice, then, is the player excommunicated by whom God is worshipped? |
augustine-city-4013 | Would not they have exclaimed in reply, What have we done? |
augustine-city-4013 | Would you hear, in the apostle''s own words, who he is who builds on the foundation gold, silver, precious stones? |
augustine-city-4013 | Yet did not each gather disciples to follow his own sect? |
augustine-city-4013 | Yet were not both sects famous among the Athenians? |
augustine-city-4013 | Yet what else can we call them than dying persons? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1010] For, as saith the apostle,"Who hath ascended but He who hath also descended into the lower parts of the earth? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1019] What then does he say who comes to worship the priest of God, even the Priest who is God? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1051] For what else is that than, Do not harm them? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1059]"Thy face"is understood, as it is elsewhere said,"How long dost Thou turn away Thy face from me?" |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1089] Who is this Highest, save God? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1108] What could be more openly said? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1156] Who does not see that the Jews are now thus? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1173] What is this but the inexpressible admiration of the foreknown, new, and sudden salvation of men? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1179] What does"The people shall see Thee and grieve"mean, but that in mourning they shall be blessed? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1213] What of Enoch, the seventh from Adam? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1219] For who does not see that the prophet could not say both, when he was sent to terrify the city by the threat of imminent ruin? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1253] It is customary to ask, When shall that be? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1264] For what flood of eloquence can suffice to detail the miseries of this life? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1269] What shall I say of the miseries of love which Terence also recounts--"slights, suspicions, quarrels, war to- day, peace to- morrow?" |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1270] Is not human life full of such things? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1310] who but a proud man can presume that he so lives that he has no need to say to God,"Forgive us our debts?" |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1320] What truer, terser, more salutary enouncement could be made? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1352] But what shall become of the little ones? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1357] Can He mean out of that kingdom in which are no offenses? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1364] Whence the apostle says,"What have I to do with judging them that are without? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1397] Do not they even who have the first- fruits of the Spirit groan within themselves, waiting for the adoption, the redemption of their body? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1399] But when shall there be no more death in that city, except when it shall be said,"O death, where is thy contention? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1400] O death, where is thy sting? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1430] Here Augustin inserts the remark,"Who does not see that cadavera( carcases) are so called from cadendo( falling)?" |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1452] For if we take the bare literal sense, how is it possible to call the heaven above, as if the heaven could be anywhere else than above? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 151] But why should I spend time in writing such things, or make others spend it in reading them? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1571] And who then is it, they ask, of whom the Apostle Paul says,"But he himself shall be saved, yet so as by fire?" |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1573] Would you hear who he is that buildeth wood, hay, stubble? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1586] He then who has not compassion on his own soul that he may please God, how can he be said to do alms- deeds proportioned to his sins? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1590] Why do many through fear of the first saying run to baptism, while few through fear of the second seek to be justified? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1665] When this promise is fulfilled, what shall we be? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 1676] Or, as the presbyter Jerome rendered it from the Hebrew,"Was not my heart present when the man turned from his chariot to meet thee?" |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 172] Which of these is the wife of Vulcan? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 180] But what are those things which do harm when brought before the multitude? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 247] What is this? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 268] But why is Janus preferred to him? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 288] But why not refer that to the world which is demonstrated to be in the world? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 317] Lastly, was it before Christian judges that Apuleius himself was accused of magic arts? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 33] Are not those very Romans, who were spared by the barbarians through their respect for Christ, become enemies to the name of Christ? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 342] And what is compassion but a fellow- feeling for another''s misery, which prompts us to help him if we can? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 385] So in another prophet:"Wherewith shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before the High God? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 413] Among philosophers it is a question, what is that end and good to the attainment of which all our duties are to have a relation? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 431] But what am I doing? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 453] Was the prophet present when God made the heavens and the earth? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 515] Who, then, can doubt that God, either in foreknowledge or in act, separated between these and the rest? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 54] Did they lose these? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 575] But if our creation even as mortals be a divine benefit, how is it a punishment to be restored to a body, that is, to a divine benefit? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 579] For if it be, how has it come to pass that such a thing should be the punishment of sin? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 589] For what is more precious than a death by which a man''s sins are all forgiven, and his merits increased an hundredfold? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 662] And when the Lord Himself had asked Peter,"Hast thou a regard for me( diligis) more than these?" |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 681] And who would be so pedantic as to say that he should have said"I will"rather than"I desire,"because the word is used in a good connection? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 728] What need of saying more? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 729] And what is pride but the craving for undue exaltation? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 78] Or perhaps she is not there, because she slew herself conscious of guilt, not of innocence? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 81] Why does he love, or at least face, so many serious dangers, by remaining in this life from which he may legitimately depart? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 825] Who can avoid referring this to a profound mystery? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 874] But what did these vain and presumptuous men intend? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 880] We are to understand the words as if it had been said, Shall nothing be restrained from them which they have imagined to do? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 885] For what can we understand by the division of the earth, if not the diversity of languages? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 895] How can this be true if he departed from Haran after his father''s death? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 940] How then is it said"In Isaac shall thy seed be called,"when God calls Ishmael also his seed? |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 942] In whose similitude but His of whom the apostle says,"He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all?" |
augustine-city-4013 | [ 985] Do you say that these are the words of a single weak woman giving thanks for the birth of a son? |
augustine-city-4013 | __________________________________________________________________[ 566]^"Quando leoni Fortior eripuit vitam leo? |
augustine-city-4013 | and again, Have I sanctified my heart in vain, and washed my hands in innocency? |
augustine-city-4013 | and can thought conceive That happy souls this realm would leave, And seek the upper sky, With sluggish clay to reunite? |
augustine-city-4013 | and if not safe, then how can we be already enjoying our final beatitude? |
augustine-city-4013 | and if now earthly bodies can retain the souls below, shall not the souls be one day able to raise the earthly bodies above? |
augustine-city-4013 | and if so, what, pray, is that cause, what is that so great necessity? |
augustine-city-4013 | and is there not found a god who listens to the well- disposed man, and removes the fear of the gods that they may do him good? |
augustine-city-4013 | and shall Sarah, that is ninety years old, bear?" |
augustine-city-4013 | and shall Sarah, that is ninety years old, bear?" |
augustine-city-4013 | and that this will happen endlessly again and again, recurring at fixed intervals, and in regularly returning periods? |
augustine-city-4013 | and twice"Diligis me?" |
augustine-city-4013 | and why, on their account, is the Christian religion injured by the most unworthy calumnies? |
augustine-city-4013 | and, what is the reason of the blessedness of the good, and the misery of the evil? |
augustine-city-4013 | are diligent with difficulty, and without difficulty are indolent? |
augustine-city-4013 | do not ye judge them that are within?" |
augustine-city-4013 | how can this be believed without enervating our faith in the eternal punishment of the devils? |
augustine-city-4013 | if chaste, why slay her? |
augustine-city-4013 | in his treatment of what person would he have manifested the fear of God? |
augustine-city-4013 | learn with difficulty, and without difficulty remain ignorant? |
augustine-city-4013 | nay more, the confession of demons and the deception of wretched men? |
augustine-city-4013 | of the rock struck with the rod, and pouring out waters more than enough for all the host? |
augustine-city-4013 | or do the demons themselves, in order that they may merit pardon for the penitent, first become penitents because they have deceived them? |
augustine-city-4013 | or if he wishes to die, how can he live as he wishes, since he does not wish even to live? |
augustine-city-4013 | or is it not to be believed that He will do this, because it is an undesirable thing, and unworthy of God? |
augustine-city-4013 | or was Thy fury against the rivers? |
augustine-city-4013 | or was Thy rage against the sea?" |
augustine-city-4013 | or was not this the primal condition of man from which the blessed apostle selects his testimony to show what the animal body is? |
augustine-city-4013 | or who can think what the will of the Lord is? |
augustine-city-4013 | or who would say to his enemy, or to the man he thinks his enemy, You have a bad flesh towards me, and not rather, You have a bad spirit towards me? |
augustine-city-4013 | or, What need to add"of life"after the word spirit? |
augustine-city-4013 | quo nemore unquam Exspiravit aper majoris dentibus apri? |
augustine-city-4013 | shall He shut up in His anger His tender mercies?" |
augustine-city-4013 | shall he snatch his soul from the hand of hell?" |
augustine-city-4013 | this swiftest substance in such sluggishness? |
augustine-city-4013 | though the Lord had not said three times but only once,"Lovest thou( amas) me?" |
augustine-city-4013 | what if a man suffers from curvature of the spine to such an extent that his hands reach the ground, and he goes upon all- fours like a quadruped? |
augustine-city-4013 | what tombs of the martyrs would he have respected? |
augustine-city-4013 | where are reason and intellect when disease makes a man delirious? |
augustine-city-4013 | where is the disputer of this world? |
augustine-city-4013 | where is the scribe? |
augustine-city-4013 | who is more at variance with them? |
augustine-city-4013 | who more envious, bitter, and jealous? |
augustine-city-4013 | who was at liberty to sin?" |
augustine-city-4013 | who would not be revolted by it? |
augustine-city-4013 | whose blood would he have refrained from shedding? |
augustine-city-4013 | whose chastity would he have wished to preserve inviolate? |
augustine-city-4013 | why do we carry our investigation through all the rest of it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how shall I release myself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the end, what is it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what do I lose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is a necklace? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is the penalty for him who puts his own slave in chains, what do you think that is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is this to liberty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what, also, will be the end of the sickness? epictetus-discourses-2010 And what,"you may say,"has this to do with being a slave?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who is your evidence for this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And, how,replied Diogenes,"can this be when I think that you are odious to the gods?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are a stork and a man, then, like things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are these things, then, like those? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you changed then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you so hard- hearted? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you then unhappy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Better in what? epictetus-discourses-2010 But I fear that I may be disconcerted?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But I was used to the water of Dirce? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But I will take off your head? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But do you call things to be of bad omen except those which are significant of some evil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But how did I treat of that particular matter? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But how shall I have a neat cloak? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But shall I not obtain any such thing for it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But such a man has a school; why should not I also have a school? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what is it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But,said the young man,"shall marriage and the procreation of children as a chief duty be undertaken by the Cynic?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But,you may say,"such a one treated me with regard so long; and did he not love me?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Could a man who says so, gain so much as Menoeceus gained? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did I not ask for the barley drink? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I not adapt it to particulars? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I not then adapt it properly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not care? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you philosophers then teach us to despise kings? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you say this now also? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you wish me, brother, to read to you, and you to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does a man then differ in no respect from a stork? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he, then, not threaten you at all? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Dost Thou still wish me to exist? epictetus-discourses-2010 For what purpose then have philosophers theorems?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what purpose, then, have I received these things? epictetus-discourses-2010 For what purpose?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For why,a man says,"do I not know the beautiful and the ugly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | From whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has he done nothing, more? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you the signal from nature which the appearance that may be accepted ought to have? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you then the demonstrations? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How could he? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do you know it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do you mean without a lawyer? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do you mean? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do you understand''attaching yourself to God''? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How dost thou depart? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is it possible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is that? epictetus-discourses-2010 How is that?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How long will you act thus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How should it not seem so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then shall I become of an affectionate temper? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then shall I cease to commit them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then shall I see well in any other way in the amphitheatre? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then shall a man endure such persons as this slave? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then shall my brother cease to be angry with me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then will they in any way be useful to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How with the body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, are you not shut out? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, do I use them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, shall I get what I want? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, shall a man maintain the existence of society? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How,he replies,"am I not good?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I have been judged to be impious and profane? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I shall not do that; but how is it that you say that these are not evils? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If then I shall make a mistake in these matters may I not have killed my father? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you choose death as the heavier misfortune, how great is the folly of your choice? epictetus-discourses-2010 In little matters of speculation?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what way? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what, then, is the difference? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it the soul that you mean? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it, then, consistent with reason that there should be running of noses in the world? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is my father bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is my neighbour bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is not my hand my own? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there no reward then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there, then, nothing more? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | It is something,you say:"but who is able to compel me, except the lord of all, Caesar?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | May it never happen,he replied,"that this day should come?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must I then be the only man who goes without a prize? epictetus-discourses-2010 Must I, then, alone have my head cut off?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must I, then, not desire health? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must my leg then be lamed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must we say that all thins are right which seem so to all? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Nor did Helvidius at Rome fare badly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now, then, must I live in this tumult? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | On so small a matter then did such great things depend? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought not then this robber and this adulterer to be destroyed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Pain or pleasure? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Pray, master, shall I succeed to the property of my father? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I then no longer exist? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall we be despised, then, by the Trojans? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Slave,he replied,"was the thing omitted here the Capitol?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | So then all these great and dreadful deeds have this origin, in the appearance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | So when you approach me, you have no regard to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | So, then, you say that I do not now understand names? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Socrates, then, did not fare badly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Suppose that you think that it is night? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Tell me also about the Good, what was your opinion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Tell me then what things are indifferent? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The passage in which I described Pan and the nymphs? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then what good do I gain? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Thus, then, have we many masters? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To banishment,he replies,"or to death?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To the things which are in our power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well have I not read to you, and do you not know what I was doing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, can the ten conquer in this matter? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, if some man should come upon me when I am alone and murder me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, is not the man who has gone through this ceremony become free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, would any man envy those who are nothing to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then; do you wish me to pay court to a certain person? epictetus-discourses-2010 Well then; is it day?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, banishment? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, do these seem to you small matters? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, is not the theatre common to the citizens? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, then, are you troubled with an unfavourable demon? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, then, must a man provide for himself such means of exercise, and to introduce a lion from some place into his country, and a boar and a hydra? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, then, ought we to say such things to the many? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, where does it lead? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What about my property? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What advantage is it, then, to him to have done right? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What are they saying about me there? epictetus-discourses-2010 What do you mean?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you say? epictetus-discourses-2010 What have I done?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What have you to do with me, man? epictetus-discourses-2010 What if they are necessary to me?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of thing do you mean? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What nerves are these? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What shall I do, how will it be, how will it turn out, will this happen, will that? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then did not Socrates write? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then do you say of them now? epictetus-discourses-2010 What then have I need of?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is it to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is my brother''s? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is your opinion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then must I be brought to trial; must another have a fever, another sail on the sea, another die, and another be condemned? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then would you have me to be despised? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then, are not women common by nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then, does not this satisfy you? epictetus-discourses-2010 What then, is freedom madness?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then, must a man be uncleaned? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then, ought we to publish these things to all men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? epictetus-discourses-2010 What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? epictetus-discourses-2010 What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What will you do with death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What will you do with disease? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, and immortal too, exempt from old age, and from sickness? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, if I shall be sick? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, since I am naturally dull, shall I, for this reason, take no pains? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, was not Plato a philosopher? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When then a man has turned round before the praetor his own slave, has he done nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When then did I tell you that I am immortal? epictetus-discourses-2010 When then shall I see Athens again and the Acropolis?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When will the west wind blow? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When, then, women are carried off, when children are made captives, and when the men are killed, are these not evils? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where am I? epictetus-discourses-2010 Where have I failed in the matters pertaining to flattery?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where have I omitted the things which conduce to happiness? epictetus-discourses-2010 Where is there any place of refuge? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Which? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who was Hector''s father? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who was their mother? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who were his brothers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who will provide for me the necessary food? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who will return? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who will take care of me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who, then are you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you trouble me? epictetus-discourses-2010 Why then do we not exercise ourselves and one another in this manner?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you say nothing to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then, if we are naturally such, are not a very great number of us like him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do you go to the doors? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, should I still go? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then,said he,"should I ask him for anything when I can obtain it from you?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will it then be useful to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | With what then must we begin? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you have me to bear poverty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you have me to possess power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you like me to read Paeans to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Yes: what then if I should be sent to Gyara? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Yes; but if my child die or my brother, or if I must die or be racked, what good will these things do me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You then,a man may say,"are you free?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | ), but by God through reason, is he not content when he is alone? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | A handsome man or woman? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | A little more of what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | A man who will teach him to live? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | A person said to Rufus when Galba was murdered,"Is the world now governed by Providence?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | A prince or a private man, a senator or a common person, a soldier or a general, a teacher or a master of a family? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | About not exerting our movements contrary to nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | About what things are we busy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Achilles replies,"Would you then take her whom I love?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Again, sound sense, for the contemplation of what things does it belong to us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Again, the grammarian''s art is employed about articulate speech; is then the art also articulate speech? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Again, when an earthquake shall happen, I imagine that the city is going to fall on me; is not one little stone enough to knock my brains out? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Against whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Against your will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Allow us to ripen in the natural way: why do you bare us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Am I a poor body, a piece of property, a thing of which something is said? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Am I more powerful than he, am I more worthy of confidence? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Am I not free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Am I not mad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Am I not without sorrow? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Am I so stupid? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | An estate in land? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | An inclination arises in me to find fault with a person; for have I not found fault with him before?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And I once said to a man who was vexed because Philostorgus was fortunate:"Would you choose to lie with Sura?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And am not I in danger who dwell in Nicopolis, where there are so many earthquakes: and when you are crossing the Hadriatic, what hazard do you run? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And are all who hear benefited by what they hear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And are the good things of the best within the power of the will or not within the power of the will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And are there none in Olympia? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And are we not in a manner kinsmen of God, and did we not come from Him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And are we not overthrowing neighbourhood, and friendship, and the community; and in what place are we putting ourselves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And are you not changeable in love? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And are you such a man as can listen to the truth? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And as to magistracies and honours? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And can he maintain toward society a proper behavior? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And could he still have been Socrates, if he had lamented in this way: how would he still have been able to write Paeans in his prison? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And did Priamus, who begat fifty worthless sons, or Danaus or AEolus contribute more to the community than Homer? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And did not the judges make the same declaration against Socrates? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And do not I only tell you that you may do what is becoming to yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And do they not become dry that they may be reaped? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And does he not reckon as pure gain whatever they may do which falls short of extreme wickedness? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And does not Antisthenes say so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And does not Socrates say so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And does the loss of nothing else do a man damage? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And for what purpose do you follow them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And from what others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And have we any doubt then why we fear or why we are anxious? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And have you also been accustomed while you were studying philosophy to look to others and to hope for nothing from yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And he who has selected a man as his friend and is of a changeable disposition, has he good- will toward him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And he who now abuses a man, and afterward admires him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how are we constituted by nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how can you give them any of these things which you do not possess? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how can you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how do I meet with those whom you are afraid of and admire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how do slaves, and runaways, on what do they rely when they leave their masters? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how do things happen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how do you differ? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how do you possess this power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how else so regularly as if by God''s command, when He bids the plants to flower, do they flower? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how far music? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how in that case can there be one and the same principle in all animals, the principle of attachment to themselves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how in that case should we have been useful to any man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how is it in all other arts? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how is it possible that contradictions can be right? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how is it possible that the most necessary things among men should have no sign, and be incapable of being discovered? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how is that possible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how is this possible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how long did Eriphyle live with Amphiaraus, and was the mother of children and of many? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how many other inns are pleasant? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how shall I be still able to maintain my duty toward Zeus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And how with respect to music? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if Caesar from any circumstance becomes my enemy, where is it best for me to retire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if I were a philosopher, ought you also to be made lame? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if a man has allowed an hypothesis, must he in every case abide by allowing it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if about hot and cold, and hard and soft, what criterion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if by chance this public instructor shall be detected, this pedagogue, what kind of things will he be compelled to suffer? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if he does not take care, how can he be such a man as we conceive him to be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if he finds anything of the kind, he blames and accuses himself:"Why did you say this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if he had continued to live, would he not have lost all these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if instead of a man, who is a tame animal and social, you are become a mischievous wild beast, treacherous, and biting, have you lost nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if it ever in any way came into your head to kill me, ought you to abide by your determinations? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if not every one, which should we allow? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if the Hellenes perish, is the door closed, and is it not in your power to die? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if the Trojans do not kill them, will they not die? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if the first do not retire, what remains? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if they exist, but take no care of anything, in this case also how will it be right to follow them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if we associate with them, can we chance them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if you are ordered to climb the mast, refuse; if to run to the head of the ship, refuse; and what master, of a ship will endure you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if you inquire what is the value of each thing, of whom do you inquire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And if you wish by all means your children to live, or your wife, or your brother, or your friends, is it in your power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And in which we ought to confide? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And indeed what resemblance is there between what other persons do and what we do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And is he who is trained to the contest and exercised by Zeus going to call out and to be vexed, he who is worthy to bear the sceptre of Diogenes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And is it not your business to be happy, to be free from hindrance, free from impediment? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And is it possible that a fault should be one man''s, and the evil in another? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And of whom does Xenophon write, that he began with the examination of names, what each name signified? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And on what shall this pleasure depend? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And shall he enter into the contest, and yet not take care whether he shall engage in argument not rashly and not carelessly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And so long as I shall stay in Thy service, whom dost Thou will me to be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the Peripatetic, do they not handle them also with equal accuracy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the good things of the best, are they better, or the good things of the worse? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the looking at a statue skillfully, does this appear to you to require the aid of no art? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the nature of good and of evil, is it not in the things which are within the power of the will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the nurse, does she love her? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the pedagogue, does he not love her? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the proper making of a statue, to whom do you think that it belongs? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And the temperate or the intemperate? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And there is no pleasing habit, nor attention, nor care about self and observation of this kind,"How shall I use the appearances presented to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And to no purpose has he made light, without the presence of which there would be no use in any other thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And to propose, or intend, or in short to make use of the appearances which present themselves, can any man compel you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And want of sense, what is it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And was he not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what advantage is it to a man who writes the name of Dion to write it as he ought? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what are the things which belong to others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what are these things to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what are these? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what can overcome desire and aversion except another desire and aversion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what can overcome pursuit except another pursuit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what can you do for me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what difference did that make to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what do I want? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what do you care for that? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what do you suppose that he is afraid of; lest he should be lashed like a slave? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what does Socrates say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what does a fever do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what does a juggler wear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what does he say himself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what does it say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what does that signify? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what doorkeeper is placed with no door to watch? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what else a tile? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what else does the do when it is opened than see? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what else of things in life is done better by those who do not use attention? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what fire or what iron shall I apply to him to make him feel that he is deadened? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what fugitive slave ever died of hunger? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what further have I about the ruling argument? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what good does the purple do for the toga? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what good will it do you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what great matter is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what greater good do you seek than this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what harm is there to you in this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what has this spy said about pain, about pleasure, and about poverty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is grief to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is it to you, how the rest shall think about these things, whether right or wrong? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is more wretched than I? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is the divine law? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is the formidable thing here? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is the name of those who follow every appearance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is the thing that is got? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is the wonder if you buy so great a thing at the price of things so many and so great? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is the wonder? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is this faculty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is this to me, if I think that these things are nothing to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what kind of talk makes men more obedient to the laws who employ such talk? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what makes a horse beautiful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what other kind of art has a name from the dress and the hair; and has not theorems and a material and an end? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what profit will a man have from it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what shall I say, not only that he made you, but also intrusted you to yourself and made you a deposit to yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what shall you swear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what tragedy has any other beginning? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what universally in every art or science? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what was strange in this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what was the ball in that case? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what was the harm for me to be known to be a philosopher by my acts and not by outward marks?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what words are sufficient to praise them and set them forth according to their worth? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what work of an artist, for instance, has in itself the faculties, which the artist shows in making it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And what would he have been doing if there had been nothing of the kind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when Ulysses was cast out shipwrecked, did want humiliate him, did it break his spirit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when did he practice this discipline which follows these words? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when did you bathe more free from trouble, and take your gymnastic exercise more quietly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when would you have submitted to any man examining and show that your opinions are bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when you are in a chariot, to whom do you trust but to the driver? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when you have begotten children, will you introduce them also into the state with the habit of plucking their hairs? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when you must die, will you then also fill us with your lamentations, because you will not see Athens nor walk about in the Lyceion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when you were a young man and engaged in public matters, and pleaded causes yourself, and were gaining reputation, who then seemed your equal? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And when you were overpowered by the young girl, did you come off unharmed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And where dost Thou will me to be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And where is the wonder? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And where is your work? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And whether we ought to believe what is said or not to believe it, and if we do believe, whether we ought to be moved by it or not, who tells us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And whether, then, are you in the condition of not deserving pity, or are you not in that condition? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And whither; can any man eject me out of the world? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who are we, who were produced by him, and for what purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who can compel you not to assent to that which appears true? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who can compel you to desire what you do not wish? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who chooses to live in sorrow, fear, envy, pity, desiring and failing in his desires, attempting to avoid something and falling into it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who gave them to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who has a better stock of books, of leisure, of persons to aid you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who has given you this power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who hinders you from being employed about these things and looking after them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who is able to compel you to assent to that which appears false? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who is it that has fitted the knife to the case and the case to the knife? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who is it that has written that the examination of names is the beginning of education? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who is the master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who of us does not assume that justice is beautiful and becoming? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who prevents you from using, according to nature, inclination to a thing and aversion from it; and movement toward a thing and movement from it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who shall hinder you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who told you that walking is your act free from hindrance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who violate it more than you who establish such doctrines? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who will trust you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And who wrote so much? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And whom did you ever see building a battlement all round and not encircling it with a wall? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And why did you come hither? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And why do I now allege this contention with one another and speak of it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And why do I say your hand? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And why do I trouble myself about anything that can happen if I possess greatness of soul? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And why have you made yourself so useless and good for nothing that no man will choose to receive you into his house, no man to take care of you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And why not, if it is possible, rather pity, as we pity the blind and the lame, those who are blinded and maimed in the faculties which are supreme? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And why should we not corrupt our neighbor''s wife, if we can do it without detection? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And why then do we not seek the rule and discover it, and afterward use it without varying from it, not even stretching out the finger without it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And will no one among you show himself such? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And will other men be immortal? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And would you wish to be so loved by your own that through their excessive affection you would always be left alone in sickness? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And yet how many friends do you think that he had in Thebes, how many in Argos, how many in Athens? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And yet is the artist like the artist in the other? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And yet what harm have I done you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And you yourselves who take away the evidence of the senses, do you act otherwise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And you, if you are preparing such a peroration, why do you wait, why do you obey the order to submit to trial? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And your clothes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And your horses? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And your house? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | And your slaves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Any other than death?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Anything like a free man, anything like a noble- minded man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Apply the rule: Is this independent of the will, or dependent? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are all things then done well? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are not the gods equally distant from all places? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are not then some men also beautiful and others ugly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are not these things indifferent and nothing to us, and is not death no evil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are these the best things that you have, or do you also possess something else which is better than all these? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are these the only works of providence in us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are these things like the other, do they require equal care, and is it equally base to neglect these and those? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are they changed at all?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are they not sons of Gods, or compounded of gods and men?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are they not those of whom you are used to say that they are mad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are they those about the way in which the beard becomes great or the hair long? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are we anxious about not forming a false opinion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you free from deception in the matter of money? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you man or woman? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you not pressed by a crowd? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you not scorched? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you not the master of my body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you not the master of my exile or of my chains? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you not the master of my property? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you not then content that you also should be pitched somewhere on a dung heap, as a useless utensil, and a bit of dung? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you not wet when it rains? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you not without comfortable means of bathing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you so curious, Socrates, and such a busybody? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you the son of a goddess mother? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you then a utensil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you then more handsome than Achilles? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you then pained at this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Are you then richer than Agamemnon? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | As a captive, a slave and mean: and what would be the use of it for you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | As a citizen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | As a neighbour, as a friend? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | As soon as you go out in the morning, examine every man whom you see, every man whom you hear; answer as to a question,"What have you seen?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | As the disposer has disposed them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | As the sun himself draws men to him, or as food does, does not the philosopher also draw to him those who will receive benefit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ask a man,"Can you help me at all for this purpose?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | At present are not things upside down? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Because no good man laments or roans or weeps, no good man is pale and trembles, or says,"How will he receive me, how will he listen to me?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Before whose bedchamber have you slept? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Being appointed to such a service, do I still care about the place in which I am, or with whom I am, or what men say about me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Being the work of such an artist, do you dishonor him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Besides this, what is proposed in reasoning? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Besides, must he not supply them with beds? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Books? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But Rufus replied,"Did I ever incidentally form an argument from Galba that the world is governed by Providence?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But a man may say,"Whence shall I get bread to eat when I have nothing?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But a sheep does not desert its own offspring, nor yet a wolf; and shall a man desert his child? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But are plants and our bodies so bound up and united with the whole, and are not our souls much more? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But are there no paradoxes in the other arts? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But as to externals how must he act? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But can Caesar give us security from fever also, can he from shipwreck, from fire, from earthquake or from lightning? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But come, what remembrance of you will there be beyond Nicopolis? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But did the father of Admetus gain much by prolonging his life so ignobly and miserably? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But do you go with us even into the temples in such a state, where it is not permitted to spit or blow the nose, being a heap of spittle and of snot? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But do you trouble yourself about this, whether others pity you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But do you understand what nature is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But does virtue consist in having understood Chrysippus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But even if they were as free as it is possible, what is this to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But even then how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But had not Achilles more beautiful hair and gold- colored? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But hast Thou no further need of me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But have you sounder opinions than your adversary? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But have you taken care of the soul yourself; and have you learned from another to do this, or have you discovered the means yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But how do you act? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But how is not the sign beautiful and becoming, and venerable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But how ought I to will to have things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if Caesar sent for you to answer a charge, do you remember the distinction? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if Caesar should adopt you, no one could endure your arrogance; and if you know that you are the son of Zeus, will you not be elated? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if God had intrusted an orphan to you, would you thus neglect him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if I have the powers of a good man, shall I wait for you to prepare me for my own acts? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if a man exercises me in keeping my, temper, does he not do good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if a man must learn by fiction that no external things which are independent of the will concern us, for this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if another who is present"You are mistaken; it is not worth while to listen to a certain person, for what does he know? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if he says,"Think that you are in evil plight": I answer,"I do not think so"; and who compel me to think so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if indeed you comprehend him who administers the Whole, and carry him about in yourself, do you still desire small stones, and a beautiful rock? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if it is reason, again who shall analyse that reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if once you have gained exemption from sorrow and fear, will there any longer be a tyrant for you, or a tyrant''s guard, or attendants on Caesar? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if reading does not secure for you a happy and tranquil life, what is the use of it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if that is praise whatever it is which philosophers mean by the name of good, what have I to praise in you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if the pot, in which your meat was cooked, should be broken, must you die of hunger, because you have not the pot which you are accustomed to? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if these things are base, determine immediately:"Where is the nature of evil and good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if they exercise power, and you do not, will you not choose to tell yourself the truth, that you do nothing for the sake of this, and they do all? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if we do not determine first what is a modius, and what is a balance, how shall we be able to measure or weigh anything? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if we had willed otherwise, what else should we have been doing than that which we willed to do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if you ask me,"What, then, is the most excellent of all things?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if you have been put in any such higher place, will you immediately make yourself a tyrant? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if you look for it in a different place from where it is, what wonder if you never find it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if you observe these, do you want any others besides? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if you refer reading to the proper end, what else is this than a tranquil and happy life? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if you say"What is''God,''what is''appearance,''and what is''particular''and what is''universal nature''? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if, as the lighter, who has given you the choice? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But if, being a man, you are unable to fill any place which befits a man, what shall we do with you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But in life how do I act? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But in the other matter, we give up philosophy, what shall we gain I gain? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But is he not hurt, who suffers in a most pitiful and disgraceful way, who in place of a man becomes a wolf, or viper or wasp? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But is it against your poor body, against your little property? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But is it as to another man''s opinion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But it does not seem so to another, and he thinks that he also makes a proper adaptation; or does he not think so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But must I excite you to philosophy, and how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But neither was Agamemnon happy, though he was a better man than Sardanapalus and Nero; but while others are snoring what is he doing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But now because Zeus has made you, for this reason do you care not how you shall appear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But now what happens? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But now where is the difficulty in what is said? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But shall I overlook my own good, in order that you may have it, and shall I give it up to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But some will say,"Whence has this fellow got the arrogance which he displays and these supercilious looks?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But tell me this: did you never love any person, a young girl, or slave, or free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But tell me who when he hears you reading or discoursing is anxious about himself or turns to reflect on himself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But the ship is sinking- what then have I to do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But to desire to move away from a thing, whose act is that? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But was it his business to examine carefully difficult theorems? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But wealth, and pleasure and, in a word, things themselves, do you sometimes think them to he good and sometimes bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what am I? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what did the stone do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what did we think about mean and faithless words and betrayal of a friend and flattery of a tyrant? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what do men say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what do you mean by such great things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what do you say, philosopher? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what do you say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what does Socrates say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what does he do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what does he say even to his judges? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what further will you desire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what great matter is the death of many oxen, and many sheep, and many nests of swallows or storks being burnt or destroyed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what harm can happen to you, where you are not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what has a natural power of hindering the will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what if the fellow- companion himself turns against me and becomes my robber, what shall I do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what is meant by"rationally?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what is philosophizing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what say you as to his body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But what says Zeus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But when I have these things conformable to nature, why should I not employ my studies also upon reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But when I hear any man called fortunate because he is honoured by Caesar, I say,"What does he happen to get?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But when you are in a city, to behave so inconsiderately and foolishly, to what character do you think that it belongs? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But when you were in the school, what was it which you used to consider? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But where can we now find these easily? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But whether we ought to look on the wife of a certain person, and in what manner, who tells us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But who is eager to play with an ass or to bray with it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But who is free from restraint? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But who tells you that you have equal power with Zeus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But why are we not active? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But why did he speak? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But why do we go to the philosophers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But why do you mock the man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But why do you or for what purpose bewail yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But why, if you did well in entrusting your affairs to me, and it is not well for me to intrust mine to you, do you wish me to be so rash? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But will you be afraid about your body and your possessions, about things which are not yours, about things which in no way concern you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But without some such exercise and preparation, can he maintain a continuous and consistent argument? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But you practice in order to be able to prove- what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But your estate, is it in your power to have it when you please, and as long as you please, and such as you please? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | But, you must lose a bit of money that you may suffer damage? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | By what kind of preparation? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | By whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | CHAPTER 13 On anxiety When I see a man anxious, I say,"What does this man want? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | CHAPTER 16 That we do not strive to use our opinions about good and evil Where is the good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | CHAPTER 17 How we must adapt preconceptions to particular cases What is the first business of him who philosophizes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | CHAPTER 26 To those who fear want Are you not ashamed at more cowardly and more mean than fugitive slaves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | CHAPTER 28 That we ought not to he angry with men; and what are the small and the great things among men What is the cause of assenting to anything? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | CHAPTER 7 On freedom from fear What makes the tyrant formidable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can I in such circumstances?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can any man compel you to receive what is false? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can any man hinder you from assenting to the truth? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can any man report to you that you have formed a bad opinion, or had a bad desire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can any person hinder you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can he do it, then, without suffering for it?'' |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can not you be a watchman at another person''s door? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can not you teach children? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can not you then speak to him as you choose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can not you write? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can you give me desire which shall have no hindrance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can you not make use of your senses? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can you then lift so great a stone as Hector or Ajax? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can you then show us anything better toward adapting the preconceptions beyond your thinking that you do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can you then show us in what way you have taken care of the soul? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Can, then, a man think that a thing is useful to him and not choose it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Come forward and tell us when did you sleep more quietly, now or before you became Caesar''s friend? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Come, and do you not naturally imagine it to be great, do you not imagine it to be valuable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Come, man, did he not maintain the character of being a lover of his country, a man of great mind, faithful, generous? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Come, what other appellations have you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Come, when you are in a ship, do you trust to yourself or to the helmsman? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Confiding in what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did I ask you for your secrets, my man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did Socrates do this, or Zeno, or Cleanthes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did Socrates persuade all his hearers to take care of themselves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did he and get drunk and show no care for the oracle? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did he call any of them master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did he consider the power of escape as an unexpected gain? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did he laugh at him, as we slaves of Epaphroditus did? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did he not die afterward? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did he seek a master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did not He introduce you here, did He not show you the light, did he not give you fellow- workers, and perception, and reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did not Socrates love his own children? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did they learn this here? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did they not for these reasons forget both who they were and for what purpose they had come there? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did they who left little children to the Thebans do them more good than Epaminondas who died childless? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did you ever hear the faculty of vision saying anything about itself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did you hear this when you were with the philosophers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did you never hear that the thing which is shameful ought to be blamed, and that which is blamable is worthy of blame? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did you not praise a certain person contrary to your opinion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did you not study what are the things that are good and what are bad, and what things are neither one nor the other? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Did you, then, make your father such as he is, or is it in your power to improve him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I claim any of these? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I convince you of this or not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I fear the master of things which are not in my power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I go to my teacher as men go to oracles, prepared to obey? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I not clean him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I not know how you became a praetor, by what means you got your consulship, who gave it to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I not wash his feet? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I say to those things which are independent of the will, that they do not concern me?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I say to you,"Go as if you were certain to get what you want"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I take away these faculties which you possess? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do I wish to write the name of Dion as I choose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do know then what a man is, what the notion is that we have of him, or have we our ears in any degree practiced about this matter? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do men then apply themselves earnestly to the things which are bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do not I treat them like slaves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do not the husbandmen abuse Zeus when they are hindered by him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do not then say to that which excels,"Who, then, are you?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do not these things seem necessary? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do not your little theorems give you some opportunity of display? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do these things appear to you to he small? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do they not see from all places alike that which is going on? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do they rely on their lands or slaves, or their vessels of silver? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do they them understand what is done? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do we then act at all differently? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do we, then, for the same reason call each of them in the same kind beautiful, or each beautiful for something peculiar? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you attend to Homer and his stories in everything? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you choose then that we should compare you to little children? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you comprehend that you are awake? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you expect to have for nothing things so great? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you know both when and how they will do good, and to whom they will do good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you know how to judge? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you know of what parts it is composed, how they are brought together, how they are connected, what powers it has, and of what kind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you know what is true or what is false? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you mean that you have been employed about sophistical syllogisms? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you mean your own? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not become greater triflers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not choose then that I should get rid of my ignorance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not consider whether you are doing, anything here which may be useful to the exercise of your will, that it may be corrected? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not examine hypothetical syllogisms? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not examine the assumptions of the syllogism named"The Liar"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not know that Diogenes pointed out one of the sophists in this way by stretching out his middle finger? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not know that both disease and death must surprise us while we are doing something? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not know that every man has regard to himself, and to you just the same as he has regard to his ass? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not know that freedom is a noble and valuable thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not know that it is the slave of fever, of gout, ophthalmia, dysentery, of a tyrant, of fire, of iron, of everything which is stronger? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not know that opinion conquers itself, and is not conquered by another? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not know that the whole book costs only five denarii? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not know, then, what is the thirst of a man who has a fever? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not now try to avoid the unavoidable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not see how each is called a Jew, or a Syrian or an Egyptian? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not see how he handled the most skillful of the Hellenes in oratory, Odysseus and Phoenix? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not see of what men yon have uttered the language? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not send and buy a new pot? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you not understand that you are saying something of this kind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you now desire that which is possible and that which is possible to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you only bear in mind the general rules:"What is mine, what is not mine; what is given to me; what does God will that I should do now? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you possess the body, then, free or is it in servile condition? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you read when you are walking? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you say it or do you not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you see how you are going, to undertake so great a business? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you see in what direction you are looking, that it is toward the earth, toward the pit, that it is toward these wretched laws of dead men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you see then that good sense necessarily contemplates both itself and the opposite? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you see what kind of things ignorance of what is profitable does? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you seek a reward for a good man greater than doing what is good and just? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you seek it in an irrational animal? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you take away the helm or the oars? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you tell me that a name which is significant of any natural thing is of evil omen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you tell me, man, what is the thing which is signified for me: is it life or death, poverty or wealth? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you then leave Hector alone and draw your sword against your own king? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you then show me your improvement in these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you then wish to be useful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that Admetus did not love his own child when he was little? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that I mean some God of silver or of gold, and external? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that I shall name some man of no repute and of low condition? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that Menoeceus gained little by death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that also those who sit by you, those who recline at table with you, that those who kiss you deserve the same? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that freedom is a thing independent and self- governing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that he wishes to pay money to the collectors of twentieths? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that it is from idle impertinence that he rebukes those whom he meets? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that you can eat as you do now, drink as you do now, and in the same way be angry and out of humour? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that you must show me the Zeus of Phidias or the Athena, a work of ivory and gold? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think that, if you do, you can be a philosopher? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you think then that by means of your anger I shall learn the art of life?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you wish to do good or to be praised? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you wish to know then if you have received any advantage? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you wish to live in fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you wish to live in perturbation? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you wish to live in sorrow? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you wish to show me that you put words together cleverly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you, then, being a man, choose to be not as one of the animals which live with man, but rather a worm, or a spider? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Do you, then, instead of removing it, blame your mother for not foretelling it to you that you might continue grieving from that time? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does Caesar who sits within give virtue and vice to those who go in to him?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does He not will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does Hippocrates, then, speak thus in respect of being a physician? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does a horse ever wallow in the mud or a well- bred dog? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does a philosopher invite people to hear him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does affection to those of your family appear to you to be according to nature and to be good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does any good man fear that he shall fall to have food? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does any man say that there is no use or excellence in the speaking faculty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does any man then hinder me from going with smiles and cheerfulness and contentment? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does any one among us think of these lessons out of the schools? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does any one meditate by himself to give an answer to things as in the case of questions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does either of them then contemplate itself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does freedom seem to you a good thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he also obtain an opinion such as he ought? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he also obtain the power of using his office well? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he call upon any other than Zeus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he not expect that which comes from the bad to be worse and more grievous than what actually befalls him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he say,"This man is modest, faithful, free from perturbations?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he then do wrong? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he then say to the gaoler that for this reason we have sent away the women? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he who loses this sustain no damage? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he who works in wood work better by not attending to it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does he, then, who has the power of making any declaration about you know what is pious or impious? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does it concern you that the judge has made this declaration? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does it require this use only? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does it seem nothing to you to have never found fault with any person, neither with God nor man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does it seem to you so small and worthless a thing to be good and happy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does it seem to you to be nothing to do a thing unwillingly, with compulsion, with groans, has this nothing to do with being a slave? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does not OEdipus say this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does not Priam say this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does not the one say it is profitable to restore Chryseis to her father, and does not the other say that it is not profitable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does the Zeus at Olympia lift up his brow? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does the captain of a ship manage it better by not attending? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does the madman do any other things than the things as in which seem to him right? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does the tyrant''s head always remain where it is, and the heads of you who obey him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does the vine say to the husbandman,"Take care of me?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does then each of these things demonstrate the workman, and do not visible things and the faculty of seeing and light demonstrate Him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does then the expounder seem to be worth more than five denarii? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does this appearance then not differ from the other? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Does this seem to you a small thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Eteocles: Why do you ask me this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Fame? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Fidelity is your own, virtuous shame is your own; who then can take these things from you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Flesh? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Fool, do you seek a greater form of administration than that in which he is engaged? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For about what has he busied himself which resembles beauty, that I may be able to change him and"Beauty is not in this, but in that?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For about what will you be afraid? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For another man, then, to have an opinion about you, of what kind is it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For can we escape from men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For do the same persons repeat the Epicurean opinions any worse? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For does he fall into trouble on account of the mouse which is nurtured in the house? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For how can a vine be moved not in the mariner of a vine, but in the manner of an olive tree? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For how do we proceed in the matter of writing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For if I should tell him to write Dion, and then another should come and propose to him not the name of Dion but that of Theon, what will be done? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For if circumstances require something else, what will you say or what will you do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For if there are no gods, how is it our proper end to follow them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For if they do not care for me, what are they to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For if we abolish the acropolis which is in the city, can we abolish also that of fever, and that of beautiful women? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For if you wish to maintain what is in your own power and is naturally free, and if you are content with these, what else do you care for? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For in what did she show her bad temper? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For instance, what will a certain person say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For is it not plain that you value not at all your own will, but you look externally to things which are independent of your will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For is it not possible to gain advantage even from death, and is it not possible to gain advantage from mutilation? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For now who among us is not able to discuss according to the rules of art about good and evil things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For of what else do you come as judges? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For on whose account should he undertake this manner of life? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For suppose that you can not hold the place of a friend, can you hold the place of a slave? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For the storm itself, what else is it but an appearance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For they say,"What am I? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For this reason when he was taken prisoner, how did he behave to the pirates? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For to what better and more careful guardian could He have entrusted each of us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what are you deficient in? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what do you expect? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what do you think? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what do you think? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what does he say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what does he say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what does the thief wish to do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what does this law say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what else can I do, a lame old man, than sing hymns to God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what else is a slanderer and a malignant man than a fox, or some other more wretched and meaner animal? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what else is this than to affirm that whatever is universally affirmed is false? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what else is tragedy than the perturbations of men who value externals exhibited in this kind of poetry? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what good has he told you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what has a man which is formidable to another, either when you see him or speak to him or, finally, are conversant with him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what have we to do with you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what hinders you from being an unfortunate man, even if you speak like Demosthenes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is a child? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is a greater storm than that which comes from appearances which are violent and drive away the reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is a man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is a man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is a master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is a more pleasant sight to him who loves mankind than a number of men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is it to be ill? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is it to be reviled? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is that which every man seeks? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is that which gives information about each of these powers, what each of them is worth? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is the consequence of such meanness of spirit but impiety? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is the difference between explaining these doctrines and those of men who have different opinions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is the end proposed in reasoning? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is the reason why you desired to be elected governor of the Cnossians? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what is weeping and lamenting? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what matter does it make by what thing a man is subdued, and on what he depends? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what more can the diviner see than death or danger or disease, generally things of that kind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what must I look to in order to be roused, as men who are expert in are roused by generous horses? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what purpose do you choose to read? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what purpose then, slave, have you hands? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what reason ought we to examine? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what shall I do, and where shall I escape it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what shall he accuse him of? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what wall is so strong, or what body is so hard, or what possession is so safe, or what honour so free from assault? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what will you do if a man speaks about gladiators, about horses, about athletes, or, what is worse, about men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what will you sell these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what, then, have they made you responsible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For when do you inquire if black things are white, if heavy things are light, and do not comprehend the manifest evidence of the senses? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For when is a a vine doing badly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For when is a conjunctive proposition maintained? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For when you eat, are you grieved because you are not reading? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For whence had I things when I came into the world? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For where do I perceive them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For where else is friendship than where there is fidelity, and modesty, where there is a communion of honest things and of nothing else? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For where shall he hide himself and how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For wherein will you show that you really consider virtue equal to everything else or even superior? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who among us did not use the words"healthy"and"unhealthy"before Hippocrates lived, or did we utter these words as empty sounds? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who are you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who can compel you to have any opinion which you do not choose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who does not choose to make use of a good vessel? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who has regard to you as a man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who is a practitioner in exercise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who is good if he knows not who he is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who is master of a ship? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who is the master of such things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who of us does not assume that Good is useful and eligible, and in all circumstances that we ought to follow and pursue it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who says,"How shall I not assent to that which is false? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who that is pregnant and I filled with such great principles does not also perceive his own powers and move toward the corresponding acts? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For who will eject you from this possession? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For whom have the many to imitate except you, who are their superiors, to whose example should they look when they go to the theatre except yours? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For why are ears of corn produced? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For why do you ask me the question, whether death is preferable or life? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For will you do it worse by using attention, and better by not attending at all? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | For, in fact, what a man has from himself, it is superfluous and foolish to receive from another? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Free, noble, modest: for what other animal blushes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | From envy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | From sorrow? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | From whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Further, if he scoff, or ridicule, or show an ill- natured disposition? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Further, then, answer me this question also: Does freedom seem to you to be something great and noble and valuable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Go whither? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Good and evil in what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Had Socrates then no equivalent for these things, Where, then, for him was the nature of good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Had he not sold the man as good for nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Had you not a fever, had you not a headache?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has a man been exalted to the tribuneship? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has he any desire of beauty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has he not given to you endurance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has he not given to you what is your own free from hindrance and free from impediment, and what is not your own subject to hindrance and impediment? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has he studied it, and has he learned it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has it no governor? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has it smoked in the chamber? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has not, then, reason convinced me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has she not by it distinguished the male and the female? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has the boy fallen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has the proconsul met you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Has, then, God given you eyes to no purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Hast Thou ever seen me for this reason discontented? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have I been eager to imitate his morals? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have I learned nothing else then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have I not the notion of it?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have I not within me a diviner who has told me the nature of good and of evil, and has explained to me the signs of both? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have I the consciousness, which a man who knows nothing ought to have, that I know nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have the contrary opinions not been eradicated from me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have the notions themselves not been exercised nor used to be applied to action, but as armour are laid aside and rusted and can not fit me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have we not a natural modesty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have we not naturally fidelity? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have we some connection with him and some relation toward him, or none? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have we then all sound opinions, both you and your adversary? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you added more to the list? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you again forgotten why you went? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you also the power of using them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you any pain in your horns? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you gone abroad for this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you lost nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not God with you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not abilities which enable you to manage the subject which has been given to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not abundance of noise, clamour, and other disagreeable things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not heard? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not often said this yourself to your companions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not read the work? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not received endurance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not received greatness of soul? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you not received manliness? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you practiced yourself in these answers, or only against sophisms? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you successfully worked out the rest? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you taken pains to learn what is a good man and what is a bad man, and how a man becomes one or the other? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you the disposition of a wild beast, Have you the disposition of revenge for an injury? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you the infallible power of avoiding what you would avoid? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you the power of moving toward an object without error? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you then done anything wrong? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you then examined any of these things and formed an opinion of your own? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you then not practiced speaking? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Have you who are able to turn round others no master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Having such promptings and commands from Zeus, what kind do you still ask from me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | He did love mankind, but how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | He says,"what evil did I suffer in my state of slavery? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | He, then, who sees from above asks you:"In the schools what used you to say about exile and bonds and death and disgrace?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Hear what Diogenes says to the passers- by when he is in a fever,"Miserable wretches, will you not stay? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Here comes the danger that in the first place he may say,"What is this to you, my good man, who are you?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Here you entrusted them to a person indifferently and to one who has no experience of horses? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Here, then, is the artificer, here the material; what is it that we want? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | His brother came to the athlete, who was a philosopher, and said,"Come, brother, what are you going to do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How can he expect anything so good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How can he have time for this who is tied to the duties of common life? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How can he? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How can you conquer the opinion of another man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How can you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How did Antisthenes make him free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How did Socrates behave with respect to these matters? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How did he compare his own happiness with that of the Great King? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How did he reprove them for feeding badly their captives? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do I know what the cast will be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do I possess right opinions when I am not content with being what I am, but am uneasy about what I am supposed to be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do they when they run away leave their masters? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do you hear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do you know then if our senses deceive us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do you know, slave, if he did not regard you in the same way as he wipes his shoes with a sponge, or as he takes care of his beast? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How do you know, when you have ceased to be useful as a vessel, he will not throw you away like a broken platter? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How far does the grammatic art possess the contemplating power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How have they this power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How have you been made so wise at once? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is it possible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is it possible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is it that the man becomes all at once wise, when Caesar has made him superintendent of the close stool? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is it then that you add to the facts these opinions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How long then must we obey such orders? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How long will you be exercised alone? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How long, then, is it fit to observe these precepts from God, and not to break up the play? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How more to you than those which seem right to the Syrians? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How much greater is this a reason for making sacrifices than a consulship or the government of a province? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How neglected? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How or for what purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How says Medea? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How shall I consider you, man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How shall I show this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How shall it obtain the good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How should you have this power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How so, Diogenes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then are we[ suspicious], if we have no natural affection to our children? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then can any other faculty be more powerful than this, which uses the rest as ministers and itself proves each and pronounces about them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then can we continue to believe you, most dear legislators, when you say,"We only allow free persons to be educated?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then did Socrates act? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then do we admit that virtue is such as I have said, and yet seek progress in other things and make a display of it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then do we call them mine? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then is an acropolis demolished? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then is it said that some external things are according to nature and others contrary to nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then is there any equality here? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then shall a man preserve firmness and tranquillity, and at the same time be careful and neither rash nor negligent? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then shall this be done? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then will you know if I am cheating you by argument? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How was He able to make the earthly body free from hindrance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How was he sold? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, he replied, does the bull alone, when the lion has attacked, discover his own powers and put himself forward in defense of the whole herd? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, are you pitied not as you ought to be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, do you now appear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, do you now say that you are considering whether things which are neither good nor bad ought to be avoided more than things which are bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, have you not convinced yourself in order to learn? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, is it possible that anything which belongs to the body can be free from hindrance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, is there left any place for fighting, to a man who has this opinion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, ought I any longer to look to seek evil and good in externals? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How, then, shall this he done? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | How?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I also say with a sorrowful countenance:"In truth it is now a long time that I have been ill.""What will happen then?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I indeed imagine that you will have such thoughts as these:"Why do we make so great and so many preparations for nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I reply,"And was not Hippocrates a physician? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I shall kill my children, but I shall punish myself also: and what do I care?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I too know this: for now you are come to me as if you were in want of nothing: and what could you even imagine to be wanting to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I will go to Athens? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | I wish to be found practicing these things that I may be able to say to God,"Have I in any respect transgressed thy commands? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If God had made colours, but had not made the faculty of seeing them, what would have been their use? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If I have not one, what do you wish me to do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If I think about it as I ought, how shall it, then, do me any damage? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If a man be of such a good disposition as to be anxious about these things, I will remind him of this:"Why are you anxious? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If any one said this to a man ignorant of the surgical art, would he not ridicule the speaker? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If he did not want something which is not in his power, how could he be anxious?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If indeed this can neither be learned nor taught, why do you blame me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If it is good to use attention to- morrow, how much better is it to do so to- day? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If nature had entrusted to you a horse, would you have overlooked and neglected him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If reason requires this to be done for the sake of country, for the sake of kinsmen, for the sake of mankind, why should you not go? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If the whim seizes him, does he break the heads of those who come in his way? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If then I must expose myself to danger for a friend, and if it is my duty even to die for him, what need have I then for divination? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If then any man should ask me which of these propositions do I maintain? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If then it had appeared to Menelaus to feel that it was a gain to be deprived of such a wife, what would have happened? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If then they had perception, ought they to wish never to be reaped? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If then you seek it in a rational animal, why do you still seek it anywhere except in the superiority of rational over irrational animals? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If they are wise, why do you fight with them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If we were horses, would you say,"My father was swifter?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If we were placed in the scales, must not the heavier draw down the scale in which it is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you are a babbler and think that all who meet you are friends, do you wish me also to be like you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you are going to write the name of Dion, are you afraid that you would be disconcerted? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you are not near now, will you not afterward be near? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you bring this charge against me hereafter, what defense shall I make? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you cherish yourself in these thoughts, do you still think that it makes any difference where yon shall be happy, where you shall please God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you choose not to be restrained or compelled, who shall compel you to desire what you think that you ought not to desire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you choose to be modest and faithful, who shall not allow you to be so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you desire anything which is your own, and one of the things which can not be hindered, how will he hinder you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you did not learn these things in order to show them in practice, why did you learn them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you dismiss these things and consider them as nothing, with whom are you still angry? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you had lost the art of grammar or music, would you think the loss of it a damage? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you see a beautiful girl, do you resist the appearance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you should once say,"When shall a man go to Athens?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If you yourself properly adapt your preconceptions, why are you unhappy, why are you hindered? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If your neighbor obtains an estate by will, are you not vexed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If your parents were poor, and left their property to others, and if while they live, they do not help you at all, is this shameful to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If, then, I think about poverty as I ought to do, about disease, about not having office, is not that enough for me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If, then, a man listens like a stone, what profit is there to the reviler? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If, then, the physician can say to him,"Well, and what, then, happened to you after the bath? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If, then, the time comes for these things, why do you not take away the wish to avoid them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If, then, you despise death and bonds, do you still pay any regard to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | If, when you are going in, pale and trembling, a person should come up to you and say,"Why do you tremble, man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Immediately you hear him saying,"To me what is the value of praise from the many?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In Athens did you see no one by going to his house? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In a horse? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In a man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In a piece of toreutic art which is the best part? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In fine, which kind of life did you prefer? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In place of Chrysippus and Zeno you read Aristides and Evenus; have you lost nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In possessions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In the body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In the first place, that I may become illustrious, what things must I endure and suffer? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In the name of God, are you thinking of a city of Epicureans? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In the schools: and are any listening to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In this case also, then, those who hear skillfully are benefited, and those who hear unskillfully are damaged? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In this matter then is there no rule certain to what"seems?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what cases, on the contrary, do we behave with confidence, as if there were no danger? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what condition would you see them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what material then ought you to seek for that which flows easily, for that which is not impeded? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what other way than by examining the movements of God and his administration What has He given to me as my own and in my own power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what respect then will it be worse for me than it is now? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what respect, he answered, has it been more cultivated now, and in what respect was the progress greater then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what then lies your power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what, then, am I deficient? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what, then, is the good, since it is not in these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what, then, should we place the good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what, then, was he, and who was he and whom did he wish to be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | In what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Indeed men are often accustomed to say,"I have told you all my affairs, will you tell me nothing of your own? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Independent of the will, or dependent on it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Into a desert? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is a man dissatisfied with his parents? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is any man able to make you assent to that which is false? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is any man then afraid about things which are not evil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is anything else then going to happen than the separation of the soul and the body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is death a bad thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is everything judged by the bare form? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is freedom anything else than the power of living as we choose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is he a Socrates, is he a Diogenes that his praise should be a proof of what I am? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is he afraid about things which are evils, but still so far within his power that they may not happen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is he dissatisfied with his children? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is he not convinced that, whatever he suffers, it is Zeus who is exercising him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is he passionate, is he full of resentment, is he faultfinding? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is he surprised at anything which happens, and does it appear new to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is he then my work, my judgement? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it His will that I be put to the rack? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it His will that I shall have fever? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it His will that I should move toward anything? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it His will that I should obtain anything? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it a cloak? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it a vice to suffer shipwreck: does it participate in vice?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it any other than our will to do so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it because we value so much the things of which these men rob us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it day? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it each faculty itself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it enough then to have learned only this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it fit to be elated over what is good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it fit to trust to anything which is insecure? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it for this reason that a tyrant is formidable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it for this reason that the guards appear to have swords which are large and sharp? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it for this that I listened to so many discourses? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it for this that you drink water, for the purpose of drinking water? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it in royal power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it in your power, then, to treat according to nature everything which happens? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it intelligence, knowledge, right reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it night? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it no one? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not a preparation against events which may happen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not better to be modest than to be rich?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not death of which you run the risk, or a prison, or pain of the body, or banishment, or disgrace? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not enough for a man to be persuaded himself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not enough for you to be unfortunate there where you are, and must you be so even beyond sea, and by the report of letters? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not enough to depart in this state of mind, and what life is better and more becoming than that of a man who is in this state of mind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not fit then, Epictetus said, to be actively employed about the best? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not in your power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not marble or bronze, or gold or ivory? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not plain that he would have wrapped himself up and have slept? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not possible to find a safe fellow traveler, a faithful one, strong, secure against all surprises?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not that they may become dry? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not that you may wipe your nose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not the fact that the more he lives at his ease, so much the more he is in a slavish condition? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not the fact that, ever since the human race existed, all errors and misfortunes have arisen through this ignorance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not the faculty of the will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not the hazard of your life? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not the possession of the excellence of a man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it not then in our power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it now Thy will that I should depart from the assemblage of men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it now his fault if he receives badly what proceeds from you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it only Chrysippus, and Zeno, and Cleanthes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it possible for him to be unimpeded? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it possible that he who desires any of the things which depend on others can be free from hindrance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it possible then that both of you are right? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it possible then that both of you can properly apply the preconceptions to things about which you have contrary opinions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it possible, then, that he who obtains the greatest good can be unhappy or fare badly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it possible, then, when a man obtains anything, so great and valuable and noble to be mean? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it proper then to be elated over present pleasure? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it that you also have not thought of these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it the animal part? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it the condition of mortality? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it the faculty of vision? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it the power of using appearances? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it then a distinct and perfect preconception? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it to be commander of an army? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it to marry? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it true then that all horses become swift, that all dogs are skilled in tracking footprints? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it your will that I should go to Rome? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it, then, for this that young men shall leave their country and their parents, that they may come to this place, and hear you explain words? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is it, then, in this alone, in this which is the greatest and the chief thing, I mean freedom, that I am permitted to will inconsiderately? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is life a good thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is not decent behavior lost? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is not health then a good thing, and soundness of limb, and life? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is not modesty lost? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is not the thing, one that can be taught? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is not there the same state below for them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is prison? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is that a paradox? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is that which in its kind makes both a dog and a horse beautiful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is the Marcian water worse than that of Dirce? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is the flesh the best? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is the world going to be turned upside down when you are dead? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is then pleasure anything secure? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is then that which is consistent with reason in contradiction with affection? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is then this criterion for him also? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there any part of life excepted, to which attention does not extend? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there any vice or anything which partakes of vice? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there anything less useful than the hair on the chin? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there not modesty, fidelity, justice? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there not the same descent to some place for them also? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there such a method by which they shall do what seems fit to them, and we not the less shall be in a mood which is conformable to nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there then a skill in hearing also, as there is in speaking? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there then anything better than what pleases God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is there, then, no energy of the soul which is an advantage to him who possesses it, and a damage to him who has lost it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this all? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this listening to a philosopher? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this oath like the soldier''s oath? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this power given to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this power given to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this so now for the first time? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this the antechamber? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this the thing which men name power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this the way in which your affairs are in a state of security? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this then the great and wondrous thing to understand or interpret Chrysippus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this what you have been earnest about doing, to learn to be free from grief and free from disturbance, and not to be humbled, and to be free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this what you learned with the philosophers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is this your business? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is, then, the despising of death an act of your own, or is it not yours? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is, then, the pleasure of the soul a thing within the power of the will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Is, then, the power of making use of appearances hindered? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | It is he who has read many books of Chrysippus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | It is seen by these very things: why do you wish to show it by others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | It is your own act, then, also to desire to move toward a thing: or is it not so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Know you not that a good man does nothing for the sake of appearance, but for the sake of doing right? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Lately again when you had been praised, you went about and said to all,"What did you think of me?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Lest they should do, what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Let him write and give you a commission to judge of music; and what will be the use of it to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Life or death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man what are you doing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man what fault have you to find with your nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man, did we make you the pedagogue of the cook and not of the child? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man, did you ask if they are useful to you, or did you ask generally? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man, how is it bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man, what are you talking about? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man, what do you wish to happen to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man, why do you mock us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man, why do you trouble yourself about us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Man, why then do you blame me, if I know? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | May it not, then, in philosophy also not be sufficient to wish to be wise and good, and that there is also a necessity to learn certain things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Me in chains? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Men keep tame lions shut up, and feed them, and some take them about; and who will say that this lion is free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Most impious man, is there no difference? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must I look to your body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must I then also lament? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must I then die lamenting? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must I then for this reason stand and play the lute? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must he not then come and take them away? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Must we then allow every hypothesis that is proposed, or not allow every one? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Next while you are doing what they do and holding their opinions, do you speak to us the words of Zeno and of Socrates? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Next, what does Thrasonides say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | No longer then say to me,"How will it be?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | No, but he cried out with amazement,"Poor man, how did you keep silence, how did you endure it?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Nothing else? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Nothing more? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now as this man has confidently intrusted his affairs to me, shall I also do so to any man whom I meet? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now can a man do anything useful to others, who has not received something useful himself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now in what respect do these differ from those? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now is not that which will happen independent of the will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now is there nothing else wanting to you except unchangeable firmness of mind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now reason, for what purpose has it been given by nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now who ever sacrificed for having had good desires? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now who tells you, Theopompus, that we had not natural notions of each of these things and preconceptions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Now will you not help yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Observe whom you yourself praise, when you praise many persons without partiality: do you praise the just or the unjust? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Observe; he has been in your company a long time; he has listened to your discourses, he has heard you reading; has he become more modest? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Of what kind are his theorems? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Of what kind of parents? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Of whom shall we inquire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Of whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Oh, man, for what purpose did you come? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | On itself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | On what, then, shall we depend for this pleasure of the soul? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Or are these the only crimes, to burn the Capitol and to kill your father? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Or can not you even look him in the face, but without saying more do you entreat to be set free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Or how are you desirous at the same time to live to old age, and at the same time not to see the death of any person whom you love? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Or how will you still be able to say as Socrates did,"If so it pleases God, so let it be"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Or if Ulysses really wept, what was he else than an unhappy man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Or ought we to maintain this fellowship with some and not with others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Or tell me what act that indicates a, great mind has he shown? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Or will you find that among them also some are benefited and some damaged? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought I to admit the falsehood? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought the good to be such a thing that it is fit that we have confidence in it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought the stone to have moved on account of your child''s folly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought we for this reason to practice walking on a rope, or setting up a palm tree, or embracing statues? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought we not when we are digging and ploughing and eating to sing this hymn to God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought we then to be angry with them, or to pity them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought you not to have gained something in addition from reason and, then, to have protected this with security? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought, then, he also to have deserted her? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought, then, she also to have left her? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Ought, then, the mother also to have left her, or ought she not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Perhaps you mean by those who do not know you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Philip or Alexander, or Perdiccas or the Great King? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Philosopher, where are the things which you were talking about? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Relying on what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Remembering this, whom will you still flatter or fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I name this strength of mind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I not escape from the fear of death, but shall I die lamenting and trembling? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I not use the power for the purposes for which I received it, and shall I grieve and lament over what happens? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I still argue with this man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I then have no shells, no ashes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I then say that the consequence does not arise through what has been conceded? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I, then, if you sail away, sit down and weep, because I have been left alone and solitary? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall I, then, who am able to receive from myself greatness of soul and a generous spirit, receive from you land and money or a magisterial office? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall we amputate this member and return to the gymnasium?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shall we not now wean ourselves and remember what we have heard from the philosophers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Should I try to please you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Should we use such things carelessly?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Show how you are used to behave in a storm on shipboard? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Shut me out? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Since, then, neither those who are called kings live as they choose, nor the friends of kings, who finally are those who are free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Slave, is it not that you may be happy, that you may be constant, is it not that you may be in a state conformable to nature and live so? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Slave, where are the crowns, where the diadem? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Slave, where was there a father in this matter that you could kill him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Slave, why do you say Socrates? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | So Diogenes replied to one who said,"Are you the Diogenes who does not believe that there are gods?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | So can not you discharge the office of a dog, or of a cock? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | So do men lose nothing more than coin? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Some person asked,"How then shall every man among us perceive what is suitable to his character?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Stand by a stone and revile it; and what will you gain? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Still how did you become a judge? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Still tell me, philosopher, tell me why you tremble? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Suppose one comes who is an adulterer: what coin does he use? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Suppose that it is above our power to act thus; is it not in our power to reason thus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Suppose that there comes into the province a thievish proconsul, what coin does he use? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Syllogisms and sophistical propositions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Take then all my poor body; when, at a man''s command, I can throw away my poor body, do I still fear him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Tell me then about what I should talk to you: about what matter are you able to listen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Tell me then, ye men, do you wish to live in error? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | That it made you a man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | That you may solve syllogisms more readily, or handle hypothetical arguments? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | That you should do what you please, and they should not even say what they please? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The Atreus of Euripides, what is it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The Demons, who are they, think you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The Hippolytus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The OEdipus of Sophocles, what is it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The Phoenix? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The governor replied,"Does, then, any person show his partisanship in this way?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The judge will determine against you something that appears formidable; but that you should also suffer in trying to avoid it, how can he do that? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The man then who allows himself to be damaged in these matters, can he be free from harm and uninjured? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The master of things which are in my own power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The only contest into which he enters is that about things which are within the power of his will; how then will he not be invincible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The practice of music, to whom does it belong? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The sea? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The women?, Please them as a man. |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | The words are the same: how do the things done here differ from those done there?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then I ask you, do you attempt to persuade other men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then after receiving everything from another and even yourself, are you angry and do you blame the Giver if he takes anything from you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then are you surprised if they pity you, and are you vexed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then do you admit that you possess anything superior to this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then do you not see that to be a judge is just of the same value as Numenius is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then do you show yourself weak when the time for action comes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then do you tell me that in desire and in aversion you are acting according to nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then do you tell me that you wish, as a plant, to be fixed to the same places and to be rooted? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then if any of us asked,"What is master doing?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then if speaking properly is the business of the skillful man, do you see that to hear also with benefit is the business of the skillful man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then is anything stronger in men than this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then is it nothing to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then she says,"Thus I shall be avenged on him who has wronged and insulted me; and what shall I gain if he is punished thus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then we say,"Lord God, how shall I not be anxious?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then what do you think? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then will you say,"No man, cares for me, a man of letters"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then, I ask you, are you unwilling to live in Rome and desire to live in Hellas? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then, I ask you, do you call this affection? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then, by the rational faculty, from whom are we separated? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then, when he was obliged to speak in defense of his life, did he behave like a man who had children, who had a wife? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then, while you are committing murder and destroying a man who has done no wrong, do you say that you ought to abide by your determinations? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Then, you will ask, and this is the chief thing:"And who is it that sent it?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Therefore Socrates said to one who was reminding him to prepare for his trial,"Do you not think then that I have been preparing for it all my life?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | This or that? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Those who are over the bedchamber? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Those who call themselves Academics? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Thus we also act: in what cases do we fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To Gyara? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To a man of experience, I suppose, and one acquainted with the aliptic, or with the healing art? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To be praised by the audience? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To be somewhere else than at Rome? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To bite, to kick, and to throw into prison and to behead? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To have many pupils? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To please whom and for what purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To prison? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To the blind it does not fall, to the lame it does not: shall it fall to a good man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To what kind of things shall we adapt it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To what person generally? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To what things then ought I to attend? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To whom have you sent gifts? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To whom then does the contemplation of these matters belong? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To your behavior to your look? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | To your dress? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Understand Archedemus then, and be an adulterer, and faithless, and instead of a man, be a wolf or an ape: for what is the difference? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Unhappy man, have you thus wasted your time till now? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Useful how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was Hermes going to descend from heaven to say this to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was Laius persuaded by Apollo? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was he so foolish as not to see that this way leads not to the preservation of life and fortune, but to another end? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was he vexed then as we are, and did he say,"And do you not think that I am a philosopher?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was it because he was born of free parents? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was it because they did not choose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was it not in your power to lie? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was it not then a great gain to be deprived of an adulterous wife? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was it not through not knowing what things are profitable and not profitable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was it when Patroclus died? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was reason, then, given to us by the gods for the purpose of unhappiness and misery, that we may pass our lives in wretchedness and lamentation? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was this the flesh or the will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was this your business, and not his? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Was your desire in any danger? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | We see with pleasure herds of horses or oxen: we are delighted when we see many ships: who is pained when he sees many men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then do you apprehend it yourself by your own power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then do you expect to acquire the greatest of arts with small labor? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then do you wish to be admired by madmen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, are these things superior to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, are you willing that we begin at last to bring such a purpose into this school, and to take no notice of the past? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, did you never see little dogs caressing and playing with one another, so that you might say there is nothing more friendly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, do you possess nothing which is free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, do you think that he who has been deceived about a man is his friend? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, does their hunger lead to any other place? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, for this reason did Apollo refuse to tell him the truth? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, has he given to you nothing in the present case? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, is the judge free from danger? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, ought you not to play with attention? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, ought you to wish the things which are not given to you, or to be ashamed if you do not obtain them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, said Epictetus, do you think that you acted right? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, since most of you have become blind, ought there not to be some man to fill this office, and on behalf of all to sing the hymn to God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, since they are such as they are, is there no remedy given to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then, was it nothing which moved you and induced you to desert your child? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then; can you tell me to whom you entrust your gold or silver things or your vestments? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well what is the hardship? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, and in his travels through the world how many intimates and how many friends had he? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, and what does he say of poverty, about death, about pain? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, and when you have taken a wife, do you intend to have your hairs plucked out? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, did you come for this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, do I not attend to my ass? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, do they apply themselves to things which in no way concern themselves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, do you think that he gained little by dying? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, does fever not come there? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, have I not been overpowered before? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, if you were going to read the name, would you not feel the same? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, in acts what have we of the like kind as we have here truth or falsehood? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, in an ox? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, is it in your power to stop this pity? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, is it then enough in this case also to know this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, is such affection natural and good, and is a thing consistent with reason not good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, is the number of stars even? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, is there nothing in a man such as running in a horse, by which it will he known which is superior and inferior? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, said Epictetus, if we were inquiring about white and black, what criterion should we employ for distinguishing between them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, should I say that I did not properly grant that which we agreed upon? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, suppose that He had made both, but had not made light? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, suppose you put a young girl in his way, what then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, then, and have you not received faculties by which you will be able to bear all that happens? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, then, are we the only persons who are lazy and love sleep? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, then, do I say that man is an animal made for doing nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, then, in the matter of desire and pursuit of an object, is it otherwise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, these birds when they are caught and are kept shut up, how much do they suffer in their attempts to escape? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, what do you say, Achilles? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, what have you been doing in the school? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, what then did he do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, when did you sup with more pleasure, now or before? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well, who would follow your advice, if he saw his child weeping after falling on the ground? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well,"Do you think that envy is pain over evils? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well; and can a man force you to desire to move toward that to which you do not choose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well; but does he who has lost his smell only lose nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well; do we fulfill their promise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Well; your own body, have you already considered about entrusting the care of it to any person? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Were not Eteocles and Polynices from the same mother and from the same father? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Were the evils that you had there not enough, those which were the cause of your pain and lamentation, even if you had not gone abroad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Were they not brought up together, had they not lived together, drunk together, slept together, and often kissed one another? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Were you never commanded by the person beloved to do something which you did not wish to do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What a shame is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What age? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What am I? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What are these? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What are you doing, man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What are you saying? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What are you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What beggar did you hardly ever see who was not an old man, and even of extreme old age? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What benefit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What can I do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What circumstances? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What destroys the whole man, at one time by hunger, at another time by hanging, and at another time by a precipice? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What difference, then, does it make to me how I pass away, whether by being suffocated or by a fever, for I must pass through some such means? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What difference, then, does it make? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What directions then, what kind of orders did you bring when you came from him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do I care for that? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do they say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do they say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do we admire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you appear to yourself to be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you do when you leave a ship? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you expect? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you lack? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you mean by praising? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you mean by thieves and robbers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you mean by"him"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you mean? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you say to him who treats you as a slave? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you say, Agamemnon ought not that to be done which is proper and right? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you suppose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you think of it?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you think? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What do you wish to do in Athens? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does aversion promise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does he care for them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does he care if a little mouse in the house makes lamentation to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does he lose who commits adultery? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does he lose who is angry? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does he lose who makes the pathic what he is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does he say to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does the coward lose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does the pathic lose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What does this character promise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else are you doing, man, than divulging the mysteries? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else but destroying and overthrowing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else do those say who make pleasure their end? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else do you seek? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else does He do than like a good general He has given me the signal to retreat? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else have they suffered than that which is the condition of mortals? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else is there? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else judges of music, grammar, and other faculties, proves their uses and points out the occasions for using them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else than opinions lies heavy upon him who goes away and leaves his companions and friends and places and habits of life? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else than opinions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else than the faculty which proves and distinguishes the genuine and the spurious drachmae? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else was it than that which is the strongest thing in men, nature, which draws a man to her own will though he be unwilling and complaining? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What else, then, is slavery? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What faculty then will tell you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What foolish talk is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What good then did Priscus do, who was only a single person? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What good then do these things do to him, when he sits and weeps for a girl? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What harm has philosophy done you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What has happened to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What has happened? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What has happened? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What has happened? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What has happened? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What have I done which is either unfriendly or unsocial? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What have we lost? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What have we to do with you, man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What have you seen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What have you to do then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What have you to do with that which is another man''s evil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What hinders you when you have a fever from having your ruling faculty conformable to nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is a child? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is bad fortune? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is civil sedition, what is divided opinion, what is blame, what is accusation, what is impiety, what is trifling? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is comprehended in this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is consequent on a thing, what is repugnant to a thing, or not consistent, or inconsistent? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is his end? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is it then itself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is it then itself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is it then that disturbs and terrifies the multitude? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is it to be banished? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is it to bear a fever well? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is pain? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is that faculty which closes and opens the ears? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is that to us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is that to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is that which is wanting? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is that which makes use of the rest? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the cause of this perturbation? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the difficulty here? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the hortatory style? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the matter presented to us about which we are inquiring? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the product of virtue? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the proof of this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the reason that you are now going up to Rome? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the reason then that he takes no account of his adversaries, and even irritates them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the stamp of his opinions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the stamp on this Sestertius? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the thing which desire promises? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the wonder then if man also in like manner is preserved, and in like manner is lost? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the wonder? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is the work of an honourable and good man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is their nature then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is then the cause of my doing wrong? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is there in this great or dreadful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is this to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of a man then do you suppose him to be who pays no regard to this matter? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of a thing do you imagine the good to be? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of administrator and how does he govern? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of an education, man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of circumstances, man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of one? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of people are the Trojans, wise or foolish? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of progress? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of solitude then remains? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of thing is a proconsul''s office? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What kind of trouble have we still? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What man, when he is walking about, cares for his own energy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What matter is this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What means have you of finding one who will rescue you from slavery? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What messenger is so swift and vigilant? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What more have I to care for? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What more suitable to a man have I than this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What more trustworthy witness have we than this very man who is, become Caesar''s friend? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What need have I then to consult the viscera of victims or the flight of birds, and why do I submit when he says,"It is for your interest"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What need have you of principles? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What need was there of this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What opinion have you formed on this subject? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What other things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What paradox do we utter if we say that the evil in everything''s that which is contrary to the nature of the thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What part of you does he hinder? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What physician invites a man to be treated by him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What prison? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What remains for me to do?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What remains for me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What say you philosopher? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What say you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What shall I do, since I have no distraction? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What shall I say to this slave? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What shall be done then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What shall distract my mind or disturb me, or appear painful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What shall we say to men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What should I suggest to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What should we do then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What takes care of all? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What tells you this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What testimony do you give for God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then are externals? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then are the things which are heavy on us and disturb us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then art thou? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then did Epaphroditus do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then did you use to say of these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then disturbs me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then do we do as sheep? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then do you take away? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then do you wish to be doing, when you are found by death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then does Chrysippus teach us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then does he want? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then does not Zeus know? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then does the character of a citizen promise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then have I not the power of displaying a good voice? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then if it be in heat, and what if it is in the rain, and what if he be in a melancholy mood, and what if he be asleep? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then in your opinion is good or bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is a man''s nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is education? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is it a paradox to say that a man is not hurt when he is whipped, or put in chains, or beheaded? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is required of me?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is that to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is that to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is that which, when we write, makes us free from hindrance and unimpeded? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the discipline for this purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the fruit of these opinions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the matter with you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the nature of God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the reason of this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the thing which is wanted? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the thing which moved? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is the wondrous thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is this evil, which is both hurtful, and a thing to be avoided? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is this superciliousness of the interpreter? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is this with respect to being a slave or free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is usually done? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then is your own? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then leads us to frequent use of divination? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then makes a dog beautiful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then makes a man beautiful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then must be done in this case? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then must we expect if we should add this occupation? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then ought I to do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then remains, or what method is discovered of holding commerce with them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then says Antisthenes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then shall I do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then shall the children of Socrates do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then should a man have in readiness in such circumstances? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then should a man say on the occasion of each painful thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then should we do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then was it that waked Epicurus from his sleepiness, and compelled him to write what he did write? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then was our opinion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then will happen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then will he not chain and not take away? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then, do you wish to please these very men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then, has not nature used this hair also in the most suitable manner possible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What time have you fixed for it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What transgression of the laws is there here, what folly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What tumult is able to do this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What tyrant is formidable, what disease, what poverty, what offense? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What will be the punishment? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What would Hercules have been if he had said,"How shall a great lion not appear to me, or a great boar, or savage men?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What would he have, or what does he regret, Patroclus or Antilochus or Menelaus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What would you have us do with you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, are they yours? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, have you read the words at all in a different way from that in which you read little odes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, did Agrippinus say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, did Rufus say to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, do these big and sharp swords do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, do we possess which is better than the flesh? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, do you possess which is peculiar? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, do you wish me to say to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, does he do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, happens when we think the things which are coming on us to be evils? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, have you done? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, hinders the same being done in this case also? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, hinders you from doing so with attention? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is given to you in answer to this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is it in playing the lute? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is it to the purpose to set up a palm tree, or to carry about a tent of skins, or a mortar and a pestle? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is it which in these acts makes the soul filthy and impure? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is more reasonable than for those who have laboured about anything to have more in that thing in which they have laboured? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is that to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is that to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is that which makes a man free from hindrance and makes him his own master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is the material of the philosopher? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is the meaning of this, that I have listened to the words of the philosophers and I assent to them, but in fact I am no way made easier? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is the punishment of those who do not accept? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is the reason of this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is this to the matter? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, is this to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, makes a man beautiful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, ought to be added to this precept? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, shall I do for them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, when He does not supply him with food? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, then, would you have? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, would you have all men lose their heads that you may be consoled? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What, wretch, do you not admit even this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | What? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When a man has these things before his eyes, does he keep awake and turn hither and thither? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When a man has this peace, not proclaimed by Caesar( for how should he be able to proclaim it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When a man has undertaken the administration of such a state, do you ask me if he shall engage in the administration of a state? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When a man sees another handling an ax badly, he does not say,"What is the use of the carpenter''s art? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When are flutes, a lyre, a horse, a dog, preserved? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When children are attractive and lively, whom do they not invite to play with them, and crawl with them, and lisp with them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When children come clapping their hands and crying out,"To- day is the good Saturnalia,"do we say,"The Saturnalia are not good?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When did any of you see me failing in the object of my desire? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When is a cock? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When is a disjunctive maintained? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When is a dog wretched? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When is a horse wretched? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When money is shown to you, have you studied to make the proper answer, that money is not a good thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When then he is become the friend of Caesar, is he free from hindrance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When then the pursuit of objects and the avoiding of them are in your power, what else do you care for? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When then? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When was Achilles ruined? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When we act contentiously and harmfully and passionately, and violently, to what have we declined? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When we act gluttonously, when we act lewdly, when we act rashly, filthily, inconsiderately, to what have we declined? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When will any one announce to me such a contest?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you are in conjunction with a woman, will you not remember who you are who do this thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you eat, where do you carry your hand to? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you have such a guide, and your wishes and desires are the same as his, why do you fear disappointment? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you have such hands, do you look for one who shall wipe your you st nose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you show a cake to greedy persons, and swallow it all yourself, do you expect them not to snatch it from you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you were a boy, did you examine your own opinions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you wish it to be handsome? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you wish it to be healthy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When you wish the body to be entire, is it in your power or not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When, then, I neither fear anything which a tyrant can do to me, nor desire anything which he can give, why do I still look on with wonder? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When, then, does the contradiction arise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When, then, have I told you that my head alone can not be cut off? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When, then, these things are secured to me, why need I be disturbed about external things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When, then, you are going to leave the sun itself and the moon, what will you do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When, then, you are still vexed at this and disturbed, do you think that you are convinced about good and evil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | When, then, you are thus affected toward things, what man can any longer be formidable to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whence did you produce and utter them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whence do you know this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where and when? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where is neither of them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where is the evil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where is the wonder then if in philosophy also many things which are true appear paradoxical to the inexperienced? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where is this equality? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where or how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where shall I seek the good and the bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where then is progress? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where then is the great good and evil in men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where then is there reason for fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Where? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wherein does the man who exercises before the combat profit the athlete? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wherein has Chrysippus injured you that you should prove by your acts that his labours are useless? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wherein shall I trust you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whether I have a patron or not, what is that to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whether do you praise the moderate or the immoderate? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whether, then, is the fact of your being pitied a thing which concerns you or those who pity you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who am I who wish to have them in this way or in that? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who among us as to his actions has not slept in indifference? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who among us does not speak of good and bad, of useful and not useful; for who among us has not a preconception of each of these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who among us for the sake of this matter has consulted a seer? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who among us teaches to claim against them the power over things which they possess? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who among you, when he intended to enter a bath, ever went into a mill? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who are they by whom you wish to be admired? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who are you, and for what purpose did you come into the world? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who can take them away? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who chooses to live deceived, liable to mistake, unjust, unrestrained, discontented, mean? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who denies it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who denies that we ought to do this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who does not value a benevolent and faithful adviser? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who gives us the power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who imitates you, as he imitates Socrates? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who is it that speaks thus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who is it, then, who has fitted this to that and that to this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who made these things or devised them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who must? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who says that it is not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who says that they are not fine? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who says this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who says this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who taught you to know? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who then among you has this purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who then has any power over me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who then is the invincible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who then made him wise all at once? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who then makes improvement? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who then tells us what it is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who was ever taught by anger the art of a pilot or music? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who will tolerate you if you deny this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who wishes to become like you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who would Hercules have been, if he had sat at home? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who, then, chooses to live in error? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who, then, ever reckoned a fourth style with these, the style of display? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who, then, is still able to hinder me contrary to my own judgement, or to compel me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who, then, tells you that he who desires the things that belong to another is free from hindrance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who, when he sees me, does not think that he sees his king and master?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Who? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whoever has in himself the power over anything which is desired by the man, either to give it to him or to take it away? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whoever, then, generally possesses the science of life, what else must he be than master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom do you blame for an act which is not his own, which he did not do himself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom do you wish to please? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom have you approached for this purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom shall I name? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom shall we believe in these matters? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom shall we listen to, you or him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom then can I still fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom then do I fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom then do I wish to gain the prize? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Whose governing part? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why am I pleased if he speaks to me in a friendly way, and receives me, and why do I tell others how he spoke to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why am I still confounded? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why are we still indolent and negligent and sluggish, and why do we seek pretences for not labouring and not being watchful in cultivating our reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why are you afraid that he may thus fall into trouble? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why are you not content? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why are you still uneasy lest you should not show us who you are? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why are you unfortunate? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why are you vexed then, man, when you possess the better thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why did Agamemnon and Achilles quarrel with one another? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why did he consider as his own that which belongs to another? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why did you call yourself a Stoic? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why did you decorate yourself with what belonged to others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do I fear the guards? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do I not throw myself down and snore? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do I still strive to enter? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do we not imagine to something of this kind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you act the part of a Jew, when you are a Greek? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you advise the wise man not to bring up children? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you care about the way of going down to Hades? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you care about what belongs to others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you deceive the many? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you deceive the many? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you deceive us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you draw him away from the perception of his own misfortunes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you give him an opportunity of raising his eyebrows? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you give yourself trouble? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you grieve? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you keep awake for us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you light your lamp? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you mingle things which have been accidentally united in the same men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you not know whence you came? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you refrain from your own good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you rise early? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you say"me"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you say"to die"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you say"tumult"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you say,"If you please, master, I shall be well"? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you seek it without? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you treat the weightiest matters as if you were playing a game of dice? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you wonder then if you carry back from the school the very things which you bring into it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why do you, so far as in your power, corrupt your judge and lead astray your adviser? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why has she not learned these principles? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why ire you insatiable? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why is it not in your power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why is this your ill? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why should I give you directions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why should I hear you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why should not the philosopher labour to improve his reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why should we? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then are we angry? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then are you anxious about that which belongs to others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then are you hindered? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then are you ignorant of your own noble descent? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then are you still afraid of his decision? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then are you troubled? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then are you troubled? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then are you vexed, if another, who has made it his study, has the advantage over you in these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then did they blame you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then did you praise and flatter him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do I resist? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you act at hazard in things of the greatest importance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you admit that you are foolish? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you call yourself a Stoic? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you call yourself a Stoic? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you choose to live any longer, when you are what you are? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you claim that which belongs to another? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you corrupt the aids provided by others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you delude yourselves and cheat others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you draw on yourself the things for which you are not responsible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you fall in with anything which you would avoid? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you flatter the physician? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you go up to Rome as if it were something great? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you lament"Oh, you who are a king and have the sceptre of Zeus?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you neglect that which is better, and why do you attach yourself to this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you not finish the work? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you seek advantage in anything else than in that in which you have learned that advantage is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you still call yourself free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you strut before us as if you had swallowed a spit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you tell me to make myself like the many? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you think of attempting so great a thing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you trouble yourself any longer about it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then do you wish me to be withered up before the time, as you have been withered up? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then does he say that it is in his power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then in greater matters do those annoy me who blame me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why then should I trouble myself about him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why will you not acquire wealth? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, in what other way than a man ought to do who was convinced that he was a kinsman of the gods? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, is it in your power to take what subject you choose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, shall I say that the man will not be persuaded by me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then did you say that he is a man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, are still disturbed and why do you choose to show yourself afraid? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, are they more powerful than you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, are you not good yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, are you still vexed if you receive the things for which you come to the school? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, are you troubled, if it be separated now? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, are; you vexed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do I care if they pity me for my poverty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do I fight against God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do not I force my way in? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do you live to surround yourself with other sorrows upon sorrows through which you are unhappy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do you not act consistently in all things, both when you approach Caesar and when you approach any person? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do you not blame yourself, and sit crying like girls? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do you pretend to be a philosopher? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, do you talk of what you did before? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, then, if you bring a boy to the tyrant when he is with his guards, is he not afraid; or is it because the child does not understand these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, was this your business, to sun yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, what else than that it shall do you honour, or that it shall show you by act through it, what a man is who follows the will of nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, what else than this, that it is conspicuous in the toga as purple, and is displayed also as a fine example to all other things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, when you are only a worm, do you say that you are a man?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, when you desire a thing, does it not happen, and, when you do not desire it, does it happen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why, who comes to the school, who comes for the purpose of being improved? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will he then have a greater share of modesty, of fidelity, of brotherly affection? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you consider now? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you fare worse, if all the rest of us are persuaded that there is a natural fellowship among us, and that it ought by all means to be preserved? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not act like a sick man and call in the physician? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not be weaned now, like children, and take more solid food, and not cry after mammas and nurses, which are the lamentations of old women? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not choose to see and to distinguish in respect to what men become philosophers, and what things belong to belong to them in other respects? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not come clean that those with whom you keep company may have pleasure in being with you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not deny even all that you have learned that you may not bring a bad name on your theorems as useless? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not gladly part with it to him who gave it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not go back, and you will see clearer when you have laid aside fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not hang yourself, wretch, with such your intention? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not hang yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not perceive either what you are, or what you were born for, or what this is for which you have received the faculty of sight? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not remember who you are, and whom you rule? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not show him the effect of virtue that he may learn where to look for improvement? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not stretch out your neck as Lateranus did at Rome when Nero ordered him to be beheaded? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not study to be content with that which has been given to you?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not take into the account on the other side what you receive and for what, how much for how much? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not take up a stick and lay it on his head? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not then seek the nature of good in the rational animal? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not think of this too, but do you also dishonor your guardianship? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not throw away as far as you can the things belonging to others with which you decorate yourself, though they do not fit you at all? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not wash off the dirt from your body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not wash yourself somewhere some time in such manner as you choose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not willingly surrender it for the whole? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not withdraw from it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not, then, choose to place your good in that in which you are equal to the gods? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not, then, letting others alone, be to yourself both scholar and teacher? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you not, then, see first if he does what he professes when he acts in an unbecoming manner, and then blame his study? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you then hear about those things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Will you thus never cease to be a foolish child? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | With such a person shall a man of sense refuse to enter into a contest, and avoid discussion and conversation with him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | With such as on their part also maintain it, or with such as violate this fellowship? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | With what evidence then am I satisfied? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | With whom, then, ought we to maintain it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | With whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you have by all means the things which are not in your power? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you have it then to come forward and condemn itself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you have me to tell him, that beauty consists not in being daubed with muck, but that it lies in the rational part? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you let me tell you what manner of man you have shown us that you are? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you not release yourself from these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you then have me to wonder at these things and worship them, and go about as the slave of all of them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Would you wish your own children to be such persons? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wretch would you have, then, anything other than what is best? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wretch, are you not content with what you see daily? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wretch, are you so blind, and do n''t you see the road to which the want of necessaries leads? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wretch, do you then on account of one poor leg find fault with the world? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wretch, which of your affairs goes badly? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Wretch, will you not dismiss these things that do not concern you at all? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You cause them sorrow? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You practice that you may not be tossed as on the sea through sophisms, and tossed about from what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You put them together, man; and what good will it do you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You reply,"Why do you also mock me and add to my present sorrows?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You say"No"; but if a man flogs you, stand in the public place and call out,"Caesar, what do I suffer in this state of peace under thy protection? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You should have seen what respect Epaphroditus paid to him:"How does the good Felicion do, I pray?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You wish to prattle about theorems? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | You, then, who are in a wretched plight and gaping after applause and counting your auditors, do you intend to be useful to others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Your body, then, is another''s, subject to every man who is stronger than yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Your body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Your possessions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | Zeus has set me free: do you think that he intended to allow his own son to be enslaved? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | a supercilious countenance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | about the things which are your own, in which consists the nature of good and evil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | about the things which do not concern us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | about what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | according to nature, or contrary to nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | am I not without fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | am I such a man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and are not children and parents and country? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and are you not mad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and as whom did He introduce you here? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and did you not flatter a certain person who was the son of a senator? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and did you not then, as you do all things now, do as you did do? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and do I not entirely direct my thoughts to God and to His instructions and commands?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and do you become worse than a well- behaved priest who treats you these fine gladiators with all respect? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and do you not at one time praise them and at another time blame them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and do you not think the same men at one time to be good, at another time bad? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and do you seek for any other, when you have him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and for this reason did you leave brother, country, friends, your family, that you might return when you had learned these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and have you not at one time a friendly feeling toward them and at another time the feeling of an enemy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how and how shall those who know you despise a man who is gentle and modest? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how are you so peevish? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how does it concern you how we act? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how is a thing great or valuable which is naturally dead, or earth, or mud? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how is it possible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how is that possible? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how many do you think that he gained by going about? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how many meadows are pleasant? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how many other young men at this age commit many like errors? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how much easier is this help? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and how often have you boasted that you were easy as to death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and if I do, how shall I still be purple? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and if such a man blames any one, does the man care for the blame? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and if the husband foolishly prates about the matter, why not pitch him out of the house? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and if women took delight in catamites, would you become one? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and if you shall lose modesty, moderation and gentleness, do you think the loss nothing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and in what also will the teacher instruct them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and is any of the smaller acts done better by inattention? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and is he who is pained, an object of pity? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and is it possible to seize it as you pass by? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and is not life itself made up of certain other things than this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and must I be the only man who has no prize?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and shall it not even do me good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and shall they who undertake this work come to it with success? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and strife with whom? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and to have God for your maker and father and guardian, shall not this release us from sorrows and fears? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and under what name shall we show him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and was it for this that Maximus sailed as far as Cassiope in winter with his son, and accompanied him that he might be gratified in the flesh? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what advantage in that case would you have had in being adorned? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what do children do when they are left alone? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what else did you learn in the school? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what end is more happy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what envy is there of evils?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what good man is unhappy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what if there should be great heat? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what is it that you say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what is more paradoxical than to puncture a man''s eye in order that he may see? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what is the use of that to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what kind of danger is yours, if others have false opinions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what more have you need of? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what will people think of you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what, if it is in the dark? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and what, if it should be at Olympia? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and when He bids them to fold themselves up and to remain quiet and rest, how else do they remain quiet and rest? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and when to shed the leaves, do they shed the leaves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and when you were become a youth and attended the rhetoricians, and yourself practiced rhetoric, what did you imagine that you were deficient in? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and when you were in health, what good was that to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and where is there occasion for flattery? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and who has lived so long with you as you with yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and who has power over these things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and who has so much power of convincing you as you have of convincing yourself; and who is better disposed and nearer to you than you are to yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and who if he had perception and reason would wish to be one of these lions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and who made the connection of men with one another and their fellowship? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and who made the fruits of the earth? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and who made the sun? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and who the seasons? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and why are the words"Know yourself"written in front of the temple, though no person takes any notice of them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and why do you light your lamp and labor for us, and write so many books? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and why do you talk of your service in the army? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and why have you come to the philosophers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and why? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and will he not pitch you overboard as a useless thing, an impediment only and bad example to the other sailors? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and''How will it turn out?'' |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | and,''Will this happen or that?'' |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | are not plants and animals also the works of God?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | are saying about yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | are you in fact so blind and deaf? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | are you not satisfied with eating according to what you have learned by reading, and so with bathing and with exercise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | are you refuting yourself every day; and will you not give up these frigid attempts? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | are you the bull of the herd, or the queen of the bees? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | are you the son of a father sprung from Zeus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | as I ought, or as I ought not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | ask me also if he shall govern: again I will say to you: Fool, what greater government shall he exercise than that which he exercises now? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | because he has made you capable of endurance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | because he has made you magnanimous? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | because he has taken from that which befalls you the power of being evil? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | because he maintains a decency of behavior, because he displays his virtue more conspicuously? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | because it is in your power to be happy while you are suffering what you suffer; because he has opened the door to you, when things do not please you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | but how did he go off to the virgins to ask for necessaries, to beg which is considered most shameful? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | by those who know you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | can I now suggest? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | can not I catch them?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | cowardice, mean spirit, the admiration of the rich, desire without attaining any end, and avoidance which fails in the attempt? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | did I ever accuse any man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | did I ever blame God or man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | did any of you ever see me with sorrowful countenance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | did he so much despair of me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | did you communicate your affairs on certain terms, that you should in return hear mine also? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | did you ever for this light your lamp or keep awake? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | did you learn this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do I hurt any man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do not the sailors abuse him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do not these very people secretly despise you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do they ever cease abusing Caesar? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do they not belong to the Giver, and to Him who made you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do they seem unjust, do you on account of these things blame God? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do you ever call a pot a dish, or a ladle a spit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do you not admit that what is good ought to be done? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do you not distinguish appearances? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do you not imagine it to be free from harm? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do you not know that human life is a warfare? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do you not know the evils which hold me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do you not use food which is suitable for your body, and clothing and habitation? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | do you suppose that I voluntarily fall into evil and miss the good? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | does any man require you to ornament yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | does he hinder the faculty of assent? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | does he look for a person to teach him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | does he not, if he suffers nobly, come off even with increased advantage and profit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | does it need only a short time? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | does not the one say that he ought to take the prize of another, and does not the other say that he ought not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for do you not say this in the case of all other things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for having acted conformably to nature? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for if I sustain damage and am unlucky, he takes no care of me; and what is he to me if he allows me to be in the condition in which I am? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for if his master had bought an exercise master, would he have employed him in the exercises of the palaestra as a servant or as a master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for if it is not right to show partisanship in this way, do not do so yourself; and if it is right, why are you angry if they followed your example? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for is not this a preparation for life? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for this do you sit by my side? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for what will they do to us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for where would they have been then staying? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for which of them knows what itself is, and what is its own value? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | for whom would you have adorned yourself, if all human creatures were women? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | free from compulsion, is he tranquil, is he happy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | has any person made me the dispenser of them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | has he any form of it in his mind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | has he been turned to reflect on himself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | has he cast away self- conceit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | has he not given to you magnanimity? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | has he not given to you manliness? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | has he perceived in what a bad state he is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | has not Zeus given you directions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have I been discontented with anything that happens, or wished it to be otherwise? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have I ever blamed Thee? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have I ever found fault with Thy administration? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have I in any respect wrongly used the powers which Thou gavest me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have I made every man''s interest dependent on any man except himself?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have I misused my perceptions or my preconceptions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have I not always approached Thee with a cheerful countenance, ready to do Thy commands and to obey Thy signals? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have I wished to transgress the relations? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have you anything better or greater to see than the sun, the moon, the stars, the whole earth, the sea? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have you been useful to yourself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have you made any study of opinions and of your own rational faculty? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have you never flattered your little slave? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have you never kissed her feet? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | have you not read much of this kind, and written much? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | he has only the first principles, and no more?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | he will be more trifling and impertinent than he is now; for what else have you rained by reading it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | how do I answer to them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | how he stopped their mouths? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | how much more beautiful than the cock''s comb, how much more becoming than the lion''s mane? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | how often and by how many must I he robbed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | how shall I not turn away from the truth?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | how shall he pass along without being attacked by robbers? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | how then shall it be done? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | in that which serves or in that which is free? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | in using nice little words?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | in what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is a power ofselecting them given to me? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is he deprived of nothing, does he part with nothing of the things which belong to him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it any other than that a man can not properly adapt the preconception of health to particulars? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it not because you have practiced writing the name? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it possible to be free from faults? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it possible, then, when a man sustains damage and does not obtain good things, that he can be happy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it that he who has lost these things has sustained no loss? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it that we may not be ignorant of the truth, who we are, and what we are with respect to you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it that you are near the severance of the soul and the body? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it the faculty of hearing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it the tyrant and his guards? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is it to wear a cloak? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is not money your master, or a girl or a boy, or some tyrant, or some friend of the tyrant? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is not what is said reported to Caesar? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | is there not the hortatory style? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | know you not that he who does the acts of a child, the older he is, the more ridiculous he is? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | natural affection, a natural disposition to help others, a natural disposition to forbearance? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | no; but a slave, And, when he was sold, how did he behave to his master? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | on what estates do they depend, and what domestics do they rely on? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or can you even in any degree understand me when I say,"I shall use demonstration to you?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or ever falling into that which I would avoid? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or for this reason would you rather pray, if it were possible, to be loved by your enemies and deserted by them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or if we were useful to men while we were alive, should we not have been much more useful to them by dying when we ought to die, and as we ought? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or must he sometimes withdraw from it, but admit the consequences and not admit contradictions? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or on the other hand how can an olive tree be moved not in the manner of an olive tree, but in the manner of a vine? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or the faculty of hearing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or the work in the one case like the other? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or wheat, or barley, or a horse or a dog? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | or will God tell you anything else than this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | ought a man to listen to such things without pleasure?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | piety and sanctity, what do you think that they are? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | shall I not hurt him, who has hurt me?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | such a power as Socrates had who in all his social intercourse could lead his companions to his own purpose? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | that a man should neglect himself and his own interest? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | that he did not often say,"I wish I had the fever instead of the child?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | that he was not in agony when the child had a fever? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | that it is the language of Epicureans and catamites? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | that one man must keep watch, another must go out as a spy, and a third must fight? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | that they are kinsmen, that they are brethren by nature, that they are the offspring of Zeus? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | that we should be as silly as sheep? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | the Trojans or the Hellenes? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | the hand of Symphorus or Numenius? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | the husbandman while he is tilling the ground, the sailor while he is on his voyage? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | the hypothetical syllogism, or the man who has been deceived by it? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | the master of what? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | the same, or something else? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | the silver or the workmanship? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | then will you not give up what belongs to others? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | this the armed guards? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | this the men of the bedchamber? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | to carry the same face always in going out and coming in? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | to gain mistresses or to fight? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | to go to his doors?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | to have blamed nobody? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | to the rich man, to the man of consular rank? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | to whom shall he attach himself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | to your mouth or to your eye? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was I not able to listen to reason? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was I not young? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was he free enough neither to desire nor to fear? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was it by proclaiming and saying,"I am such a man?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was it fit that nature should make all human creatures women? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was it for this reason you have sought to find some person from whom you might receive benefit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was it not for the purpose of discoursing skillfully? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was it that you may nevertheless be unfortunate and unhappy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was your aversion? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was your avoidance of things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | was your movement? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | we are perishing and you come to mock us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | well, I will say, can he give us security against love? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | were you born for this purpose, that dissolute women should delight in you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what are you doing? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what company shall he wait for that he may pass along in safety? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what did you hear, what did you learn? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what does He not will?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what harm is there in this? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what has He reserved to Himself? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what have I not done as to these things which I ought to have done?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what if it should be a little reputation, or abuse; and what, if it should be praise; and what if it should be death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what is going to perish of the things which are in the universe? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what is that by which they are curious and inquisitive, or, on the contrary, unmoved by what is said? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what is the matter about which you are engaged? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what must I say? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what necessity is there to carry to avoid a burden like an ass, and to be beaten with a stick? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what new thing or wondrous is going to happen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what other is capable of receiving the appearance of shame? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what want? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what will he write? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | what would you be doing when death surprises you, for you must be surprised when you are doing something? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | when He bids the fruit to ripen, does it ripen? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | when He bids them to produce fruit, how else do they produce fruit? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | when He bids them to send forth shoots, do they shoot? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | when again He bids them to cast down the fruits, how else do they cast them down? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | when then a man fears these things, is it possible for him to be bold with his whole soul to superintend men? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | when you wash yourself, what do you go into? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | whence will the citizens come? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | where does there remain any room for tears? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | where is there room for the words,''How will it be?'' |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | where is there, then, still reason for anger, and of fear about what belongs to others, about things which are of no value? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | where is this done?" |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | where shall we exhibit him? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | which of them knows when it ought to employ itself and when not? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who among us defers the use of them till he has learned them, as he defers the use of the words about lines or sounds? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who answers you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who can impede them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who can take them away? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who comes to learn what he is in want of? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who comes to present his opinions to he purified? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who else than yourself will hinder you from using them? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who else than yourselves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who has been condemned? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who is judged in this case? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who shall compel you to avoid what you do not think fit to avoid? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who shall compel you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who shall hinder you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who then is a Stoic? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who will be governor of the youth, who preside wi over gymnastic exercises? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who will bring them up? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | who, when he is deliberating, cares about his own deliberation, and not about obtaining that about which he deliberates? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | whose hand did you kiss? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why are you careless? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why are you unhappy? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do I still eject guards? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do I will to have absolutely what is not granted to ma? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do I will what does not depend on the will? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do we make ourselves worse than children? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do you contract the world? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do you force us? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do you still long for the quiet there, and for the places to which you are accustomed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do you tremble then when you are going off to any trial of this kind? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why do you undertake a thing that is in no way fit for you? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why more than what seem right to the Egyptians? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why more than what seems right to me or to any other man? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why need we say how? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why shall one man envy another? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | why should a man admire the rich or the powerful, even if they be both very strong and of violent temper? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | will he teach them what the Lacedaemonians were taught, or what the Athenians were taught? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | will it not be an advantage? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | will you be considered a man of learning; have you read Chrysippus or Antipater? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | will you not give way to Him who is superior? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | will you not remember when you are eating, who you are who eat and whom you feed? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | will you sit and weep like children? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | with the ignorant, the unhappy, with those who are deceived about the chief things? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | would he not have gained the name of coward, ignoble, a hater of his country, a man who feared death? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | would he not have gained the opposite? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | you are not saying what you say on account of your father, or your brother, but on account of yourself, do you still allege your sickness? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | you who from without see their affairs and are dazzled by an appearance, or the men themselves? |
epictetus-discourses-2010 | your present or your former life? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what''s the meaning of''no lack of admonitions and warnings''?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But is that possible?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what''s to be done? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did I exclaim that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Really?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, what of that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Everything is lawful,''you mean? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''What do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A Socialist? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A debt to whom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A dragon? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 A glass and a half of neat spirit-- is not at all bad, do n''t you think? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A lie? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 A wash- stand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | About what business? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Accidentally perhaps he made a mistake in the word, perhaps he did not use the right word? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | After all what am I worth, that another man, a fellow creature, made in the likeness and image of God, should serve me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | After pulling out my beard, you mean, he will ask my forgiveness? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Agrafena Alexandrovna?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ah, but you were frightened, you were frightened this morning, were n''t you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Ah, it''s you, Rakitin? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alive? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Alive?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, and what of the other? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Alyosha, ca n''t you come up here to me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, do you know where we had better go? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, is there a God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, is there immortality? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha,he whispered apprehensively,"where''s Ivan?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I drunk? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I to talk of that stinking dog? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Am I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Among them? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 An ax?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | An onion? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And a grand feast the night before? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And are you still reading nasty books? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And ca n''t you tell us the nature of that disgrace? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And can one observe that one''s going mad oneself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And can there be an ax there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And cherry jam? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And could n''t I be sent for from Tchermashnya, too-- in case anything happened?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And did he despise me? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And did he really tell you not to tell me about Ivan? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And did you believe he would do it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And did you tell them that you can sham fits, as you boasted then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And did you understand it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And do you know much about them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And do you know that Nazaryev, the merchant with the medal, a juryman? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And do you know, Alexey Fyodorovitch, how people do go out of their mind? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And do you really mean to marry her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And do you suppose that I ca n''t put up with that woman? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And does the shot burn?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And from whom did you... appropriate it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And hast thou considered my servant Job? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And have you got any powder? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And have you read Byelinsky? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And have you seen devils among them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And have you told them every word of our conversation at the gate? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And he told you on no account to tell me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how did you get in this time, since the gate was bolted an hour ago? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how do you feel now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how is Ilusha? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if I am? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if he had n''t come? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if they''re decent people here( and the Father Superior, I understand, is a nobleman) why not be friendly and courteous with them? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And in what way are you ill? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And is that all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And is your father''s blessing nothing to you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And it could kill any one?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And jealous of her money, too? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And mushrooms?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And my father? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And not you, not you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And now, I suppose, you believe in God, since you are giving back the money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And of Smerdyakov''s guilt you have no proof whatever but your brother''s word and the expression of his face? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And pepper perhaps? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And she meant to get you in her clutches, do you realize that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And the Prisoner too is silent? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And the cellar? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And the devil? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And the money,_ panie_?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And the old man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And the other_ pan_, what''s his name? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And the pestle?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And to part from them, to leave them for ever? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And was it like this in the time of the last elder, Varsonofy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what about Alyosha and his opinion, which you were so desperately anxious to hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what about your officer? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And what am I going to swear for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what does he tell you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what does ridiculous mean? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And what followed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what has he told you, gentlemen-- Smerdyakov, I mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what if I had n''t gone away then, but had informed against you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what if I meet any one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what is a Socialist? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what is meant by founding a city or a state? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And what then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what year is it, Anno Domini, do you know? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what''s your Tchizhov to do with me, good people, eh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And when an enemy comes, who is going to defend us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And when will the time come? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And when would you get it, your three thousand? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And when,"I cried out to him bitterly,"when will that come to pass? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And where are you flying to? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And where are you going? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And where did you get the needle and thread? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who are you, my good sir? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who can say of himself''I am holy''? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And who did you think it was?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who will believe him with all the proofs against him? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And why are you so dressed up? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why did I tell him I was going to Tchermashnya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why did you begin''as stupidly as you could''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why have you meddled? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And why should he go to father, especially on the sly, if, as you say yourself, Agrafena Alexandrovna wo n''t come at all?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And will you weep over me, will you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you are quite convinced that there has been some one here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you believed him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you clearly, confidently remember that he struck himself just on this part of the breast? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you could refuse to forgive her when she begged your forgiveness herself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you did n''t even think of washing your hands at Perhotin''s? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And you do n''t even suspect him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you imagine he would have accepted such a deed as a substitute for two thousand three hundred roubles in cash? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you remember that for certain now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you with him, you too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you, do you forgive me, Andrey? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And, Alyosha, will you give in to me? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 And, believe me, we''ve all given our word to behave properly here.... And you, Pyotr Alexandrovitch, will you go, too?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Andrey, simple soul,he seized him by the shoulders again,"tell me, will Dmitri Fyodorovitch Karamazov go to hell, or not, what do you think?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Animal? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Are n''t you ashamed to destroy yourself?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are n''t you ashamed? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Are n''t you tired of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are the shutters fastened, Fenya? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Are they so much better in their own country than we are? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you a driver? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you frowning on Smerdyakov''s account? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you going that way, to Mihailovsky? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you in your right mind? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you joking,_ panie_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you laughing at me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you leaving the hermitage? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Are you mad? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you ready? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Are you serious?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you speaking the truth? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Are you uneasy about your sins? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you waiting for me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | At Katerina Ivanovna''s? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | At that point one of the lawyers asked him, as it were incidentally, the most simple question,''Was n''t it Smerdyakov killed him?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 At... at that woman''s? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Both? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Brat?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Brother Ivan invited Dmitri to the restaurant to- day? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Brother, how will all this horror end between father and Dmitri? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Brother, let me ask one thing more: has any man a right to look at other men and decide which is worthy to live? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Brother, what are you driving at? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Brother, what are you saying? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But I appeal to you again and again from the depths of my soul; did this murder actually take place? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But I shall be asked: What about the envelope on the floor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But I simply asked whether you do know? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But are n''t you trying to arrange it so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But are you really going so soon, brother? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But are you really so sensitive? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But can it be answered by me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But can you possibly have thought of all that on the spot? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But can you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But did you serve in the cavalry? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But do you believe that I am not ashamed with you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But do you know about the money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But excuse me: where and when did you take it off your neck? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But have you ever on previous occasions taken a weapon with you when you went out, since you''re afraid of the dark?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But he knew about the Pole before? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how can I possibly be responsible for all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how can she ruin Mitya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how can we help being friendly to you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But if I should be laid up with a fit, how can I prevent him coming in then, even if I dared prevent him, knowing how desperate he is? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But if he has killed him already? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But if you say yourself that it could n''t be guessed, how could I have guessed and stayed at home? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But is her husband in prison?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But is it used involuntarily or on purpose? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But need I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But no, he did not touch his talisman, and what is the reason he gives for it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But perhaps I have n''t got a clever face?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But perhaps you can tell me how many fingers you have on your hands? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But stay-- have you dined? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But the money? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But what did he ask for, what did he ask for, good people?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what do I know about it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But what do we see? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what do we want a second cart for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what does it matter to us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what for? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But what for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what if he did not kill him, but only knocked him down? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what if you had been playing for your own amusement, what''s the harm? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what is the matter with you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But what is the matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what makes you affirm so confidently and emphatically that it''s not he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what need had you to''talk rot,''as you call it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what object had you in view in arming yourself with such a weapon? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what''s the matter with you, mamma, darling? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what_ is_ the matter with you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But when have you had time to become one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But where are you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But who''s come in like that, mamma?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why are you trembling? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But why are your eyes so yellow? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why is it weeping? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why is it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But why married, Lise? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why suppress it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why to- day, why at once?... dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But why, why had you such a suspicion about me at the time?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why, why, asks the prosecutor, did not Smerdyakov confess in his last letter? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But why, why?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But you''re coming back to- morrow? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But you''re going to her now, anyway? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 But, brother, have you no hope then of being acquitted?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, gentlemen of the jury, why do I tell you all this, all these details, trifles? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Byelinsky? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Cain''s answer about his murdered brother, was n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can I, for instance, be responsible for you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can Rakitin really have told the truth? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Can a betrothed man pay such visits? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can he be so glad to see me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can one help loving one''s own country? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can such a man suffer? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Can that boy mean so much to my heart now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can they overhear us in there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you be with those of little faith? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you do me a service, Mitri? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Can you not, at least, tell us what sum you had in your hands when you went into Mr. Perhotin''s-- how many roubles exactly?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you really be so upset simply because your old man has begun to stink? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Can you really have put off coming all this time simply to train the dog?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you really not have known till now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you sew? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you talk to me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Cards? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Clearly and confidently, for I thought at the time,''Why does he strike himself up there when the heart is lower down?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Come now, is that so, Trifon Borissovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Come, do n''t you know why you''re glad? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Come, sit beside me, tell me, how did you hear about me, and my coming here yesterday? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Come, why are we sitting here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Could such a passion last for ever in a Karamazov? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Could you have answered at that moment, if any one had asked you a question-- for instance, what year it is?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he say it to you alone once, or several times? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he tell you that alone, or before some one else, or did you only hear him speak of it to others in your presence? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did n''t go off with Onyegin? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Did that take place not here, but at the beginning of your acquaintance?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you come to that of yourself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you drink much? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Did you feel how I kissed you when you were asleep just now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you get my letter about the new miracle? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you really mean to send me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you really take him down? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you send him a letter? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you show it to every one? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Did your brother tell you, anyway, that he intended to kill your father?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Disputes about money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Dmitri Fyodorovitch, wo n''t you come now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t believe it then,said the gentleman, smiling amicably,"what''s the good of believing against your will? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you think so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you want a drink? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you forgive me, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear, Dmitri? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Do you know Sabaneyev?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know for a fact,Fetyukovitch persisted,"whether you were awake or not when you saw the open door?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know how he spends his time now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know that he visits me? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Do you know your face is quite changed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know, angel lady,she suddenly drawled in an even more soft and sugary voice,"do you know, after all, I think I wo n''t kiss your hand?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you mean me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you mean to pretend to be ill to- morrow for three days, eh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you recognize this object? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you recognize this object? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember Zhutchka, old man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember how you went up to the carriage and said to me,''It''s always worth while speaking to a clever man''? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Do you remember the fellow that murdered a merchant called Olsufyev, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember, at the beginning of his speech, making out we were all like Fyodor Pavlovitch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you see this tree? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you see, do you see? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you see? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose I_ knew_ of the murder? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose he''d think much of that, with his temper, which you had a chance of observing yourself yesterday? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Do you suppose, gentlemen, that our children as they grow up and begin to reason can avoid such questions? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you think I am afraid of you now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you think I meant to make you blush? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand what duty is? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand what the word''wife''means? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Do you want me to bow down to you, monk?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Doctor... your Excellency... and will it be soon, soon? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does it hurt? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does it make any difference whether he lies there for ever or walks the quadrillion kilometers? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Does she?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ech, every one is of use, Maximushka, and how can we tell who''s of most use? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Ethics?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Even if every one is like that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Even if my father has something to say to me alone, why should I go in unseen? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Excuse me, madam, then you did not give him money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Expecting him? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Faro? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Fenya, for Christ''s sake, tell me, where is she? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | First of all, answer the question, where did you get hurt like this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Fool,laughed Ivan,"do you suppose I should stand on ceremony with you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For money? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 For revolution?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For the Kuzmitchovs? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For the last time I entreat you, tell me, can I have the sum you promised me to- day, if not, when may I come for it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Forgive me, for goodness''sake, I had no idea... besides... how can you call her a harlot? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 From Katya, from that young lady? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | From my gait, madam? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | From the landlord? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 From what specially?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | From whom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Fyodor Pavlovitch, for the last time, your compact, do you hear? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Gentlemen of the jury, is that really so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Gentlemen of the jury, was she a mother to her children? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Gentlemen, you are good, you are humane, may I see_ her_ to say''good- by''for the last time?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Gentlemen,I said,"is it really so wonderful in these days to find a man who can repent of his stupidity and publicly confess his wrongdoing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | God and immortality? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | God, can that too be false? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Good- by, Karamazov? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Great friends with Rakitin? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Grigory? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Grushenka, is it you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Grushenka? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Grushenka? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Hallo, so you''ve got a new puppy?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Has he sent me any message? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Has your honor been back long?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have n''t I managed to please you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have n''t they need of you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Have n''t you a rag of some sort... to wipe my face?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have n''t you something more to say-- something to add? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you asked him whether he believes it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you been admitted to Communion? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you been to the Church of the Ascension? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you come from far? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you ever seen a conqueror? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you ever seen it, you, who were for so many years in close attendance on your master? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you ever seen so much as twenty thousand before, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you forgiven me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you heard our news? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you noticed how dogs sniff at one another when they meet? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Have you read Voltaire?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you said so at the examination yet? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you settled to go to- morrow morning, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you talked to the counsel? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you told it in confession? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you turned the Magdalene into the true path? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Have you, too, fallen into temptation?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 He talks very coherently,"thought Ivan,"though he does mumble; what''s the derangement of his faculties that Herzenstube talked of?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He''s never been in Poland, so how can he talk about it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 He''s talking nonsense?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Here the question arises, if it''s true that they did exist, and that Smerdyakov had seen them, when did he see them for the last time? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 His compliments? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How am I to know about Dmitri Fyodorovitch? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How are they known? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How big, for instance? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How came you to run to the servant, Fedosya Markovna, with your hands so covered with blood, and, as it appears, your face, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can I leave you like this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can I tell what he''s to do with you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can I thank you, Kuzma Kuzmitch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can Katerina have a baby when she is n''t married? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can you presume to do such deeds? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can you, Ivan, how can you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can you, and in that dress too, associate with schoolboys? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could I dare laugh at you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How could I guess it from that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could I have said it more directly then? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How could I help knowing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could I help meddling? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How could I tell I had hit on a clever one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could I?... dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How could it not be a sin? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could this money have come into your possession if it is the same money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could you help reckoning on him? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How could you lie still on the line? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How dare I love them, teach and educate them, how can I talk to them of virtue? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How did you get it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do I know? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How do you know him from an ordinary tit?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you know? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How do you know?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you mean''according to justice''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you mean, mamma, one on the top of another, how is that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you mean, offering herself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you mean, you do n''t accept the world? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How does he fly down? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How does he love you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How does he speak, in what language? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How does your poem end? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How have you grown so rich? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is it that you''re all covered with blood? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How is it they all assert there was much more?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is that, may one inquire? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is this? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How is your daughter''s health? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How it was done? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How much in the bank? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How so? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How so?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How was it you came just now, eh? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How''naught''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How''s that the most ordinary? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How''s this,_ panovie_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 How? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I ask you for the second time-- need I take off my shirt or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I ask you, what would become of the excluded? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 I assure you I''m in earnest.... Why do you imagine I''m not serious?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I believed, I believe, I want to believe, and I will believe, what more do you want? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I did think of prosecuting him,the captain went on,"but look in our code, could I get much compensation for a personal injury? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I do n''t understand you.... What have I to be afraid of to- morrow? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I had not forgotten that,cried Katerina Ivanovna, coming to a sudden standstill,"and why are you so antagonistic at such a moment?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I have a contempt for you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I heard he was coming, but is he so near? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I meant to tell you later, for how could I decide on anything without you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 I said to him,''Then everything is lawful, if it is so?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I say this in case we become bad,Alyosha went on,"but there''s no reason why we should become bad, is there, boys? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I say, what makes you think I read it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 I shall be asked,''What about the old woman, Grigory''s wife? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I shall escape, that was settled apart from you; could Mitya Karamazov do anything but run away? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 I should have thought you could n''t have forgotten it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I suppose it''s all up with me-- what do you think? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''ll just have a liqueur.... Have you any chocolates? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''m drunk now, that''s what it is.... And are n''t you drunk? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 I''ve long been yearning to see you, why did n''t you come?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I... you, sir... would n''t you like me to show you a little trick I know? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If I have broken his skull, how can I find out now? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 If I''m to shoot myself, why not now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If you are going away to- morrow, what do you mean by an eternity? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In a fit or in a sham one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In a theater? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 In active love? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In miracles? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In my pocket? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 In that case is there anybody else you suspect?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In that case your landlady will remember that the thing was lost? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In the dark? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In the spirit and glory of Elijah, have n''t you heard? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 In two words, what do you want? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In what sense did they found it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In your landlady''s cap? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Infinitely? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Is Ivan very keen on it, and whose idea was it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is he ironical, is he jesting? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it because I am as much a murderer at heart? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it better, then, to be poor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it for me to bless them? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Is it hot?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it loathing for my father''s house? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it possible that a miserable, contemptible creature like that can worry me so much? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it possible,I cried, clasping my hands,"that such a trivial incident could give rise to such a resolution in you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it possible? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it simply a wild fantasy, or a mistake on the part of the old man-- some impossible_ quiproquo_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it true, Mitya? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Is it worth it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t Madame Hohlakov laying it on? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is she cheerful? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Is she here or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is she here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is she lost for ever? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that all you can think of?... dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Is that all?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that really your conviction as to the consequences of the disappearance of the faith in immortality? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that the sort of thing you dream about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is there any one in the world I could tell what I''ve told you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Is this because the trial begins to- morrow? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is your brother innocent or guilty? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Is your name Matvey?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It grows on a tree and is gathered and given to every one...."Apples? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It was he told you about the money, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It was not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It was you murdered him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It''s here, sir, here, sir,he muttered cringingly;"it''s here, you''ve come right, you were coming to us...""Sne- gi- ryov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It''s possible for one who does n''t believe in God to love mankind, do n''t you think so? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Ivan''s a tomb?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ivan''s going? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Ivan, and is there immortality of some sort, just a little, just a tiny bit?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ivan, poor Ivan, and when shall I see you again?... dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Jealous of you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Joined whom, what clever people? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Joking? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Just as he did God, then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Karl Bernard? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Katya,cried Mitya suddenly,"do you believe I murdered him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Know whom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Krassotkin, may I give it to my mother? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Lack of faith in God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Last night? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Let''s go to Grushenka, eh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Like a martyr? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Listen, gentlemen, could anything be more likely than this theory and such an action? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Listen, tell me who it is I love? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Lite? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Love life more than the meaning of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Loves his having killed his father? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Make it up with him? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Mamma, how has he behaved like an angel?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | May I ask that question? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | May I ask you something, sir? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | May I look out of the window? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Me? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Mitya, dear, what''s the matter with you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Mitya, who is that looking at us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Morning? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Mr. Snegiryov-- is that you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Mushrooms? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | My heart better than my head, is it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 My money, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | My story, gentlemen? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Nice?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | No one but Smerdyakov knows, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | No, for every one, for every one, you here alone, on the road, will you forgive me for every one? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 None at all?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Not Zhutchka? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Not an easy job? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Not because I wo n''t be your wife, but simply weep for me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Not coming? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Not for another man''s death?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Not in your pocket? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Not my business?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Not real? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Nothing but saffron? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Nothing to boast of? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now, would n''t you like to continue your statement? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Nuts? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Of the gold- mines, madam? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Of whom could she have been jealous?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Oh, I am ready to approve of you now,said he;"will you shake hands? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Oh, gentlemen of the jury, why need we look more closely at this misfortune, why repeat what we all know already? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Oh, what are you doing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Oh, where, where did you get that from? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Oh, yes, everything.... That is... Why do you suppose I should n''t understand it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | On account of some stupid nonsense-- as it''s sure to turn out-- am I going to wake up the household and make a scandal? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 On purpose?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | On the question who founded Troy? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Once or several times?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Only from his face? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Or was it the end?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Our story? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Pater Seraphicus-- he got that name from somewhere-- where from? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perezvon? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Philosophical reflections again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Polish women? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Porfiry, did you take her offering where I told you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Possibly even that... only perhaps till I am thirty I shall escape it, and then--"How will you escape it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Quite at home? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Really, Lise? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Really? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Really? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Really?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Rebellion? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Ring?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall I go at once and give information against Smerdyakov? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Shall I tell it to you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | She asks me to go and see her? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 She''s asked you, written to you a letter or something, that''s why you''re going to her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | She''s here, too..."With whom? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Should he fling it up and go away altogether?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Should n''t we send for Herzenstube? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Should n''t you put a wet bandage on your head and go to bed, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Signals? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Simply to ask about that, about that child?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Smashed? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 So no one knew of the signals but your dead father, you, and the valet Smerdyakov? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So there''s a secret, she says, a secret? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 So what was it that impelled you to this sentiment of hatred? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you despise me now for those twenty- five roubles? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 So you do suppose there are two who can move mountains? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you married a lame woman? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you positively declare that you are not guilty of the death of your father, Fyodor Pavlovitch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you thought then, you scoundrel, that together with Dmitri I meant to kill my father? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you would go any length for me, eh? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 So you''re afraid?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you''re only stained, not wounded? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Some lint, mamma, for mercy''s sake, bring some lint and that muddy caustic lotion for wounds, what''s it called? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Speak, you stinking rogue, what is that''something else, too''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Stay, Trifon Borissovitch,began Mitya,"first and foremost, where is she?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Stay, did you tell the prosecutor and the investigating lawyer about those knocks? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Strangled, what for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Sure? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Surely I did n''t declare so positively that I''d brought three thousand?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely he did not tell you so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely you do n''t think me such an out and out scoundrel as that? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Tapped the ground?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me now, what game have you been up to? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Tell me now, why did you send me then to Tchermashnya?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me rather why you who are so clever, so intellectual, so observant, choose a little idiot, an invalid like me? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Tell me why it is those poor mothers stand there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, Karamazov, have you an awful contempt for me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, Karamazov, what sort of man is the father? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Tell me, can he be allowed to go on defiling the earth?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, how are things going? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, is she coming now, or not? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Tell me, my good woman, is Agrafena Alexandrovna there now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, though, was that''amulet,''as you call it, on your neck, a big thing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, what made you hope that I should be the one to find him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me,Alyosha asked anxiously,"did you send for that person?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That I am sorry to lose God? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 That for me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That is, what blood? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 That''s as much as to say,''It''s always worth while speaking to a sensible man,''eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s not ridiculous, is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The Holy Ghost in the form of a dove? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The Metropolis tavern in the market- place? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The Pan Captain has heard of Pan Podvysotsky, perhaps? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The Pole-- the officer? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The bodyguard? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 The devil only knows, what if he deceives us?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The landlady is laying the table for them now-- there''ll be a funeral dinner or something, the priest is coming; shall we go back to it, Karamazov? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The mines? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 The money,_ panie_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The pistols? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 The question is, will you go to the gold- mines or not; have you quite made up your mind? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The question now is, my young thinker reflected, is it possible that such a period will ever come? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 The three thousand you promised me... that you so generously--""Three thousand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then even you do n''t believe in God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then he despises me, me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then he''s expecting Grushenka to- day? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then it''s for the salvation of my soul you are working, is it, you scoundrel? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then she is not angry at my being jealous? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then why are you giving it back? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then why on earth,he suddenly interrupted Smerdyakov,"do you advise me to go to Tchermashnya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then you do n''t mean to take proceedings? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then you have said all that in your evidence? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then you''ll go, you''ll go? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | There was a dispute about three thousand roubles, I think, which you claimed as part of your inheritance? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | There''s one thing you have n''t made clear yet: you are still betrothed all the same, are n''t you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 There, you see, you hear?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | They all accuse me of having hidden the children''s money in my boots, and cheated them, but is n''t there a court of law? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 They caught him smartly at Mokroe, did n''t they, eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | They do n''t let convicts marry, do they? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Though you were so excited and were running away? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Three thousand,_ panie_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Three thousand? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Three years ago?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Till morning? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Timofey said they were a lot of them there--""At the station?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To Mokroe? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 To begin with, are we alone?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To father? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To hell? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To my thinking, you''d better keep quiet, for what can you accuse me of, considering my absolute innocence? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 To sink into debauchery, to stifle your soul with corruption, yes?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To sound what, what? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To whom are you referring as''that wicked wretch''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To whom, to whom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Trifon Borissovitch, is that you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Universal history? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Upon my word, you do n''t suppose they wo n''t acquit him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Upon my word,cried my adversary, annoyed,"if you did not want to fight, why did not you let me alone?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Very well, Lise, I''ll look; but would n''t it be better not to look? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Wandering?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was I then so eager, was I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was he a cavalry officer indeed? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Was it your finger he bit?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We are drinking the new wine, the wine of new, great gladness; do you see how many guests? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 We laugh, but what must the prisoner be feeling?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We shall see each other again, or do you think we sha n''t? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We stick to the old doctrine, there are all sorts of innovations nowadays, are we to follow them all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, I''ve come to do the same again, do you see? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, am I to stay naked like this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, and what else? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, and what happened? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, are they feasting? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Well, are you coming to the Superior?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, did you get your nose pulled? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Well, how are things over there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, how would it be if you began your story with a systematic description of all you did yesterday, from the morning onwards? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Well, is he lying there now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, must I take off my shirt, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, so you''ve saved the sinner? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, what now? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Well, what of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, who did found it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, why are you blushing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well-- and yours? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Well?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Were you very anxious to see me, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What AEsop? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What Church of Ascension? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What Piron?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What Podvysotsky? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What Sabaneyev did you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What Sabaneyev is it he''s talking about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What Sabaneyev? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What Tchizhov? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What Trifon Nikititch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What a repulsive mug, though, has n''t he? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What aberration?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What about the door? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What am I to do now, Kuzma Kuzmitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What am I to say, gentlemen of the jury? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What are these people? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are we to believe then? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What are you about?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you doing to me? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What are you doing, loading the pistol?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you frowning at? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you going to Mokroe for, now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you grinning at? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you learning French words for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you saying, Ivan? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What are you saying?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you shouting for? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What are you talking about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you talking about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you weeping for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What blood? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What blunder, and why is it for the best? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can I do for you,_ panie_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can I say?--that is, if you are in earnest--"Is there a God or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can be the matter? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What could you have informed? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What crime? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What crime? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did he ask you to tell me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did he lie on there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did he say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did he say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did it mean, falling at his feet like that? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What did you quarrel about this time?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did you think of what he said about children? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do I care for your faith?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do I know about love and women and how can I decide such questions? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do I think? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you know?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by healed? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you mean by isolation?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by mystic? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you mean by that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by''a long fit''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by''nothing''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by''precisely so''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by''something else, too''? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you mean by''sorry to lose God''?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by''stepping aside''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean, Mitya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you think yourself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you think, Karamazov? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you want to intrude for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you want with so much? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What do you want?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you want? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you want? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does Ivan say? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What does''suverin''mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What dog''s that you''ve got here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What else is left for him to do? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What even if for another man''s death? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What evidence can she give that would ruin Mitya?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for, if you had no object? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What gates of paradise? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What grief? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What grounds had you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What has became of your fortune? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What has happened to you, sir? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What has he said to you so special? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What has led you to see all this? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What have I come for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have I come for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have I done to you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have I to be afraid of? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What have you come for, worthy Father? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have you stolen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What idiocy is this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if I wo n''t tell you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What is happening? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it again? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it he can not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it to us? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What is it you want of me, sir?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it, Kolya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it, Trifon Borissovitch? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What is it, my child?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is the matter? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What is the matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is there terrible if it''s Christ Himself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is there to explain, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What makes you think that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What meanness? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What meeting, sir? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What murderer? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What need had he of precaution? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What next? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What o''clock is it,_ panie_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What object? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What of Dmitri and father? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What of him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What officer? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What promotion? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What reproach? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What should I forgive you for, sir? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What should I go for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What should I like you for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What should I want a light for? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What signals? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What sort of shape? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What strength? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What strikes you as so strange? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What sum, Dmitri Fyodorovitch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What suspicion? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What tortures? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What trick? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What truth? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What vision? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was it made you decide to do it yesterday? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was that he said about Jerusalem?... dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What was your reason for this reticence? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What were you telling me just now about Lise? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What wild dream now? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What will happen now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will our peasants say now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will the counsel for the defense say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What wisp of tow? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What would become of an ax in space? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What would turn out? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s it open for? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What''s it to do with me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s that for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s that for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the matter with him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the matter with you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the matter,_ panie_? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What''s the matter? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the matter? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What''s the matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the matter? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the matter? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the meaning of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the use of the counsel? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What''s this box? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s wrong with him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, after all, is this Karamazov family, which has gained such an unenviable notoriety throughout Russia? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, am I to stay naked? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, do n''t you believe in God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, do you suppose I''d shoot myself because I ca n''t get three thousand to pay back? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What, he got there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, he stole it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whatever do you want to go picking quarrels with every one for? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 When did I say so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When did she go? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When the day of the murder planned by Smerdyakov came, we have him falling downstairs in a_ feigned_ fit-- with what object? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 When they do get a day to enjoy themselves, why should n''t folks be happy?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When was he with you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where are we going? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Where are you going?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where are you hastening? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Where are you, my angel, where are you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where are you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where can we get it from? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Where can you have heard it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where could she be except at Fyodor Pavlovitch''s? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Where did this cart come from in such a hurry?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did you get the material, that is, the rag in which you sewed the money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did you put it afterwards? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where have you been? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where have you taken him away? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Where is she then, Prohor?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where is the patient? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where is yonder? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Where was he murdered? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where was he sending you just now? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Where was it, exactly?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where... is Zhutchka? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who are rogues? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who does like it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Who else? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who has made me a judge over them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is a_ chevalier_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is he? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Who is laughing at mankind, Ivan?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is stupid? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Who is the murderer then, according to you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is your witness? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is_ he_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who knows it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Who put that pillow under my head? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who the devil is there to ask in this imbecile place? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Who told you not to tell? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who will be murdered? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who writes such things for them? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Who''s there?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who''s this? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Who''s this?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Who? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whom do you mean-- Mitya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whom have you been beating now... or killing, perhaps? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whose then? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why I needed it?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are they crying? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why are we sitting here though, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you all silent? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you late, female? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you laughing? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why are you looking at me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you looking at the bullet? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you sad? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why are you so afraid of Mitya to- day?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you so uneasy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you surprised at me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you trying me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you weeping? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are your fits getting worse? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why ashamed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why ask him to come out? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why bring in the question of worth? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why did n''t you go away just now, after the''courteously kissing''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did n''t you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did you hold me, Alexey Fyodorovitch? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why did you reckon on me rather than any one else?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did you send for me to- day, Lise? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did you tell a lie, pretending we are thrashed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do I bring him in? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why do I whisper? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do evil? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t you go on? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t you go to Tchermashnya, sir? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you ask, and are frightened at my answer? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why do you keep pestering me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you look at me without speaking? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why do you look so glum? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you run after him? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why do you sigh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you weep? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why does he come here so often? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why have you been laughing at Alexey? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why have you hidden yourself here, out of sight? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why is it all over with me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is it all over with you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why is it he is smiling?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is it impossible? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why is it worth while speaking to a clever man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is such a man alive? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why look at it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not go for the pistols, bring them here, and here, in this dark dirty corner, make an end? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not talk? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why not, if I sometimes put on fleshly form? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why reckon the days? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why should He forbid?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should I be looking for you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why should I go to Tchermashnya?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should I play with you, when I put my whole trust in you, as in God Almighty? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should n''t I learn them so as to improve my education, supposing that I may myself chance to go some day to those happy parts of Europe? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should you be taken for an accomplice? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why unhappy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why were you in such pressing need for just that sum, three thousand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why wo n''t he talk to me? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why''fraud''?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why''nonsense''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, am I like him now, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, do you suspect him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, does he make a row? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, has he killed somebody else? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, how could you have sinned against all men, more than all? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why, is he afraid for me or for himself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, is n''t she a relation of yours? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why, the man''s drunk, dead drunk, and he''ll go on drinking now for a week; what''s the use of waiting here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, then you told a lie? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why, was it wrong of me to feel sure?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, what are you doing, what are you about? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why, who could have opened it if you did not open it yourselves?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, who taught you all this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, why could nothing better have happened? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, why, am I a murderer? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why, why, had he gone forth? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, you really are ill? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why,asked the boy,"is Christ with them too?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Why?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will my brother Dmitri soon be back? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you be so good then as to tell us how you came here and what you have done since you arrived? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you say what you mean at last? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you settle the little bill now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you shoot, sir, or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | With death? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | With such a hell in your heart and your head, how can you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 With this eight hundred you must have had about fifteen hundred at first?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Without scissors, in the street? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Wo n''t you have some lemonade? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Would n''t there have been? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you like three thousand? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Would you like to get married? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you like to go to the mines, Perhotin? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Would you like to look anywhere else if you''re not ashamed to?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you like to look at it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Would you mind sitting on the chair just as you sat on the wall then and showing us just how you moved your arm, and in what direction?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Write it down? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Yes, am I worth it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, and walked up and down the room an hour ago... Why have the candles burnt down so? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Yes, gentlemen, I was in want of it, and suddenly thousands turned up, eh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, that one... on your middle finger, with the little veins in it, what stone is that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, what must it be for Mitya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, what will Fetyukovitch say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, what would become of an ax there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, who can have killed him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, you do know... or how could you--? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Yes; is it a science?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yet you gave evidence against him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You again?... dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You apply them to us, and look upon us as socialists?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are at your saucy pranks again? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You are at your saucy pranks again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are in love with disorder? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are not laughing at me, now, Ivan? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are of the tradesman class? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are speaking of your love, Ivan? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are thirteen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are upset about something? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You did n''t? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You do n''t believe? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t feel afraid of water? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t know, but you see God? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You do n''t mean to say you really did not know?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t mean you would run away? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t remember? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You do n''t understand?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do that,_ panie_,said Mitya, recognizing with despair that all was over,"because you hope to make more out of Grushenka? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You feel penitent? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You force me to go to that damned Tchermashnya yourself, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You get whipped, I expect? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You got back to town? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You have some special communication to make?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You here, Alexey? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You love another woman, and I love another man, and yet I shall love you for ever, and you will love me; do you know that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You mean about Diderot? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You mean,''steal it''? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You pulled out the weapon and... and what happened then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You put that towel on your head? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You remember that? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You scream?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You see? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You speak of Father Zossima?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You still mean that Tchermashnya? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You think it''s something to do with you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You think so? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You think that every one is as great a coward as yourself?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You thought so? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You understand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You used to say yourself that everything was lawful, so now why are you so upset, too? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You wanted to help him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You will allow us to note that point and write it down; that you looked upon that money as your own property? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You will explain why you do n''t accept the world? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You will forgive me for having tormented you? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You wo n''t be angry?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t be naughty while I am gone? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You wrote a poem?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ll come again some time or other? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You''ll kill me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''re making fun of me, are n''t you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''re not joking? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 You''re still asking whether she has been here or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''re taking him, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You-- can see spirits? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You... are perhaps still unwell? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You... you mean Katerina Ivanovna? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Your Excellency, your Excellency... is it possible?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Your honor... sir, what are you doing? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 Your mother?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | _ And the mother of Jesus was there; And both Jesus was called, and his disciples, to the marriage._"Marriage? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 _ C''est du nouveau, n''est- ce pas?_ This time I''ll act honestly and explain to you. |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | _ Did_ it? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''And do you remember that clearly?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''And where did you get the linen?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''But what will become of men then?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''But, as it is, she will ask,''But where is the money?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Did n''t you know?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Do you know Sabaneyev?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Do you see that cart full of oats?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Do you see what I am like now?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Father,''he asked,''are the rich people stronger than any one else on earth?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Foolish one,''he said,''why weep? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''For with what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again,''or how does it go? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Grushenka,''he cried,''Grushenka, are you here?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Hast Thou the right to reveal to us one of the mysteries of that world from which Thou hast come?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''He sends his compliments,''and she''ll ask you,''What about the money?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Here she is; she''s in the bush, laughing at you, do n''t you see her?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''How can I endure this mercy? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''How did he seem then?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''How did you step? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''In that case,''I asked him,''why have you come to defend me?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Is it Thou? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Is that you, Boileau? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Judge Thyself who was right-- Thou or he who questioned Thee then? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Knowest thou not,''said the saint to her,''how bold these little ones are before the throne of God? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''No, you must go and deny, without denial there''s no criticism and what would a journal be without a column of criticism?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Of that bloodshed I am guilty, but who has killed my father, gentlemen, who has killed him? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Quite so,''I said,''can we ever do anything rational?'' dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Quite so,''some astute people will tell me,''but what if they were in agreement? dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 ''Sovereign,''I suppose? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''The oats are dropping out of the sack, and the goose has put its neck right under the wheel to gobble them up-- do you see?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Was it for my sake he begot me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Well, my boy,''said I,''how about our setting off on our travels?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Well, will you take it or not, are you so lost to shame?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Well,''said I,''if that cart were to move on a little, would it break the goose''s neck or not?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Well?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''What do you mean by Napravnik?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''What is it?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''What news?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''What sort of a cap?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''What''s going on in there now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''What''s the use of the envelope?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Where could he be if not with the Lord God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Where is she? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Where is she?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Where?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Who does n''t believe in the devil? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Who told you so?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Why are you keeping him?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Why has n''t she come? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Why is my favorite dog lame?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Why is the babe poor?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Why is the babe so poor?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Why, my daughter, have you fallen again already?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''Will you preach this in your reviews?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''You black sword,''said I,''who asked you to teach me?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''You fools and buffoons, can you ever do anything rational?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ''You''ll stand up and say it was I killed him, and why do you writhe with horror? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ( Do you like that stupid barking, Karamazov? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ("What if he should find out that I''ve only that one number of_ The Bell_ in father''s bookcase, and have n''t read any more of it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | --for all this business is a misfortune, is n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | --who says that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | ... and why is the cuff turned in?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | 8 Literally:"Did you get off with a long nose made at you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A Treatise On Smerdyakov"To begin with, what was the source of this suspicion?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A beetle?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A cigar, perhaps?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A piece of meat, have n''t you got any?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | A pound of what children are very fond of, what is it, what is it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | About my''wisp of tow,''then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | After Alexey, the man of God?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | After rubbing your back, I believe, you drank what was left in the bottle with a certain pious prayer, only known to your wife?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | After such an escapade how can I go to dinner, to gobble up the monastery''s sauces? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Again the walls are receding.... Who is getting up there from the great table? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ah, Alyosha, how do you know all this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alexey Fyodorovitch, have you come from him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | All at once a fellow, who is an errand- boy at Plotnikov''s now, looked at me and said,''What are you looking at the geese for?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | All because it was Karamazov, not Smerdyakov, he did n''t think, he did n''t reflect, and how should he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | All things are lawful then, they can do what they like?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Allow me to ask,"he turned again to Alyosha,"what has brought you to-- our retreat?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alone or with the assistance of the prisoner? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, Alyosha, what''s the matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, are you blushing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, are you listening, or are you asleep?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, darling, how did you escape from them, those women? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, darling, to- morrow-- what will happen to- morrow? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, do you believe I love you with all my soul?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, do you believe that I''m nothing but a buffoon?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, is it true that at Easter the Jews steal a child and kill it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, shall I call for some champagne? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, why am I not ashamed with you, not a bit? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, why do n''t you love me in the least?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Alyosha, why is it I do n''t respect you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I a monk, Lise? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I blind? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I for sale?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I going to eat him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I his nurse? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I my brother Dmitri''s keeper?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I not in heaven now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I so abject? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I to be dressed up like a fool... for your amusement?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I to become a peasant or a shepherd? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I to forgive him or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I to go on sitting here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I to understand that you only agreed with her from compassion for her invalid state, because you did n''t want to irritate her by contradiction?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I too late to reach the railway by seven, brothers?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I unjust, indeed, in saying that he is typical of many modern fathers? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I worth it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Am I worthy of it?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Among whom?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | An old woman, an old man.... Have you killed some one?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | An old woman?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And I answered them:"Why not, sometimes at least?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And I explained my comparison very reasonably, did n''t I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And I say to myself,''What if I''ve been believing all my life, and when I come to die there''s nothing but the burdocks growing on my grave?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And I soothed her, do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And I was so sorry for the boy then; I asked myself why should n''t I buy him a pound of... a pound of what? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And I''d only forty copecks; how could I take her away, what could I do? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And a more serious matter still, what is this letter she has written? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And accepting it would remain happy for ever?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And after all, what have I to do with Dmitri? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And again had he spent three thousand or fifteen hundred yesterday? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And all at once the whole truth in its full light appeared to me; what was I going to do? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And all dissolved in vodka?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And as God''s above, I suddenly thought, why go on in misery any longer, what is there to wait for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And as for rights-- who has not the right to wish?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And by the way, why did you do that-- why did you set apart that half, for what purpose, for what object did you do it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And can Katerina Ivanovna, with her intelligence, her morbid sensitiveness, have failed to understand that people would talk like that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And can the Lord of Heaven and earth tell a lie, even in one word?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And can you have made up your mind? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And couldst Thou believe for one moment that men, too, could face such a temptation? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And do you know I''m sorry to lose you, Alyosha; would you believe it, I''ve really grown fond of you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And do you know what that man has been to me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And do you suppose he''s going to give me money to help to bring that about when he''s crazy about her himself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And every one said something kind to me, they began trying to dissuade me, even to pity me:"What are you doing to yourself?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And for what, for whom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And have you heard the poem?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And he did actually refuse the money?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And he is an excellent, earnest young man, is n''t he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And he thinks that will be a satisfactory finish, does n''t he?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And he, luckless man, what could he give her now, what could he offer her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how are the other weak ones to blame, because they could not endure what the strong have endured? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how can you imagine a dog could be alive after swallowing a pin? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how could you get away from the dinner? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how did he know what had happened, since he had been lying unconscious till that moment? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how do you know it all beforehand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how do you know? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how has that Ivan won you all, so that you all worship him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how is it we went on then living, getting angry and not knowing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And how shall I, too, put up with the rabble out there, though they may be better than I, every one of them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if I challenge him and he kills me on the spot, what then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if he dismisses me, what can I earn then from any one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if she does go to the old man, can I marry her after that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if that is so, if they dare not forgive, what becomes of harmony? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if we were all to talk in rhyme, even though it were decreed by government, we should n''t say much, should we? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And if you come to that, does proving there''s a devil prove that there''s a God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And in fact, why did I set off for Tchermashnya then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And is it for me to conceal from Thee our mystery? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And is not the counsel for the defense too modest in asking only for the acquittal of the prisoner? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And is there only a shade? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And many here have given only an onion each-- only one little onion.... What are all our deeds? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And many more men come to try their luck, among them a soldier: The soldier came to try the girls: Would they love him, would they not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And no one else?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And on what did you step?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And remember, Misha, if you are called Misha-- His name is Misha, is n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And shall we be right or shall we be lying? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And she says she is a sister.... And is that the truth?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And so you must be calm, do you understand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And so, kiddies, can I go out? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And that fatal letter-- isn''t that simply drunken irritability, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And that''s consistent, for if you have no God what is the meaning of crime? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And that, of course, would mean the end of everything, even of magazines and newspapers, for who would take them in? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And the beauty of Katerina Ivanovna? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And the covering of the money-- the torn envelope on the floor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And the priceless message from Mokroe?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And then that ironical tone_ a la_ Heine, eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And then what do you think? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And there''s no knowing which will turn out the better.... Are you asleep?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And these women? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And those fellows with the brass plates on, why are they here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And to say to them: God bless you, go your way, pass on, while I--""While you--?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And was it to get money that the prisoner ran off, if you remember? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And were they far from a wedding, either? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And were you shamming all along, afterwards, and in the hospital?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what are these boys to him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what awaited him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what becomes of harmony, if there is hell? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what could Smerdyakov have told her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what difference does it make now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what do I care if I spend twenty years in the mines, breaking ore with a hammer? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what do they talk about in that momentary halt in the tavern? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what do we read almost daily? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what do you think? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what does this moment stand for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what does your second half mean?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what follows from this right of multiplication of desires? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what good is it all to us now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what harm has she done? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what have I, a penniless beggar, done for her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what have Russian boys been doing up till now, some of them, I mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what if Grushenka comes to- day-- if not to- day, to- morrow, or the next day?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what if Samsonov sent me here on purpose? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what if there is no_ must_ about it, even if he was there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what is my breath to them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what is suffering? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what is the use of Christ''s words, unless we set an example? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what is this message, may I ask, or is it a secret?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what made it come back to me now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what of Dmitri? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what proof have we that he had taken out the money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what sort of cards were you playing with just now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what use is it for me to hide anything from Thee? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what was he to wish for each of them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what will that lead to? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And what would our life be now together? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And where was it found? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who are the others?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who could open it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who has provided it all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who the devil''s to know who is Sabaneyev?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who will admit so much in these days? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who will believe you about freedom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who will believe you, and what single proof have you got?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who would punish him for that, considering that you ca n''t take two skins off one ox? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who wrote them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And who''s the better for it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why are you so completely persuaded of your brother''s innocence?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why can not I be a servant to my servant and even let him see it, and that without any pride on my part or any mistrust on his? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why did I want to do such a thing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why did she send for the doctor?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why dost Thou look silently and searchingly at me with Thy mild eyes? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why is n''t Mitya drinking? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why should I, when it all depends on Dmitri Fyodorovitch and his plans?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why the devil should I like him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why, on the contrary, does he force me to believe in money hidden in a crevice, in the dungeons of the castle of Udolpho? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And will people recognize it, will they appreciate it, will they respect it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And with which of them was Alyosha to sympathize? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And without Grusha what should I do there underground with a hammer? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And would you have us not come here to disturb you, not fly here to thank you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And yet he is a learned man, would you believe it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And yet-- happiness, happiness-- where is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you''ve got Perezvon with you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And you''ve really not succeeded in finding that dog? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And"Would you believe it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And, after all, what does it matter whether it has a ceiling or has n''t? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And, how could I tell her myself?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | And, indeed, was it to make wine abundant at poor weddings He had come down to earth? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Angry again? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Another idea, too, forced itself upon him:"What if she loved neither of them-- neither Ivan nor Dmitri?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Answer: why have we met here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Answered in the affirmative?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Answered whom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Anyway, what does that vision mean?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are n''t we making a mistake? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are n''t you ashamed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are n''t you lying?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are the peasants here worth such kindness, Dmitri Fyodorovitch, or the girls either? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are they playing cards?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are we jackals thirsting for human blood? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are we late? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are we to leave it all to the Jews? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you a human being?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you afraid of me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you angry with some one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you at the door? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you fond of children, Alyosha? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you going to flog me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you in the service here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you jealous of him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you laughing at me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you out of your mind?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you raving?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you referring to what I said just now-- that one reptile will devour the other? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you so hopeless, brother?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you so worried?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you still trying to throw it all on me, to my face? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are you thinking about it even? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Are your minds relieved?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Artistic, was n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | As for all this shouting in taverns throughout the month, do n''t we often hear children, or drunkards coming out of taverns shout,''I''ll kill you''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | As soon as my tongue runs away with me, you just say''the important thing?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Because I was so pleased? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Besides, he seems to be ill.""And do you suppose I''d thrash him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Besides, what motive had he for murdering the old man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Better Siberia than your love, for I love another woman and you got to know her too well to- day, so how can you forgive? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Bowing down to him-- what did it mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Brother Ivan--""What of brother Ivan?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Brother, what could be worse than that insult?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But I ask again, are there many like Thee? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But Thou wouldst not deprive man of freedom and didst reject the offer, thinking, what is that freedom worth, if obedience is bought with bread? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But after all, what is goodness? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But before we proceed to listen to your communication, will you allow me to inquire as to another little fact of great interest to us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But could I endure such a life for long?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But did he do it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But did he murder him after all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But did he murder him without robbery, did he murder him at all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But didst Thou not know that he would at last reject even Thy image and Thy truth, if he is weighed down with the fearful burden of free choice? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But do you know, I should like to reap, cut the rye? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But does it matter to us after all whether it was a mistake of identity or a wild fantasy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But dost Thou know what will be to- morrow? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But he asked me,''Why, have you tickled her?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But he did not see the good side, what do you think? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But he had time to whisper to me:"Do you remember how I came back to you that second time, at midnight? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But he was thinking at that moment of one thing only-- where was_ she_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how am I to say what I want so much to tell you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how can we carry out such a cure in our mansion, without servants, without help, without a bath, and without water? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how could I tell it would turn out like that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how could he be left without him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how could he love those new ones when those first children are no more, when he has lost them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how could he, how could he not have thought of him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how did he get the billion years to do it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how do you explain this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how is it that he has decided that you shall spend some time in the world? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how shall I describe the state the ladies were in? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But how? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But if parricide is a prejudice, and if every child is to ask his father why he is to love him, what will become of us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But if there is n''t a God at all, what do they deserve, your fathers? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But in my soul I have a profound contempt for the classics and all that fraud.... You do n''t agree, Karamazov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But in that case what was Ivan''s position? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But in what sense?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But is the mere fact that that scrap of paper was lying on the floor a proof that there was money in it, and that that money had been stolen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But morally he owes me something, does n''t he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But now Smerdyakov''s dead, he has hanged himself, and who''ll believe you alone? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But now he, too, was angry:"One loves people for some reason, but what have either of you done for me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But now let me ask you: did Ilusha hurt your finger much? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But now-- do you know Katerina Ivanovna is here now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But perhaps you think that I am saying all this on purpose to annoy you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But remember that they were only some thousands; and what of the rest? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But seest Thou these stones in this parched and barren wilderness? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But she? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But still I''m not a thief? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But tell me, have you read Pushkin--_Onyegin_, for instance?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But the question is: is it true that they were entrusted to him in such an insulting and degrading way as was proclaimed just now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But the question,"Who had founded Troy?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But then there are the children, and what am I to do about them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But there''s wit in that elder, do n''t you think, Ivan?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But this belief filled his heart with terror, for how could he carry it out? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But wait, had n''t I better come with you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what about me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what am I saying to him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what becomes of our hymn from underground? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what could he understand even in this"laceration"? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what do I care for avenging them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what do you think happened? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what do you want with four dozen of champagne? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what for, with what object? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what happened? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what if the thing happened quite differently? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what if there were something of the sort, a feeling of religious awe, if not of filial respect? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what information can I give? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what is there to wonder at, what is there so peculiarly horrifying in it for us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what is this defense if not one romance on the top of another? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what shall we do, what must we do now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what was awaiting the luckless man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what''s that sentimentality you''ve got up there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what''s the good of my galloping over, if it''s all a notion of the priest''s? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what''s the matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what''s the matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But what, what if the old man''s alive? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But when she had finished, he suddenly cried in a sobbing voice:"Katya, why have you ruined me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But when, when had he seen it for the last time, I ask you that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But where can he have got three thousand?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But who are these witnesses? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But who can reproach her, who can boast of her favor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But who has killed my father, who has killed him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But who is this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But whose fault is that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why am I talking about those two? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why are we standing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why are you so worried about my going away? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why could n''t he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why do you ask? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why do you ask?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why do you give it to me, if you committed the murder for the sake of it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But why should I have wanted it; what grounds had I for wanting it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But with what? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But would you like some? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But you are a little pig like Fyodor Pavlovitch, and what do you want with virtue? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But you said that it''s a month since you... obtained it?..." |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, damn him, is he worth talking about so much?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, do you know, there''s a damnable question involved in it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, excuse me, who can have told you all this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, gentlemen of the jury, why may I not draw the very opposite conclusion? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, goodness, what shall I do with your eyes? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, hang it, what does it matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, if it were on purpose, the question arises at once, what was his motive? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, of course, if they do n''t ask, why should we worry them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, on the other hand, my conscience? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | But, stay; did n''t I tell you this morning to come home with your mattress and pillow and all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | By her house? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | By the way, how is she now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | By the way, your brother Ivan set off to Moscow this morning, did you know?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | By their being avenged? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | By what miracle could they have disappeared, since it''s proved the prisoner went nowhere else? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | By what will you escape it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ca n''t we? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ca n''t we?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ca n''t you go away?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ca n''t you see it all over his face that he is a fool, that peasant, eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ca n''t you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Call them in, too, that were locked in.... Why did you lock them in? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Came here to forgive me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can a Russian peasant be said to feel, in comparison with an educated man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can he, can he do what Thou didst? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can it be right to confess aloud? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can it be that I am afraid of death, afraid of being killed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can that be?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can there be a sin which could exceed the love of God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can they condemn him in place of the valet and will no one stand up for him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can they have been written by men?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you explain that to us?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you really have thought about me, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you spin tops?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you suppose that I would conceal it from you, if I had really killed my father, that I would shuffle, lie, and hide myself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you tell me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you understand that one might kill oneself from delight? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you understand that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you, Father?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you, dear sir, grant me this favor?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Can you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Canst Thou have simply come to the elect and for the elect? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Catching his eye, she laughed so that the elder could not help saying,"Why do you make fun of him like that, naughty girl?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Chemist or what?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Come answer, answer, I insist: what was it... what could I have done to put such a degrading suspicion into your mean soul?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Come with me, wo n''t you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Come, will you go?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Confess... have you seen him, have you seen him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Consider yourself, who ever talks in rhyme? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Consider, how have we heard of that sum, and who has seen the notes? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Conversations And Exhortations Of Father Zossima_( e) The Russian Monk and his possible Significance_ Fathers and teachers, what is the monk? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Could a Karamazov fail to understand it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Could any one think of it all in such a desperate hurry? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Could he, had he been plotting the murder, have desired to attract the attention of the household by having a fit just before? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Could n''t you tell him this is Zhutchka, and he might believe you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Could the old man have been laughing at me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Could two different people have the same dream?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Cure me of what?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | D''you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | D''you want to split your throat?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did I know? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did I let any one count it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did I love him or only my own anger? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did I want it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did I want the murder? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did any one love him ever so little in his childhood? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did any one train him to be reasonable? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he bite your finger?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he despise me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he despise me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he do this simply to betray himself, or to invite to the same enterprise one who would be anxious to get that envelope for himself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he indirectly?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he laugh at me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he not insinuate the same idea at the inquiry and suggest it to the talented prosecutor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he not tell you anything about money-- about three thousand roubles?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he say,''Do n''t tell him''?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did he tell me the truth or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did his conscience lead him to suicide and not to avowing his guilt? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did n''t you know that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did n''t you know? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did n''t you know?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did n''t you know?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did n''t you promise some one yesterday to see them to- day?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did she really give you three thousand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did she really?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did she send for you or did you come of yourself?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did the prisoner take the envelope from under the pillow, did he find the money, did that money exist indeed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did they go and each lay a brick, do you suppose?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did they really take you to the court?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you ever hear, most Holy Father, how Diderot went to see the Metropolitan Platon, in the time of the Empress Catherine? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you hear her cry,''I''ll go to death with you''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you hope to restore him to consciousness?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you kill him alone? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you know that I loved your face? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you know that secret? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you laugh at me very much?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you notice, Alexey Fyodorovitch, how young, how young Ivan Fyodorovitch was just now when he went out, when he said all that and went out? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you pick up your cassock and run? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you really mean to shoot yourself to- morrow, you stupid? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you really want to?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you talk to him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Did you tell him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Didst Thou forget that man prefers peace, and even death, to freedom of choice in the knowledge of good and evil? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Didst Thou not often say then,"I will make you free"? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Dmitri has asked you to go to her and say that he-- well, in fact-- takes his leave of her?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do I annoy you by my vivacity?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do I see you again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do I understand what I want? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t I do it myself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t I know to Whom I am speaking? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t I see? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you know it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you know that he''s mad? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you know that this is the greatest of his days? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you really know him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you remember any other ingredient?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you see what a lot she thinks of Ivan, how she respects him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you think so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you trust me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you want money?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do n''t you want to write it down?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do they let convicts get married? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do they let convicts marry? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you approve?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you believe I did it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you forgive me or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you forgive me, Mitya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear that phrase uttered with such premature haste--''if not I''--the animal cunning, the naivete, the Karamazov impatience of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear this, Porfiry?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear, do you hear that majestic voice from the past century of our glorious history? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you hear?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you imagine I am jealous of Dmitri, that I''ve been trying to steal his beautiful Katerina Ivanovna for the last three months? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know Kalganov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know Madame Hohlakov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know her?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know the meaning of despair, Alexey?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know what we were quarreling about then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know what would be the best thing to do?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know, Alyosha, I promised him champagne on the top of everything, if he''d bring you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know, Ivan, I ca n''t resist the way he looks one straight in the face and laughs? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know, gentlemen, you''re both afraid now''what if he wo n''t tell us where he got it?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you know, you are not at all well this evening? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you like it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you love me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you love me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you mean absolutely no one?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember Hamlet? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember about the troika? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember that precisely? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember the chariot?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you remember?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you see now, Alyosha, what a violent, vindictive creature I am? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you see our Sun, do you see Him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you see? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you still feel the pain?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose I am afraid of you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose I could have managed without it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose I do n''t see that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose I like all this business, and in your company, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose I understand it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose that the peasants do n''t understand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you suppose the hero had gained his end? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you think I always lie and play the fool like this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you think I am boasting?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you think I do n''t mind-- that I do n''t mind still? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you think I''m a vulgar fool?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you think she kissed Grushenka''s hand first, on purpose, with a motive? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand anything of my tirade, Alyosha?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand that, friend and brother, you pious and humble novice? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand what I want from you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand why this infamy must be and is permitted? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you understand?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Do you, do you in yourself, believe it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does He look at him and not say a word?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does he exist?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does he know or does n''t he?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does he think I ca n''t? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does it want warming? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does she really deserve it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does that fit in at all with the character we have analyzed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Does the spirit of God move above that force? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Dost Thou not believe that it''s over for good? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Driven out the seven devils, eh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Eh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Everything is lawful, is that it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Father monks, why do you fast? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Fenya, is it that little girl they''ve sent? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Finally, he had asked the patients as soon as he saw them,"Well, who has been cramming you with nostrums? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For how can a man shake off his habits? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For the last time, once for all, is there a God or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For what am I on earth but a poor relation? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For what are we aiming at now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For what purpose exactly did you hide it, what did you mean to do with that fifteen hundred? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For what would have happened, I reflected, what would have happened after my hosannah? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For who can rule men if not he who holds their conscience and their bread in his hands? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | For whom is man going to love then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Forgive my foolish words...""What are you afraid of?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | From the hall they could hear Grushenka leap up from the sofa and cry out in a frightened voice,"Who''s there?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | From whom could you find out? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | From whom did you first hear it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | From whom do you think? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Gentlemen of the jury, I put this question to you in earnest; when was the moment when Smerdyakov could have committed his crime? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Gentlemen of the jury, what is a father-- a real father? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Gentlemen, are you laughing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Gentlemen, may I stay with you till morning? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Give it her back, take it from me.... Why make a fuss? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Go to her, Alyosha, ask her not to speak of that in the court, ca n''t you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Good heavens, why did you stand there saying nothing about it all this time? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Grushenka with her?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Had we better come back here to- night? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Had you forgotten? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Has he been to see him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Has it not lasted nineteen centuries, is it not still a living, a moving power in the individual soul and in the masses of people? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Has it reformed me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Has no one, absolutely no one, heard from you of that money you sewed up? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Has some one suggested your going to America already?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Has the young lady, Katerina Ivanovna, been with you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have I entered into some sort of compact with you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have n''t you a bit of meat? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have n''t you less?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have not we the right to assume that a revengeful woman might have exaggerated much? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have the Karamazovs been making trouble again? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have they a foundry there of some sort? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have they been ill- treating you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have they money?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you any idea of horse- breeding, Dmitri Fyodorovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you any water? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you asked him where it was? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you been beating that captain again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you been fighting with some one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you been home and seen your brother?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you broken with him completely? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you brought your mattress? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you ever felt, have you ever dreamt of falling down a precipice into a pit? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you ever seen von Sohn?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you found a gold- mine?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you had a fall? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you had anything to eat to- day?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you heard about Father Zossima?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you really?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you seen Dmitri to- day?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you stolen something?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Have you thought of it or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He abuses me, I suppose, abuses me dreadfully?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He asked immediately:"Is the master murdered?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He asks me to spare-- whom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He began, even in the first month of his marriage, to be continually fretted by the thought,"My wife loves me-- but what if she knew?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He carried off these two letters-- what for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He could n''t have been thrashed then, he could n''t, could he?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He did no one any harm, but"Why do they think him so saintly?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He had just gone down- stairs, but seeing you I made him come back; do you remember? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He had meant to say,"Can you have come to this?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He had rushed in like a fool, and meddled in what? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He has agreed already: do you suppose he would give up that creature? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He has risen from the dead, has n''t he, von Sohn?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He here, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He is isolated, and what concern has he with the rest of humanity? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He is rebelling against his God and ready to eat sausage....""How so?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He is uncontrolled, he is wild and unruly-- we are trying him now for that-- but who is responsible for his life? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He kept repeating to himself:"How was it I forgot? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He lay ill; I thought looking at him, if he were to get well, if he were to get up again, what then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He looked about him and said,''Why not go and kill the master?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He looked at me quite stupidly,''And what does the goose think about?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He loved them both, but what could he desire for each in the midst of these conflicting interests? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He murdered him and I incited him to do it... Who does n''t desire his father''s death?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He offered you money for me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He remembered you lovingly, with anxiety; do you understand how he honored you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He says,''Why live in real life? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He simply pounced on me:"Master dear, is it you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He stepped close to him, held out his hand, and almost overwhelmed, he said:"Well, old man... how are you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He stood still and suddenly wondered,"Why am I sad even to dejection?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He suddenly recalled how he had once in the past been asked,"Why do you hate so and so, so much?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He told me the year before last that his wife was dead and that he had married another, and would you believe it, there was not a word of truth in it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He trained one little boy to come up to his window and made great friends with him.... You do n''t know why I am telling you all this, Alyosha? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He was standing up and was speaking, but where was his mind? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He would certainly have to keep watch to- day, but where? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He''s alive?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He''s awfully low, but it''s natural to him, eh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He''s got something to grieve over, but what''s the matter with you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | He''s the same sort of shaggy dog.... You allow me to call in my dog, madam?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Here Fyodor Pavlovitch will get up directly and begin worrying me every minute,''Has she come? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Here are the guests, here are the young couple sitting, and the merry crowd and... Where is the wise governor of the feast? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Here or at Samsonov''s gate? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Here we are face to face; what''s the use of going on keeping up a farce to each other? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Here, put it here, why waste it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Herzenstube? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Him or myself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | His acquaintance with Fyodor Pavlovitch was of the slightest, and what if, after he had been knocking, they opened to him, and nothing had happened? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | His left eye winked and he grinned as if to say,"Where are you going? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How am I to get away from here now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How are you going to atone for them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How are you, von Sohn?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How are you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How are you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can I convince myself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can I endure so much love? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can I help adoring her, how can I help crying out and rushing to her as I did just now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can I prove it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can I tell?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can a clumsy, ugly brute like me, with my ugly face, deserve such love, that she is ready to go to exile with me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can he go into the house when you say that the house is hateful to you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can it be contempt when we are all like him, when we are all just the same as he is? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can such a one fight? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can such a prisoner be acquitted? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can we blame children if they measure us according to our measure? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can you be so sure you are going to have a fit, confound you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can you break off the engagement if she, your betrothed, does n''t want to?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can you confirm your statement... if indeed you are not delirious?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can you speak so confidently?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How can you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could I dare to keep it back from him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could I have forgotten it till now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could I have forgotten it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could I help drawing my conclusions?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could he have helped soiling with his blood- stained hands the fine and spotless linen with which the bed had been purposely made? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could he help telling him, indeed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could he live without seeing and hearing him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could he understand indeed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could it be? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could one catch the thief when he was flinging his money away all the time? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could she have been proud? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could the prisoner have found the notes without disturbing the bed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could you do such a thing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could you guess it either, sir?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could you know beforehand of the cellar?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could you tell that you would fall down the cellar stairs in a fit, if you did n''t sham a fit on purpose?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How could you understand it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How dare he not know me after all that has happened? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How dare you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How dared you tell him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How did I know that Smerdyakov had hanged himself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How did she say it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How did you do it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How did you find out? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How did you manage to get here so quick? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you keep the fasts?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How do you know that_ he_ visits me?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How does it follow that because he was there he committed the murder? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How does it go? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How has he shown it, that you make such a fuss about it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How have I wronged you, tell me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How have you come to be an angel? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is it I have n''t met you before? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is it better? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is it possible to pray for the peace of a living soul? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is it that I do n''t deserve the same?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is it you do n''t understand that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is it you''ve gone so deep into everything?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is she?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is the weak soul to blame that it is unable to receive such terrible gifts? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How is your elder?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How shall I speak, how shall I speak? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How shall it be decided? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How should the rich know? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How then can I look upon the pestle as a proof of premeditation? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How then could my soul beget a flunkey like you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How was he murdered? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How was it Fenya let you in? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How was it he never thought that he was covered with blood and would be at once detected? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How was it you told me the day and the hour beforehand, and about the cellar, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How was this, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How will you explain that now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How will you live all your life, if you do n''t make up your mind to do it now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How will you live, how will you love them?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How would it be if you were to help me make friends with her?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How''s that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How''s that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How, and with what? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How, how is one to prove it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How-- how can I get back my faith? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | How?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Hungering and thirsting for you in every cranny of my soul and even in my ribs? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I adopt all your habits here: I''ve grown fond of going to the public baths, would you believe it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I am a young man... and who can be responsible for every one he meets?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I am alone in the world, and if I die, what will become of all of them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I ask you is such a man free? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I ask you why your Jesuits and Inquisitors have united simply for vile material gain? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I ask you, gentlemen, would Smerdyakov have behaved in that way? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I asked him,''without God and immortal life? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I beat them, but they adore me, do you know, Karamazov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I began saving money, I became hard- hearted, grew stout-- grew wiser, would you say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I believe absolutely that my brother is innocent, and if he did n''t commit the murder, then--""Then Smerdyakov? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I believe you are laughing, Karamazov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I call God to witness whose was the dishonesty and by whose commands I acted, was n''t it by her own and Fyodor Pavlovitch''s? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I came here seeking my ruin, and said to myself,''What does it matter?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I did n''t come for nothing.... Why, why is everything so stupid?..." |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I do n''t know what the punishment is-- but it will be without loss of the rights of my rank, without loss of my rank, wo n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I gave my promise, and here--""What?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I had heard it, and do you know who told it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I have been to you before-- or have you forgotten? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I imagine something every day.... What did she say to you about me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I know him, but what do you make of him-- a mountebank, a buffoon?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I know you are called Kolya, but what else?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I know you have a lot of anxiety and trouble, but I see you have some special grief besides, some secret one, perhaps?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I know you went yesterday to that doctor... well, what about your health? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I love driving in the snow... and must have bells.... Do you hear, there''s a bell ringing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I love golden- haired Phoebus and his warm light.... Dear Pyotr Ilyitch, do you know how to step aside?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I loved cruelty; am I not a bug, am I not a noxious insect? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I made it myself... not while I was pulling the captain''s beard, though....""Why do you bring him in all of a sudden?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I mean, persuade him to take it.... Or, rather, what do I mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I remember how, immediately after it had been read, the President asked Mitya in a loud impressive voice:"Prisoner, do you plead guilty?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I said;"do you feel ill?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I sat down and began thinking, where''s he run off to now like a madman? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I say, Alyosha, you have surprised me, do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I seem to be on the right path, do n''t I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I shall be asked: Then why did he talk about it in taverns? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I should dreadfully like to set fire to the house, Alyosha, to our house; you still do n''t believe me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I shut my eyes and ask myself,''Would you persevere long on that path? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I snatched up that iron paper- weight from his table; do you remember, weighing about three pounds? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I suppose you still regard that security as of value?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I suppose you were n''t married in Poland, were you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I took it for a joke... meaning to give it back later....""Then you did take-- But you have not given it back yet... or have you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I want to play to- day, good people, and what of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I wanted to prove what he was, and what happened? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I was a silly slip of a girl; I used to sit here sobbing; I used to lie awake all night, thinking:''Where is he now, the man who wronged me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I whispered to him,''Why, she''s there, there, under the window; how is it you do n''t see her?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I would have sent Alyosha, but what use is Alyosha in a thing like that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I wrapped it round my head and threw it down here... How is it it''s dry? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''ll love you in Siberia....""Why Siberia? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''ll marry you, and you shall become a peasant, a real peasant; we''ll keep a colt, shall we? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''ll mend it, where have you put it away?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''m struck all of a heap myself, for who can have murdered him, if not I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''m very good.... Come, why am I so good?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''ve been grieving over her all night as I sat with you.... Ca n''t you, wo n''t you tell me what you are going to do with her now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | I''ve never drunk with you, have I?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If I curse you, what then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If I die, who will care for them, and while I live who but they will care for a wretch like me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If I had been planning such a murder could I have been such a fool as to give such evidence against myself beforehand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If I respected you, I should n''t talk to you without shame, should I?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If I take it, I sha n''t be behaving like a scoundrel? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If Smerdyakov killed him, how did he do it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If all must suffer to pay for the eternal harmony, what have children to do with it, tell me, please? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If even you are a sensualist at heart, what of your brother, Ivan? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If he felt like that, what chance was there of peace? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If he had really been a guilty accomplice, would he so readily have made this statement at the inquiry? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If he murdered him, he murdered him, and what''s the meaning of his murdering him without having murdered him-- who can make head or tail of this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If he only opened the door to you, how could Grigory have seen it open before? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If he ran away without murdering him, who did murder him?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If it were not so, indeed, why should Ivan Fyodorovitch have kept silence till now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If not I, who can it be, who? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If she were to say to him:"I''m yours; take me away,"how could he take her away? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If you tell me, I''ll get off?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | If you wo n''t, I am glad to see you...""Me, me frighten you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In The Dark Where was he running? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In a tearful, faltering, sobbing voice he cried:"What should I say to my boy if I took money from you for our shame?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In a third group:"What lady is that, the fat one, with the lorgnette, sitting at the end?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In another group I heard:"He had no business to make a thrust at the Petersburg man like that;''appealing to your sensibilities''--do you remember?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In deciding so certainly that he will take the money?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In silence, alone with his conscience, he asks himself perhaps,''What is honor, and is n''t the condemnation of bloodshed a prejudice?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In that case let me ask you, do you think me like Dmitri capable of shedding AEsop''s blood, murdering him, eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In the blue room?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In the tavern again, as before? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In two words, do you hear?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In what form?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In what way did it assist him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In what way is he like von Sohn? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | In your eyes, Alexey Fyodorovitch, I sha n''t be a scoundrel? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Iron hooks? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is Sylvester well?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is he fit to be married after that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is he the murderer?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it because I am base? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it because I am going to shed blood? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it cold? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it conceivable?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it credible? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it for a monk of strict rule to drink tea?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it for me to defend you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it from love of life? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it likely-- a pig like that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it not relative? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it our cynicism, is it the premature exhaustion of intellect and imagination in a society that is sinking into decay, in spite of its youth? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it positively, actually true that there is no one else at all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it possible you were n''t the least afraid, lying there under the train? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it possible? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it really you I see?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it that our moral principles are shattered to their foundations, or is it, perhaps, a complete lack of such principles among us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it the parting with Alyosha and the conversation I had with him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it the same in the present case? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it to save my spending money on the fare, or to save my going so far out of my way, that you insist on Tchermashnya?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it true that you mean to leave the monastery?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it true, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it worth it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is it you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t every one constantly being or seeming ridiculous? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t it funny?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t it so?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t mamma listening?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t that rather good? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t that so?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t that, too, a romance?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is n''t this supposition really too fantastic and too romantic? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is not it simply a dream of ours?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is not that tragic? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is not this a flight of fancy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is she laughing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is she... that sort of woman?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is such a thing possible and with such a betrothed, and before the eyes of all the world? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that Father Paissy''s teaching?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that a pun, eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that all the proof you have?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that betrothed of his, Katerina Ivanovna, whom he has kept so carefully hidden from me all this time, going to marry him or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that clear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that enough for you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that likely? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that logical? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that proved? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that really necessary?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that right to your thinking, is that right?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that so or not, Grigory Vassilyevitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that so or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that the way to understand it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that true or not, honored Father?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that what you say?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that your idea?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is that your little girl?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is there any justice to be had in Russia?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is there anything you want?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is there beauty in Sodom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is there in the whole world a being who would have the right to forgive and could forgive? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is there room for my humility beside your pride? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is there?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Is this the way to bring them together?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It seemed strange to Alyosha that he asked so confidently and precisely, about one of his brothers only-- but which one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It was about nine o''clock when Marfa Ignatyevna came in with her usual inquiry,"Where will your honor take your tea, in your own room or downstairs?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It was dull before, so what could they do to make things duller? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It was for spite I drove the old man out of his mind.... Do you remember how you drank at my house one day and broke the wine- glass? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It was senseless enough before, so what could they do to make it more senseless? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It would n''t take much to do for AEsop, would it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It would take a billion years to walk it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It''s a feature of the Karamazovs, it''s true, that thirst for life regardless of everything; you have it no doubt too, but why is it base? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It''s a lesson to me.... She is more loving than we.... Have you heard her speak before of what she has just told us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It''s not seemly-- is that it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It''s not them he''s afraid of-- could you be frightened of any one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It''s only you I can believe; was she here just now, or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | It''s true, is n''t it, Alyosha? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ivan cried, his face working with anger,"why are you always in such a funk for your life? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ivan is not going to Tchermashnya-- why is that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ivan, do you love Alyosha?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Ivan, speak, is there a God or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Just as we are doing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Just look at her; is she an American? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Just think of him married, would n''t it be funny, would n''t it be awful?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Kalganov instantly opened his eyes, looked at her, stood up, and with the most anxious air inquired where was Maximov? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Karamazov, if I am not keeping you, one question before you go in?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Karamazov, tell me, am I very ridiculous now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Karamazov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Keep it up as long as you like....""What''s the matter with him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Knowest Thou that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Kolya did indeed ask him the question,"Who founded Troy?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Let the son stand before his father and ask him,''Father, tell me, why must I love you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Let us go in, though, and, by the way, what is your name? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Lise, do you want anything now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Listen, Alexey Fyodorovitch, why have you been so sad lately-- both yesterday and to- day? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Listen, what is an aberration?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Live, my joy.... You loved me for an hour, remember Mityenka Karamazov so for ever.... She always used to call me Mityenka, do you remember?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Look at the worldly and all who set themselves up above the people of God, has not God''s image and His truth been distorted in them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Look, everybody, look, Ilusha, look, old man; why are n''t you looking? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Lost two hundred already? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Man was created a rebel; and how can rebels be happy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | May I trouble you now to explain why you jumped down, with what object, and what you had in view?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Misha, come here, my boy, drink this glass to Phoebus, the golden- haired, of to- morrow morn....""What are you giving it him for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Mitya faltered at last, and at the same moment turning to Alyosha, his face working with joy, he cried,"Do you hear what I am asking, do you hear?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Mitya persisted stupidly,"why are its little arms bare? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Mitya, Mitya, how could I be such a fool as to think I could love any one after you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Mitya, my falcon, why do n''t you kiss me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Mitya, why do n''t they come? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Must I take Ilusha from school and send him to beg in the streets? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Must n''t other people talk because you''re bored?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Must one despair?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | My God, calm my heart: what is it I want? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | My angel, tell me the truth, was she here just now or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | My dear ones, why do we quarrel, try to outshine each other and keep grudges against each other? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Need I confess, need I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Nikolay Ilyitch, how is it I ca n''t please you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | No news?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | No, it''s not right-- it''s dishonest and cowardly, I''m a beast, with no more self- control than a beast, that''s so, is n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | No, wait a minute.... Are you thinking of putting that bullet in your brain, perhaps?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Not suitable in my position?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Not the same man this time, how long is this going on? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Nothing will happen to you; ca n''t you believe that at last? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now answer one more question: are the gypsies here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now can it be so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now for the second thing, but first a question: does the pain prevent you talking about utterly unimportant things, but talking sensibly?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now rub your face; here, on your temples, by your ear.... Will you go in that shirt? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now tell me, what have I done to you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now they are without food and their case is hopeless?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now what do you think you''re going to her to- day to say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Now, have I insulted you dreadfully?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Of old, leaders of the people came from among us, and why should they not again? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Of the Emperor Napoleon? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Of the murderer? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Of whom are you talking, brother?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Of whom are you talking?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Oh, God, what have I done?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Oh, dear, what have I done? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Oh, gentlemen, is n''t it too base of you to say that to my face? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Oh, of course, Thou didst proudly and well, like God; but the weak, unruly race of men, are they gods? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Oh, you stinking Jesuit, who taught you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | One has to take an oath, has n''t one?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | One must be agreeable, must n''t one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Only how is he going to be good without God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Only those who have got no conscience, for how can they be tortured by conscience when they have none? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Only till morning, for the last time, in this same room?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Or do you, too, consider that to escape would be dishonorable, cowardly, or something... unchristian, perhaps?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Or have they, perhaps, been beaten? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Or is n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Or what are we coming to?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Out of a purse, eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | People laugh and ask:"When will that time come and does it look like coming?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | People talk, why hinder them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps I shall be purified, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps I shall see him and say:''Have you ever seen me look like this before?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps I was only dreaming then and did n''t see you really at all--""And why were you so surly with Alyosha just now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps a tumbler and a half?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps he had simply struck himself with his fist on the breast?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps such foresight at such a moment may strike you as unnatural? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps that''s me, Yorick? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps that''s what you''re thinking at this moment? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps there is just something? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Perhaps you are wondering at my words, perhaps you do n''t believe me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Precocity"What do you think the doctor will say to him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Prosecutor, have you not invented a new personality? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Rakitin?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Remembering them, how could he be fully happy with those new ones, however dear the new ones might be? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Robbers and murderers have done that, but what sin have you committed yet, that you hold yourself more guilty than all?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Roubles? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Roughly speaking, a wine- glass or two?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Samsonov questioned the lad minutely: What he looked like? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall I ask you a riddle?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall I catch you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall I find you a wife?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall I run to him or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall I say, Mitya?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall I tell her to bring some? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall we be happy, shall we?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall we be very late, Andrey?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall we get the carriage out?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Shall we go over and have a look at it, eh? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | She almost shrieked, and interrupted him in a fury:"How much longer am I to be worried by that awful man?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | She began speaking quickly and nervously in a warm and resentful voice:"Why has he forgotten everything, then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | She gave birth to them, indeed; but was she a mother to them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | She thought she could bewitch Grushenka if she liked, and she believed it herself: she plays a part to herself, and whose fault is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | She whispered to me suddenly as I was coming away,''Why did n''t you come before?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Should I dare to defend you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Sit down, Mitya, what are you talking about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So I knew it was all over for me.... And behind me disgrace, and that blood-- Grigory''s.... What had I to live for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So I went down into the cellar thinking,''Here, it''ll come on directly, it''ll strike me down directly, shall I fall?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So how could I tell?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So she ought to be flogged on a scaffold? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So she ran home? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So that one might well wonder, as I did as soon as I had looked at them,"what men like that could possibly make of such a case?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So that''s where you want to be, my gentle boy?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So what am I to tell her, Dmitri Fyodorovitch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So what can one call it but a fraud?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So what have I done? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So why should I let them flay the skin off me as well, and to no good purpose? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you already believed him to have murdered his father?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you say there are a lot of them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you want to be a monk? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you wanted to give me up to him, did you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So you were glad I went away, since you praised me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | So, according to you, I had fixed on Dmitri to do it; I was reckoning on him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Some brandy?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Speak, all the same, is there a God, or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Splendid, was n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Stay, how does it go?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Stay, tell me, why did you want my consent, if you really took Tchermashnya for consent? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Stay, where did I break off? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Stealing straight out of a pocket? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely she need not be ruined with me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely that could have happened?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely that''s Russian, is n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely there is n''t four hundred roubles''worth here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely you are not such great friends?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely you do n''t suppose I am going straight off to the Jesuits, to join the men who are correcting His work? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Surely you do n''t... understand that already?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Take three thousand and go to the devil, and Vrublevsky with you-- d''you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me one thing, Alexey, what does that vision mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me the chief thing: What of her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me this at least, why did you open the envelope and leave it there on the floor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, did you think then that I desired father''s death or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, how is Katerina Ivanovna now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, how will he be tried? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, now, what do you suppose he''s always talking about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, tell me, Alyosha, did he despise me or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, when was she here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, why has Lise been in hysterics? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, will Father Zossima live till to- morrow, will he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, will you be here long? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, will you wait for me here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me, you were betrothed, you are betrothed still?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me,"she shook him by the hand and peeped into his face, smiling,"tell me, do I love that man or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Tell me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That I persuaded you to go to Tchermashnya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That I''d take my Ilusha and thrash him before you for your satisfaction? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That anxiety was just what he was suffering from-- what is there improbable in his laying aside that money and concealing it in case of emergency? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That hosannah in the skies really was n''t bad, was it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That is my view of the monk, and is it false? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That may be so, but answer me one question: what motive had he for such a counterfeit? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That must be done in your presence and therefore--""Should n''t we have some tea first?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That scream drives me... How can I help it when you put the lint in another place? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That was it, was n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s a lie....""How dare you defend me to him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s all right... but where am I to put this?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s all very charming; but if you want to swindle why do you want a moral sanction for doing it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s awful rot, is n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s enough, is n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s how it must have been, what other reason could he have had for throwing it so far? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s how the Jesuits talk, is n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s it, is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s no offense to you, gentlemen, is it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s right, is n''t it, von Sohn? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s right, is n''t it, von Sohn? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s so, is n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s the Russian faith all over, is n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s what it comes to, is n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s what your eyes have been meaning for these three months, have n''t they?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | That''s why I needed your consent, so that you could n''t have cornered me afterwards, for what proof could you have had? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The Lord God ca n''t surely take a Tatar and say he was a Christian? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The banker says,''_ Panie_ Podvysotsky, are you laying down the gold, or must we trust to your honor?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The elder, opening his weary eyes and looking intently at Alyosha, asked him suddenly:"Are your people expecting you, my son?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The existence of God, eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The formula,''all is lawful,''I wo n''t renounce-- will you renounce me for that, yes?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The gates of paradise? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The gold- mines?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The man sang again: What do I care for royal wealth If but my dear one be in health? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The prisoner was asked the question,''Where did you get the stuff for your little bag and who made it for you?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The question is what are my convictions, not what is my age, is n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The song ends with a merchant: The merchant came to try the girls: Would they love him, would they not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The stuffy workshop, the din of machinery, work all day long, the vile language and the drink, the drink-- is that what a little child''s heart needs? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The three thousand?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The very fact that she is a woman is half the battle... but how could you understand that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The world has proclaimed the reign of freedom, especially of late, but what do we see in this freedom of theirs? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | The youth involuntarily reflects:''But did he love me when he begot me?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then I wonder-- hooks? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then I''m not mistaken?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then a gypsy comes along and he, too, tries: The gypsy came to try the girls: Would they love him, would they not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then he must have gone out-- where? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then it was Dmitri after all who killed him; you only took the money?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then suddenly the whole court rang with exclamations:"What''s the meaning of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then what are we to do now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then why are you dressed up like that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then you did n''t quite know what you were doing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Then you had been out of town?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | There are plenty to pray for you; how should you be ill?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | There''s no harm in that, is there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | There''s not been such a banquet since the Superior entertained the Bishop and General Pahatov, do you remember? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | There''s something of Mephistopheles about him, or rather of''The hero of our time''... Arbenin, or what''s his name?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | They ca n''t agree on the price, maybe you''ve heard? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | They have n''t troubled the valet at all, have they?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Thou?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Though in what way is he better than I am? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Three dozen champagne-- what do you want all that for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To Father Paissy''s sorrowful question,"Are you too with those of little faith?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To ask her for money?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To ask me,''What do you believe, or do n''t you believe at all?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To be my natural self? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To be shot for the satisfaction of our moral feelings? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To be shot? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To come to you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To correspond?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To marry Grushenka? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To murder his master a second time and carry off the money that had already been stolen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To see the preference given-- to whom, to what? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To talk of my love for Katerina Ivanovna, of the old man and Dmitri? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To whom is he to go if he find you not together, his father and mother? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To whom will he be thankful? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | To whom will he sing the hymn? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | True, but what if he slandered him unconsciously? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Undress? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Vodka is going too far for you, I suppose... or would you like some?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Voltaire did n''t believe in God and loved mankind?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Von Sohn, what have you to stay for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Wait a bit, you shall soon get to bed.... What''s the time?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Wait a minute-- how did it go? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was I asleep? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was he enlightened by study? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was he going to make a row? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was he like this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was it a violent blow you gave him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was it he killed your father or was it the valet? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was it perhaps since he had known Katerina Ivanovna? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was it symbolic or what?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was it the miracle forced him to believe? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was it the same as then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was not one moment of her love worth all the rest of life, even in the agonies of disgrace? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was she furious?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was she not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was she?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was that a moment to show compassion? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was that what he said-- his own expression?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was this Thy freedom?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Was this what Thou didst? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We know the Jesuits, they are spoken ill of, but surely they are not what you describe? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We must work, do you hear? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We quarreled again, would you believe it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We shall laugh at it in the end, sha n''t we? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We were fearfully dull here.... You''ve come for a spree again, I suppose? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | We''re good and bad, good and bad.... Come, tell me, I''ve something to ask you: come here every one, and I''ll ask you: Why am I so good? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, I felt a centipede biting at my heart then-- a noxious insect, you understand? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, and who has united us in this kind, good feeling which we shall remember and intend to remember all our lives? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, damn it all, I ca n''t stay here to be their keeper, can I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, did you give him the money and how is that poor man getting on?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, now are you satisfied, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, only fancy, perhaps I too accept God,"laughed Ivan;"that''s a surprise for you, is n''t it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, shall I go on?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, what of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, what of that alternative? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, what then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, where now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well, write it; I consent, I give my full consent, gentlemen, only... do you see?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well-- what did he deserve? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well-- what then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Well?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Went away?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Were n''t you frightened?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Were there not, on the contrary, new grounds for hatred and hostility in their family? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Were we right teaching them this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Were you a cavalry officer?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Were you threatening me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What Sabaneyev?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What about the inheritance?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What am I beside her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What am I now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What am I saying? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What am I to do, what am I to do?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What am I to do? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What am I to do?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are seraphim? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are the causes of our indifference, our lukewarm attitude to such deeds, to such signs of the times, ominous of an unenviable future? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are these sins of mankind they take on themselves? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are we to believe, and what can we depend upon? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you going for now?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you looking for here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What are you to do? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can I tell about such things?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can be more precious than life? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can become of him if he is in such bondage to the habit of satisfying the innumerable desires he has created for himself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can he say after that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can men be after this?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What can one do in such a case? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What canst Thou say, indeed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What could you mean by it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did he mean by that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did he mean by that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did it mean, Alyosha, tell me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did it say?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did my client meet with when he arrived here, at his father''s house, and why depict my client as a heartless egoist and monster? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did she say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did she say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did the doctor say?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did you mean by that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did you say that for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What did you_ vonsohn_ there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do I care for a hell for oppressors? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do they do? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do we want an escort for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by''lite''?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by''not you''?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean by_ all_? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you mean?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you say to that, my fine Jesuit?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you say to that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you think of the gold- mines, Dmitri Fyodorovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you think we must do now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you think?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you think?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you think?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you want to know for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What do you want?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does Smerdyakov say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does Smerdyakov say? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does a man tell lies for sometimes?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does he mean by''I''m stepping aside, I''m punishing myself?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does he mean?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does he want here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does it matter if you do laugh and make jokes, and at me, too? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does it matter to me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does it mean?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What does money matter? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What dragon?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What else did I come for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What fool have you made friends with?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What foolery is this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What good can hell do, since those children have already been tortured? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What had I left to live for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What happened after I departed?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What has meanness to do with it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have I come for but to study all the customs here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have I done to you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have I to do with it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have I to do with you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have they got here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have you done to fascinate him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What have you got there, a great- coat, a fur coat? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if He does n''t exist? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if Rakitin''s right-- that it''s an idea made up by men? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if any one does show off a bit? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if he committed the murder and gets off unpunished? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if his master had taken the notes from under his bed and put them back in his cash- box without telling him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if she made up her mind to- day to go to Fyodor Pavlovitch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if she--? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if they murdered him together and shared the money-- what then?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if they wo n''t let her follow me to Siberia? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if they''re asleep?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if when I go home I feel sorry for him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if you''ve been weaving a romance, and about quite a different kind of man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What if, finally unhinged by the sudden news of the valet''s death, he imagined it really was so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is conscience? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is ethics?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is excommunication? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is happening to me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is he saying?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is right in this case? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is shameful? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is the great idea in that name? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is the matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is the matter?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is the meaning of that great word? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is there unlikely in all I have put before you just now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is this babe?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is woman? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What is your faith?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What led me to see it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What makes you ask?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What makes you say so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What makes you say you will have one to- morrow?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What makes you talk of such a thing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What more do you want?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What more? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What mother are you talking about? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What murderer? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What next?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What object? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What of? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What reason had you to consent to Tchermashnya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What reason have we to call that letter''fatal''rather than absurd? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What right have I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What saint do you say the story is told of?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What shall we do... to amuse ourselves again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What shall we drink to? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What should I be underground there without God? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What signals?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What sort of exclusion? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What sort of rag was it, cloth or linen?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What sort of suit? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What third person?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What though he is everywhere now rebelling against our power, and proud of his rebellion? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What trick?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What trustworthy proof have we that the prisoner is lying? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What use is a letter of thanks if it''s anonymous? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What use is it now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was he aiming at? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was he reckoning on? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was he weeping over? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was his name?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was such an elder? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What was your motive for making such a secret of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will become of the family? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will become of the foundations of society? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will become of them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will he tell us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will they do to one in the next world for the greatest sin? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will you have-- coffee?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will you think of me now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What will you wear when you come out of the monastery? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What would a schoolboy be if he were not whipped? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What would become of him if the Church punished him with her excommunication as the direct consequence of the secular law? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What would he be with others? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What would it have cost him to add:''I am the murderer, not Karamazov''? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What would you have got by it afterwards? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What would you say to a driver who would n''t make way for any one, but would just drive on and crush people? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What you talked about last time?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s America? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s a day or two to you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s being read?"... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s he afraid of? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s he scolding about?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s in it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s it for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s that?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the matter with you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the meaning of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the sense of making friends in the frost out here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the time?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s the use of what I think? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s this for, gentlemen?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s this?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What''s wrong?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, gentlemen, are you going to write that down?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, what, had he said to her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, without asking leave, without asking a blessing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, you are turning up your nose again? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What, you want to write that down, too?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | What?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When did you step? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When had she been there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When have I said so?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When have they been seen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When it got dark and the shutters were closed, Fenya asked her mistress:"Is the gentleman going to stay the night, mistress?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When she compares us, do you suppose she can love a man like me, especially after all that has happened here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When the doctor, an old German called Eisenschmidt, came:"Well, doctor, have I another day in this world?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When the servants came in to him he would say continually,"Dear, kind people, why are you doing so much for me, do I deserve to be waited on? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When will she come?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | When?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where am I?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where are they? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where are you going now-- to Venice? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where are you going? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where are you off to, Alexey Fyodorovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where can one sit down?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did the light come from on the first day?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did they go? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did you find such a tailor in these parts? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did you get such a dreadful wound, Alexey Fyodorovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did you get such a lot?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did you get your wig from? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where did you step? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where do they forge them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where does he come from? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where had he the means, the money to do it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where had they come from? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where have I put it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where have you been?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where have you come from?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where have you taken him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where is she? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where is she? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where is she?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where is she?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where is that bell ringing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where is the finger of Providence? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where shall I put them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where should he be if not here?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where should he go? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where should he sit if not there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where then was he to get the means, where was he to get the fateful money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where was the paragraph? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where were you going?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where will you sleep?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where would they get it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where would they get them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where''s my money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where''s that monk?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Where?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whether he was drunk? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who are these keepers of the mystery who have taken some curse upon themselves for the happiness of mankind? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who are they?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who can have killed him if I did n''t? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who can have killed him,_ if not I_?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who can say of himself that he is happy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who can tell?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who could have decreed this? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who could have written it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who counted the money? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who dare ask me such questions?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who had judged him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who has authorized me to preach to fathers? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who heard what he said? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who helped you to sew it up a month ago?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is it laughing at man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is responsible for his having received such an unseemly bringing up, in spite of his excellent disposition and his grateful and sensitive heart? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is that man? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who is this with you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who knew it, pray? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who laughs at him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who murdered him, if not he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who scattered the flock and sent it astray on unknown paths? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who set the rumor going? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who the devil can make you out? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who was Karl Bernard?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who was he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who was so kind?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who were they? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who will hold an unclean Tatar responsible, Grigory Vassilyevitch, even in heaven, for not having been born a Christian? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who will search them?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who would feed it and who would feed them all? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who would have believed me and what charge could I bring against you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who''ll bring me word?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who''ll keep watch for me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who''s coming and going?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who''s this?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Who?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whom could I marry better than you-- and who would have me except you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whom did you rob?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whom did you tell? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whom hast Thou raised up to Thyself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whom have you brought? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whom?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whose then? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Whose then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why Is Such A Man Alive? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why Is Such A Man Alive? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why Smerdyakov? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why am I in a hurry? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why am I pleased with myself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why am I tormented by it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are people poor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are they crying?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are they so dark from black misery? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are we sitting here and no coffee? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you angry now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you crying? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you laughing again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you laughing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you playing the fool?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you so depressed, Alyosha? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you so late? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you staring at me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are you taking it away?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why are your fingers moving like that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why at Mokroe?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why can I not say that you accuse my client, simply because you have no one else to accuse? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why can there not be among them one martyr oppressed by great sorrow and loving humanity? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did he do so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did he put it all off till morning? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did his conscience prompt him to one step and not to both? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did n''t he report it at once? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did n''t you simply carry off the envelope?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did n''t you stop me, Ivan, and tell me I was lying?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did she send for you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did you begin to spy for Dmitri Fyodorovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did you consent to remain in such unseemly company? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did you do that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why did you not come before, you angel?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why didst Thou reject that last gift? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do I keep on trembling? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t they feed the babe?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t they hug each other and kiss? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t they sing songs of joy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t they wrap it up?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t you begin doing something?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t you drink, Mitya? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do n''t you look where you''re going, scapegrace?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you always look down upon us?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you disturb the peace of the flock?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you expect reward in heaven for that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you interfere, as if I should believe that you prompted me, and that I did n''t remember it of myself?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you keep putting the notes in your side- pocket? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you look at me like that, Alexey Fyodorovitch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you look at me so critically?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you look at me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you look like that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you look like that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you look so surprised? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you offend against good order? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you say such things?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you stare at me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you take it so seriously? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you torment her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you torment me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you tremble? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you trouble his happiness? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you want to go meddling if your sacrifice is of no use to any one? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you whisper?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you wonder at me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why do you... sometimes say things to her that give her hope?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why does Pyotr Alexandrovitch refuse to pass judgment? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why does it interest you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why does n''t he talk? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why does n''t he want to come near me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why go to America when one may be of great service to humanity here? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why had he kept them for fourteen years afterwards instead of destroying them as evidence against him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why had he recalled that afterwards with repulsion? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why had he sent him into the world? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why has he pulled you up? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why has my breath become unpleasant to you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why has n''t she come?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why hast Thou come now to hinder us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why have I been longing for you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why have I been thirsting for you all these days, and just now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why have n''t I a right to abuse him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why have you been looking at me in expectation for the last three months? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why have you come?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why have you put that long gown on him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is it I never have hysterics? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is it he still does not understand how much I am ready to bear for his sake? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is it out of the question? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is the babe poor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is the room growing wider?... |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why is the steppe barren? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why listen to me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why next morning, had he been suddenly so depressed on the journey? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not accept such an interpretation of the facts? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not found a charity in the honor of the parricide to commemorate his exploit among future generations? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not in the dungeons of the castle of Udolpho, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not some other weapon? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not, why could it not be that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why push myself forward again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why scissors? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should Dmitri break in on him if she does n''t come? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should an author forego even one listener?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should he know that diabolical good and evil when it costs so much? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should he stare out into the dark? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should n''t I develop him if I like him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should not my servant be like my own kindred, so that I may take him into my family and rejoice in doing so? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should she have such suffering to bear?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should they, too, furnish material to enrich the soil for the harmony of the future? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should we assume everything as we imagine it, as we make up our minds to imagine it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why should you deny the prisoner a sense of honor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why soak my handkerchief, wiping the blood off his head so that it may be evidence against me later? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why such love for me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why suspect your mother of such meanness?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why talk of a wee bit while she might have said''a little bit,''like every one else? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why that? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why was I waiting for you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why was it I dreamed of that''babe''at such a moment? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why was it he had forgotten this officer, like that, forgotten him as soon as he heard of him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why was it, why was it you would n''t come all this time?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why wo n''t he admit it, do you think? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why wo n''t he come and see us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why wo n''t they make friends?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why wo n''t you dare? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why would it be so nice, Alyosha?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, I thought you were only thirteen?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, are you in love with her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, as he reached Moscow, had he said to himself,"I am a scoundrel"? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, did you murder him?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, for instance, does the prosecution refuse to admit the truth of the prisoner''s statement that he ran away from his father''s window? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, he thought, did I put myself forward to help him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, how did you tear yourself away? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, if you meant to put that bullet in your brain, would you look at it or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, then, are we looking for any other program? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, then, art Thou come to hinder us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, then, hast Thou come to hinder us?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, why did I degrade myself by confessing my secret to you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, why does n''t he know me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why, why does the prosecutor refuse to believe the evidence of Alexey Karamazov, given so genuinely and sincerely, so spontaneously and convincingly? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Why?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will any one of you be going to the town to- morrow?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will it be just to ruin them with me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will she come soon?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will they marry us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will they marry us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you allow me to say one word to this unhappy man, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you come yourself?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you come?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you come?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you let me go?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you lie at our feet, von Sohn? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you receive me as your guest?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you sit quiet or not?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Will you stake another hundred?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | With my brother''s help or without?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | With what object? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | With what weapon? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | With whom is she now, at Mokroe?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | With whom? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | With whom?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Without God?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Without suffering what would be the pleasure of it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Wo n''t you add that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Wo n''t you have a drop of brandy? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would any one venture to give her the sacred name of mother? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would he have left the envelope on the floor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you believe it, Ivan, that that lacerates my sentiments? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you believe it, he told me three weeks ago? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you believe it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you believe it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you believe it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you consent to explain what motives precisely led you to such a sentiment of hatred for your parent?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you like a wet towel on your head? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you like it done at once, sir?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you like some sweets? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you like some tea? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Would you persevere in your love, or not?'' |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, I took the pestle.... What does one pick things up for at such moments? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yes, really, will you let me sit on your knee? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yet are we to believe that, though plotting the murder, he told that son, Dmitri, about the money, the envelope, and the signals? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yet what was offered Thee? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Yet why did he not shoot himself then, why did he relinquish his design and even forget where his pistol was? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You agree? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You approve, Ippolit Kirillovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are a schoolboy, I suppose?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are going away? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are going to her?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are not ashamed to be with me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are not laughing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are not laughing?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are scolding again? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You are welcome, we''ve been hoping to see you a long time.... You were so kind as to come with Alexey Fyodorovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You ask why? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You ca n''t be speaking in earnest?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You ca n''t have been at Katerina Ivanovna''s yourself when he was talking about you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You did n''t expect me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t mean that meeting? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t mean to say you seriously believed that he was going to work miracles?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t play horses, do you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t suppose I am fibbing, do you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do n''t suppose he too came to murder me, do you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You do stand firm, do n''t you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You forgive my impertinence?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You had much better look at her-- do you see how she has pity on me? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You have asserted in public, I believe, that it was based upon jealousy?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You have perhaps heard of him? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You heard what she said just now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You know Fyodor Pavlovitch?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You know I turned him out of the house.... You know all that story, do n''t you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You know a doctor has come? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You know how things are with us? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You know it is sometimes very pleasant to take offense, is n''t it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You know it''s-- Do you know who it is? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You know what I came back for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You led me on to it, prosecutor? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You left it behind on purpose, so as not to give it back, because you knew I would ask for it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You mean the myth about that crazy idiot, the epileptic, Smerdyakov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You might see the gates of heaven open, not only the door into the garden?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You never lie to me, do n''t lie now: is it true? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You remember for a fact that you did not give him any money?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You remember how you used to love cherry jam when you were little?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You remember? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You said just now that you thought of me, too?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You say that aunt tried to stop her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You see those two branches? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You see, I shut my eyes and ask myself if every one has faith, where did it come from? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You seem to disagree with me again, Karamazov?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You seem to love me for some reason, Alyosha?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You sit down, too, Rakitin; why are you standing? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You surely do n''t deny that character can be told from the gait, Dmitri Fyodorovitch? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You think I meant to make her an offer? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You think I would n''t do it, Rakitin, that I would not dare to do it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You want to write that down? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wanted to be sure? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wanted to talk to me again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You went to see her yesterday, I believe?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You were not afraid then of arousing suspicion?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t ask for the fifth one too?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t be angry? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t be frightened alone and cry?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t be frightened and cry when I''m gone?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t be thrashed for coming with me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t climb on the cupboard and break your legs? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t forget, you wo n''t forget what I asked you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t frighten us, will you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You wo n''t go and inform against me then, will you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You would n''t be going except for that?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''d like it to be to- day? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ll give them something, Agafya, wo n''t you?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ll never get a woman like me... and he wo n''t either, perhaps...""Wo n''t he? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''re not angry with me, Alyosha? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''re not angry, are you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''re not angry, gentlemen? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''re the servant there?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''re tired perhaps? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ve got the money in your hand, but instead of going to Siberia you''re spending it all.... Where are you really off to now, eh?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ve heard that Father Zossima is dead?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ve just been in our mansion, what did you see there? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ve no heart, any of you-- that''s what it is? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ve sat down already? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ve seen her? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | You''ve taken a load off my heart.... Well, what are we to do now? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Your reverence, am I to come in or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | Your reverence, do you know who von Sohn was? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | _ Long will you remember__ The house at the Chain bridge._ Do you remember? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | _ Monsieur sait- il le temps qu''il fait? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | _ Tout cela c''est de la cochonnerie_.... Do you know what I like? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | _( h) Can a Man judge his Fellow Creatures? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | _( i) Of Hell and Hell Fire, a Mystic Reflection_ Fathers and teachers, I ponder,"What is hell?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | and who would believe you? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | and will it ever come to pass? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | and"What can an official, still more a peasant, understand in such an affair?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | and... what am I to do then?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | are you looking for me?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | asked Alyosha,"is he a tell- tale or what?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | but can nothing, absolutely nothing save him now?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | could n''t we do this?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | could n''t you go to that counsel yourself and tell him the whole thing by yourself? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | cried Fyodor Pavlovitch,"that he absolutely can not and certainly can not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | cried Mitya,"wo n''t you drink it?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | damn it, is it my business to look after them?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | did you ever tempt those holy men who ate locusts and prayed seventeen years in the wilderness till they were overgrown with moss?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | he cried suddenly,"why the devil did I take you up? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | he exclaimed,"must I? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | he fell suddenly on his knees,"what must I do to gain eternal life?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | he seemed suddenly to bethink himself, and almost with a start:"Why, did you find the door open?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | he shouted,"do you see, three thousand, do you see?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | how do I know now what is of most importance? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | how will it end?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | is it too proud? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | is it true or false, and would it be right?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | it seemed to say;"we settled everything then; why have you come again?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | of foreign travel? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | of the fatal position of Russia? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | roared Mitya,"where is she?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | that is, the population of the whole earth, except about two hermits in the desert, and in His well- known mercy will He not forgive one of them? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | that new doctor Katya sent for from Moscow for your unhappy brother, who will to- morrow-- But why speak of to- morrow? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | the man who wronged me, do I love him or not? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | then he tried to murder you, too?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | they asked,"are we to make our servants sit down on the sofa and offer them tea?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | this has so much influence, it can so bias the mind; but, gentlemen of the jury, can it bias your minds? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | though he is condemned to penal servitude for twenty years, he is still planning to be happy-- is not that piteous? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | was on the tip of his tongue, but to his profound astonishment he heard himself say,"Is my father still asleep, or has he waked?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | what am I doing it for?" |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | what is he fit for? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | what''s wrong, what is it? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | why not fourteen hundred? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | why was it shed? |
dostoyevsky-brothers-3017 | your Excellency,"faltered the captain,"but you''ve seen"--he spread out his hands, indicating his surroundings--"mamma and my family?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''I shall look forward very much to your return....''Yes, yes, how did she say it? tolstoy-war-1881 ''Now then, where''s your chief''s quarters?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A baby? tolstoy-war-1881 A child?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A diary? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A formidable one, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A full- grown one? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A future life? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A petition? tolstoy-war-1881 A prisoner? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A skillful commander? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Afraid of what? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah yes, and what else did he say that''s unpleasant? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, Vesenny? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, Wostov? tolstoy-war-1881 Ah, a weapon?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, from Vienna? tolstoy-war-1881 Ah, he''s come?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, how do you do, great warrior? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, how do you do, my dear prince? tolstoy-war-1881 Ah, if only I were a man? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, is it you, cousin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, it''s you? tolstoy-war-1881 Ah, what have you done to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, you''re back? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah? tolstoy-war-1881 All over?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | All well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Allow me to ask,he said,"are you a Mason?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I not too late? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I spoiled for Andrew''s love or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I taken prisoner or have I taken him prisoner? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I to let the troops have the oats, and to take a receipt for them? tolstoy-war-1881 Am I to sacrifice my feelings and my honor for money? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | An order to who? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And Alpatych is being sent to Smolensk? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And Bolkonski? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And Father? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And Nicholas? tolstoy-war-1881 And Prince Kuragin?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And am I to bring the gypsy girls along with him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And are the hours the same? tolstoy-war-1881 And are you building?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And at your age what secrets can there be between Natasha and Boris, or between you two? tolstoy-war-1881 And besides, what have I done to bring it about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And ca n''t it be helped? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And did n''t Hippolyte tell you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And did you give me tobacco yesterday? tolstoy-war-1881 And did you really see and speak to Napoleon, as we have been told?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And do you feel quite calm? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And do you feel sad here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And do you remember how we rolled hard- boiled eggs in the ballroom, and suddenly two old women began spinning round on the carpet? tolstoy-war-1881 And have you been here long?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And have you brought little Nicholas? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And have you heard? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And have you talked everything well over with Prince Theodore? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how about you, Count Peter Kirilych? tolstoy-war-1881 And how can Sonya love Nicholas so calmly and quietly and wait so long and so patiently?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how could you believe he was my lover? tolstoy-war-1881 And how did they arrest you, dear lad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how do you get on with the officers? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how does he now regard the matter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how does one do it in a barn? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how has it all happened? tolstoy-war-1881 And how have I obtained all this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how''s it you''re not afraid, sir, really now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how''s your father? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And if I should meet His Majesty before I meet the commander in chief, your excellency? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And if he asks about the losses? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And is Denisov nice? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And is Papa older? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And is there a large force of you here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And love of one''s neighbor, and self- sacrifice? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And me? tolstoy-war-1881 And our little tea table?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And our share? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And should there be nothing left but to die? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And so they are writing from Potsdam already? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And so you have met Count Nicholas, Mary? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And so you think Napoleon will manage to get an army across? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And so you''ve had him educated abroad, Prince Vasili, have n''t you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And that caused his sister to refuse my brother? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And the count wanted him to say it was from Klyucharev? tolstoy-war-1881 And the fete at the English ambassador''s? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And the little girl, the little girl, what am I to do with her if she''s not theirs? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And the prisoners he killed in Africa? tolstoy-war-1881 And then so, do you see?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And they said Kutuzov was blind of one eye? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And was Ivanushka with you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And was our militia of any use to the Empia? tolstoy-war-1881 And was the Holy Mother promoted to the rank of general?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what about his character? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what devil made me go to that wat? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what did you think? tolstoy-war-1881 And what do his father and sister matter to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what does he mean by''One of my eyes was sore but now I am on the lookout with both''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what does she come worming herself in here for? tolstoy-war-1881 And what does she want the money for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what has become of that scoundrel? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what have I been thinking of till now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what is she so pleased about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what position will you adopt toward the government? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what were you going to say? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what will be there, and what has there been here? tolstoy-war-1881 And what''s your name?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And when are we to start, your excellency? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And where has he sprung from? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And where is Lise? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And where is the wounded officer? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And where is your brother- in- law now, if I may ask? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And where''s Nicholas? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And where''s the fur cloak? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who are you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who are you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who for? tolstoy-war-1881 And who has told you what is bad for another man?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who is it she takes after? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who is that young man beside you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who is that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who is this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who may you be? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who will inherit his wealth? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why are children born to such men as you? tolstoy-war-1881 And why are they stopping? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why are you stopping here? tolstoy-war-1881 And why did I come here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why did n''t he call me? tolstoy-war-1881 And why did n''t you do it at seven in the morning? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why did n''t you simply come straight to me as to a friend? tolstoy-war-1881 And why did she resist her seducer when she loved him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why do you serve? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why do you stand there gaping? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why has the Emperor Alexander taken command of the armies? tolstoy-war-1881 And why is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why not marry her if she really has so much money? tolstoy-war-1881 And why should she marry?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why the deuce are we going to fight Bonaparte? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And with thee? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And yet they say that war is like a game of chess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And you did n''t see that everybody is packing up? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And you wo n''t feel ashamed to write to him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And you''re surprised at the way she rides, Simon, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And you, Michael Nikanorovich? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And you, are you one of the doctors? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And you? tolstoy-war-1881 And you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And your children? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Andrew lying? tolstoy-war-1881 Andrew, why did n''t you warn me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Andrew, would you like...Princess Mary suddenly said in a trembling voice,"would you like to see little Nicholas? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Angina? tolstoy-war-1881 Another glass?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Any news from Mack? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Apropos, tell me please, is it true that the women have all left Moscow? tolstoy-war-1881 Are n''t you cold?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are n''t you ready? tolstoy-war-1881 Are the horses ready for the general?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are there many more of you to come? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are they drinking? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are those our men there? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are we getting to the Melyukovs''? tolstoy-war-1881 Are we really lost? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are we really quite lost, your excellency? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you afraid, then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you an officer? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you asleep, Mamma? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you bowing to a friend, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you going already, Count? tolstoy-war-1881 Are you going to Count Cyril Vladimirovich, my dear?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you ill? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you living with your mother? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you not ashamed to deprive us of your charming wife? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you not weary of that stupid, meaningless, constantly repeated fraud? tolstoy-war-1881 Are you ready?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you remaining in Moscow, then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you staying in my house? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you the Elder? tolstoy-war-1881 Are you unwell today? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Arguing? tolstoy-war-1881 Asks for reinforcements?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At first I did not like it much, because what makes a town pleasant ce sont les jolies femmes,* is n''t that so? tolstoy-war-1881 At home?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At once? tolstoy-war-1881 At seven o''clock? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At such a moment? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At what o''clock did the battle begin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At what o''clock was General Schmidt killed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Back or forward? tolstoy-war-1881 Bah, really? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Because I know it will end in nothing...."How can you know? tolstoy-war-1881 Because it is better for me to come less often... because... No, simply I have business....""Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Before me? tolstoy-war-1881 Besides how can I ask the Emperor for his instructions for the right flank now that it is nearly four o''clock and the battle is lost? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Besides, is it for me, for me who desired his death, to condemn anyone? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Besides, would the princess have me? tolstoy-war-1881 Buonaparte?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Buonaparte? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Burdino, is n''t it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But I am certain that we were angels somewhere there, and have been here, and that is why we remember...."May I join you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But action with what aim? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But after all who asked them here? tolstoy-war-1881 But all the same?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But am I not too cold with him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But am I really in Moscow? tolstoy-war-1881 But can this be compared...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But can you stay till tomowwow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But could it be otherwise? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But death and suffering? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But did you notice, it says,''for consultation''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how are you going to stop them? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how are you to get that balance? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how can I?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how could one say that in Russian? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how get married? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how he did frighten me... You''ve seen the princess? tolstoy-war-1881 But how is it the doctor from Moscow is not here yet?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how? tolstoy-war-1881 But if he is dishonorable?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But if the bridge is crossed it means that the army too is lost? tolstoy-war-1881 But in what am I to blame?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But in what position are we going to attack him? tolstoy-war-1881 But in what was I to blame?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But is n''t it all the same now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But it is n''t?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But it''s true that you remained in Moscow to kill Napoleon? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But joking apart,said Prince Andrew,"do you really think the campaign is over?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But no, he has preferred to surround himself with my enemies, and with whom? tolstoy-war-1881 But nobody possesses it, so what would you have? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But none of you would go? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But on what then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But really, had n''t I better go away? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But see here, to tell the truth, Aunt..."What is it, my dear? tolstoy-war-1881 But sha n''t we have to accept battle?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But tell me, how will your husband look at the matter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But tell me, what is he like, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But was it really not possible for Kutuzov to state his views plainly to the Emperor? tolstoy-war-1881 But we have grain belonging to my brother?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what about my heirs? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what am I to do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what am I to do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what are you shouting for? tolstoy-war-1881 But what are''God''s folk''?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what could have happened? tolstoy-war-1881 But what did Klyucharev do wrong, Count?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what did you hear? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what did you want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what do I care about your allies? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what do they want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what do you mean by living only for yourself? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what do you think, Daniel Terentich? tolstoy-war-1881 But what does it mean?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what has happened between you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what have they been up to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what have you heard? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what is the matter with you, Count? tolstoy-war-1881 But what is there in running across it like that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what is there to say about me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what is war? tolstoy-war-1881 But what of her?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what on earth is worrying me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what was I thinking? tolstoy-war-1881 But what was that you said: Frola and Lavra?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what''s to be done? tolstoy-war-1881 But when are you coming to bed?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where and how will my Toulon present itself? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where do you come from not to know what every coachman in the town knows? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where is Sonya? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where was she left? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But who could help loving her? tolstoy-war-1881 But who is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But who, after all, is doing this? tolstoy-war-1881 But why a year? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why are you angry? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why did n''t you tell me, Dronushka? tolstoy-war-1881 But why do n''t you want to take it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why do you expect that he will leave us anything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why go to Petersburg? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why have you collected here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why should n''t I say I saw something? tolstoy-war-1881 But why talk of me?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why, Count, why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But with such ideas what motive have you for living? tolstoy-war-1881 But you do n''t suppose I''m going to get you married at once? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But you have n''t refused Bolkonski? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But you know how it all ended, do n''t you? tolstoy-war-1881 But you meant to stay another two days?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But you take it without sugar? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But, Mamma, is he very much in love? tolstoy-war-1881 But, Mamma, suppose I loved a girl who has no fortune, would you expect me to sacrifice my feelings and my honor for the sake of money?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But, just what did the genewal tell you? tolstoy-war-1881 By the way, you know German, then?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ca n''t you make less noise? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can I receive that pure liquid into an impure vessel and judge of its purity? tolstoy-war-1881 Can I see the count?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can a man so important and necessary to society be also my husband? tolstoy-war-1881 Can a sleigh pass?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can fate have brought me to her so strangely only for me to die?... tolstoy-war-1881 Can he really be going away leaving me alone without having told me all, and without promising to help me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be that all this has happened so quickly and has destroyed all that went before? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be that it is all over? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be? tolstoy-war-1881 Can it or can it not be?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can one be well while suffering morally? tolstoy-war-1881 Can one see from there?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can she have loved my brother so little as to be able to forget him so soon? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can something bad have happened to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can they be French? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can this be death? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can we arm ourselves against our teachers and divinities? tolstoy-war-1881 Can you do it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can you imagine it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can you resist it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Come now, what about your Roi de Prusse? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Come, what''s the matter, old fellow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Commander in Chief Kutuzov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Connaissez- vous le Proverbe:*''Jerome, Jerome, do not roam, but turn spindles at home!''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Corporal, what will they do with the sick man?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Could n''t one get a book? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Count Ilya Rostov''s son? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Count, is it wrong of me to sing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Crazy? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Dear me, can I have forgotten? tolstoy-war-1881 Decision? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did he believe? tolstoy-war-1881 Did n''t I explain to you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did n''t he vanish somewhere? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did n''t we get you to Tver in seven hours? tolstoy-war-1881 Did you get here quickly? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you hear of the last event at the review in Petersburg? tolstoy-war-1881 Did you promise to marry her?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you see her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you see it yourselves? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you see? tolstoy-war-1881 Did your mother tell you that it can not be for a year?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Dites donc, le colonel Gerard est ici? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Dmitri,said Rostov to his valet on the box,"those lights are in our house, are n''t they?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do I remember Nicholas? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t talk Russian,said Dolokhov in a hurried whisper, and at that very moment they heard through the darkness the challenge:"Qui vive?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you hear it''s His Majesty the Emperor''s health? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you know I ca n''t sit like that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you like it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you want to? tolstoy-war-1881 Do n''t you wecollect what bad use I made of your lessons?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you wish to serve me? tolstoy-war-1881 Do n''t you, Lise? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you believe in a future life? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you hear how he''s walking? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you hear what I am saying or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you hear? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know I have entrusted him with our secret? tolstoy-war-1881 Do you know her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know the condition I am in? tolstoy-war-1881 Do you know what I am thinking about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know what I heard today? tolstoy-war-1881 Do you know what it''s about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know, Mary, what I''ve been thinking? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know, Rapp, what military art is? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know,he said at last, evidently unable to check the sad current of his thoughts,"that Anatole is costing me forty thousand rubles a year? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you like him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you love me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you play then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you recognize him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember, sire, what you did me the honor to say at Smolensk? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you see?... tolstoy-war-1881 Do you speak French?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you speak French? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you take vodka, Count? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you think he can last till morning? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you think so?... tolstoy-war-1881 Do you understand what you''re saying?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you understand, damn you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you want anything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you want to be doing the same? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Does he love me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Does he love you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Does it matter, Count, how the Note is worded,he asked,"so long as its substance is forcible?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Does n''t he? tolstoy-war-1881 Eh, is anything hurting you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh, is she pretty? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh, who''s there? tolstoy-war-1881 Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? tolstoy-war-1881 Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? tolstoy-war-1881 Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? tolstoy-war-1881 Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Else how could all this have happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Even divorce you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | First, notepaper-- do you hear? tolstoy-war-1881 For me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | For what have you come hither? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Forever? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Forever? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Forgive what? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | From General Field Marshal Kutuzov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | From Heloise? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | From where to where, Your Majesty? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | From whom did you get this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Gave him leave? tolstoy-war-1881 Gentlemen, who wishes to bet with me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Get over what? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Give me my thimble, Miss, from there..."Whenever will you be ready? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Go away? tolstoy-war-1881 Going already?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Going on? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Going? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Gone to bed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Gone? tolstoy-war-1881 Good, was n''t it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Got it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | H- o- o- w are you standing? tolstoy-war-1881 Ha, what''s this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Had n''t I better ride over, your excellency? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Handsome, is n''t she? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has Prince Vasili aged much? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has anything come from Andrew? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has anything happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has he been married long? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has he come? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has he taken his medicine? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has something happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has the enemy entered the city? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has the snow been shoveled back? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have I not for eighteen months been doing everything to obtain it? tolstoy-war-1881 Have I upset you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have n''t I said I''m not going to gwovel? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have n''t I told you I wo n''t give them up? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have n''t you robbed people enough-- taking their last shirts? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have the biscuits and rice been served out to the regiments of the Guards? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have they surrendered my ancient capital without a battle? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you a complaint to make? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you any letters of hers? tolstoy-war-1881 Have you any news of the Rostovs?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you been here long, Countess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you done this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you had that youngster with you long? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you heard the password? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you known that young man long, Princess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you lost anyone, my dear fellow? tolstoy-war-1881 Have you never thought of marrying your prodigal son Anatole?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you seen Duport? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you seen Lazarev? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you seen the princess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you seen the young countess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you sought for means of attaining your aim in religion? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you told her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you told them to bring the horse? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He has spoken? tolstoy-war-1881 He is an excellent fellow.... And are you very much in love?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He visits them? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He was gray, you remember, and had white teeth, and stood and looked at us..."Sonya, do you remember? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He''s dead-- why carry him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He''s handsome, is n''t he? tolstoy-war-1881 He? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He? tolstoy-war-1881 Health, at a time like this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Hiding? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | His Excellency Prince Vasili Kuragin and his son, I understand? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Home? tolstoy-war-1881 How about my son Boris, Prince?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How about the horses? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How am I to understand you, mon pere? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How am I? tolstoy-war-1881 How am I?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How are you now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How are you, Mary? tolstoy-war-1881 How can I join in? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can I think of the bright side of life when, as you see, I am sitting on a barrel and working in a dirty shed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can he talk like that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can one help it, lad? tolstoy-war-1881 How can one push on? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can one talk or think of such trifles? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can one talk to the masters like that? tolstoy-war-1881 How can people be dissatisfied with anything?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can the Emperor be undecided? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can they laugh, or even live at all here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can they need reinforcements when they already have half the army directed against a weak, unentrenched Russian wing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can we fight the French, Prince? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can you ask why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can you judge the Emperor''s actions? tolstoy-war-1881 How can you live in Moscow and go nowhere? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can you show me that you are telling the truth? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How could I let him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How d''you do, friend? tolstoy-war-1881 How dare you take it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did that fellow get here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did the star get into the icon? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did you get here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do you do, cousin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do you do, my dear? tolstoy-war-1881 How do you expect him to answer you all at once?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do you feel, mon brave? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do you find Andrew? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do you know? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do you say it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How has his whole illness gone? tolstoy-war-1881 How have you got here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is he now? tolstoy-war-1881 How is he?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it I am not moving? tolstoy-war-1881 How is it I did not know it before?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it Vienna was taken? tolstoy-war-1881 How is it pointing?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it that no one realizes this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it you did n''t go head over heels? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it you''re not ashamed to bury such pearls in the country? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it,she began, as usual in French, settling down briskly and fussily in the easy chair,"how is it Annette never got married? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is that?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is the count? tolstoy-war-1881 How is the prince?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is your health? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How many inhabitants are there in Moscow? tolstoy-war-1881 How many miles?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How many years have you been fattening on the commune? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How many? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How much is left in the puhse? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How much longer? tolstoy-war-1881 How often have I asked you not to take my things?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How often we sin, how much we deceive, and all for what? tolstoy-war-1881 How shall I enter the drawing room? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How shall I put it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How so, my pet? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How was it I noticed nothing? tolstoy-war-1881 How was it a gun was abandoned?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How''s it you''re not drunk today? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How''s this, Colonel? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How''s your wound? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How? tolstoy-war-1881 How? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I am glad.... Are you here on leave? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I am sure you''re not telling us everything; I am sure you did something...said Natasha and pausing added,"something fine?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I did not... What is it all about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I do n''t know about that, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I do n''t understand, Mamma-- what is his attitude to Pierre? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I dreamed last night...--"You were not expecting us?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I guessed it then when we met at the Sukharev tower, do you remember? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I have long wanted to ask you, Andrew, why you have changed so to me? tolstoy-war-1881 I hear you have made peace with Turkey?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I hope I may now congratulate Your Majesty on a victory? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I hope it is good news? tolstoy-war-1881 I knew I was in the right so I kept silent; was not that best, Count?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I love you all and have done no harm to anyone; why must I suffer so? tolstoy-war-1881 I love you all, and have done no harm to anyone; and what have you done to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I say I wo n''t surrender, I say... Am I not right, sir? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I say, Balaga,said Anatole, putting his hands on the man''s shoulders,"do you care for me or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I say, Father, joking apart, is she very hideous? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I say, are n''t the flints in your pistols worn out? tolstoy-war-1881 I say, do you remember our discussion in Petersburg?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I say, is it true that we have been beaten? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I say, shall we soon be clear? tolstoy-war-1881 I should like to know, did you love..."Pierre did not know how to refer to Anatole and flushed at the thought of him--"did you love that bad man?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I should like,said the vicomte,"to ask how monsieur explains the 18th Brumaire; was not that an imposture? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I think I sent you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I understand that you could not, and can not, think of yourself, but with my love for you I must do so.... Has Alpatych been to you? tolstoy-war-1881 I understand the deception and confusion,"he thought,"but how am I to tell them all that I see? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I was forgetting... Do you wish it brought at once? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I wo n''t, I ca n''t sleep, what''s the use? tolstoy-war-1881 I wonder, is it not too late to administer unction?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I''ll go up onto the knoll if I may? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I? tolstoy-war-1881 I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I? tolstoy-war-1881 I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I? tolstoy-war-1881 I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I? tolstoy-war-1881 I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I? tolstoy-war-1881 I?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I?... tolstoy-war-1881 If before that you are not ten times wounded, killed, or betrayed, well... what then?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If he were n''t afraid of a battle why did he ask for that interview? tolstoy-war-1881 If only I were to hand the letter direct to him and tell him all... could they really arrest me for my civilian clothes? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If they hear of this, will they let it pass? tolstoy-war-1881 If we fought before,"he said,"not letting the French pass, as at Schon Grabern, what shall we not do now when he is at the front? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If we have been angels, why have we fallen lower? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ilyin? tolstoy-war-1881 In Moscow?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Indeed? tolstoy-war-1881 Is Papa at home?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is everything quite all right? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he in Moscow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he still here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he tall and with reddish hair? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he very ill? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he weaker? tolstoy-war-1881 Is it a holiday?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it about Nicholas? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it certain? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it for visitors you''ve got yourself up like that, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it just sentimentality, old wives''tales, or is she right? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it over? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible that Amelie( Mademoiselle Bourienne)"thinks I could be jealous of her, and not value her pure affection and devotion to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible that he died in the bitter frame of mind he was then in? tolstoy-war-1881 Is it possible that this stranger has now become everything to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible to forget? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible to plan or think of anything now? tolstoy-war-1881 Is it possible? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it true that Austrians have been beaten? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it worth thinking or speaking of it at such a moment? tolstoy-war-1881 Is my carriage ready?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t Duport delightful? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t it fine, eh, Uncle Ignat? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t she exquisite? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t she too young? tolstoy-war-1881 Is she clever?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is she like him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is she swift? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that Mary practicing? tolstoy-war-1881 Is that right?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that so? tolstoy-war-1881 Is that their Tsar himself? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that weally still going on? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that you, Clement? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is the Englishman bragging?... tolstoy-war-1881 Is the cabman to be discharged, your honor?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is the carriage ready? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is the general here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is there any hay here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is there anything at all behind that impassive face? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is there sufficient forage in Krems? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is this good or bad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is this the way to the princesses''apartments? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is this your saber? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is this your saber? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It is all, all her fault,he said to himself;"but what of that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It is now my turn to ask you''why?'' tolstoy-war-1881 It is true that Natasha is still young, but-- so long as that?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It was a ruble an arshin, I suppose? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s a bad business, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s a good day, eh? tolstoy-war-1881 It''s all right my staying a day with you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s all the same.... Is everything ready? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s capital for us here, but what of him? tolstoy-war-1881 It''s even certain that I should have done the same, then why this duel, this murder? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s not going to be a ghost story? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s the enemy?... tolstoy-war-1881 Just a few oats?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Karay? tolstoy-war-1881 Killed?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Le Roi de Prusse? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Lie down? tolstoy-war-1881 Like my father?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Look, there''s Alenina,said Sonya,"with her mother, is n''t it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Looking for Vasili Dmitrich Denisov? tolstoy-war-1881 Louisa Ivanovna, may I?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Love? tolstoy-war-1881 Mamma, are you cross? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Mamma, can we have a talk? tolstoy-war-1881 Mamma, one need not be ashamed of his being a widower?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Marya Dmitrievna? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Master, what have you said? tolstoy-war-1881 May I ask you,"said Pierre,"what village that is in front?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I go at once? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I go in and look? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I kiss Mamma? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I make bold to trouble your honor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I stay a little longer? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May the wounded men stay in our house? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Mine, sir? tolstoy-war-1881 Must I break off with him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Must one die like a dog? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | My commands? tolstoy-war-1881 My dear fellow, how are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | My dear fellow, what have you been up to in Moscow? tolstoy-war-1881 My dear friend?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | My mind, my mind aches? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | My plans? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Nastasya Ivanovna, what sort of children shall I have? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natalie? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natalie? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha, it''s magical, is n''t it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha, what are you about? tolstoy-war-1881 Natasha, what is it about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha, you love me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha, you would not deceive me? tolstoy-war-1881 Natasha,"he said,"you know that I love you, but...""You are in love with me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Never mind, never mind, what does it matter? tolstoy-war-1881 Nicholas, have you come? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Nicholas, when did you break your cameo? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Nicholas, will you come to Iogel''s? tolstoy-war-1881 Nikolenka, what is the matter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, Prince, our regiment has gone to the front, but I am attached... what is it I am attached to, Papa? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, Sonya, but do you remember so that you remember him perfectly, remember everything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, ah... Likhachev-- isn''t that your name? tolstoy-war-1881 No, but do n''t you think it''s nice?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, but listen,she said,"now you are quite a man, are n''t you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, but what is it, my dear? tolstoy-war-1881 No, but why do you think so?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, how could she? tolstoy-war-1881 No, it''s only indigestion?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, not long..."Do you like him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, why be sorry? tolstoy-war-1881 No, why disturb the old fellow?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No... Why should it be? tolstoy-war-1881 No... why not, my dear, why should n''t I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No; I mean do you know Natasha Rostova? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No? tolstoy-war-1881 Not hurt, Petrov?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Not let the wife have him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Not lower, who said we were lower?... tolstoy-war-1881 Not seen Duport-- the famous dancer? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Nothing... No..."Is it something very bad for me? tolstoy-war-1881 Now then, what do you want?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now what does this mean, gentlemen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now who could decide whether he is really cleverer than all the others? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now you, young prince, what''s your name? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now, Vera, what does it matter to you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now, is it suitable that Count Kutuzov, the oldest general in Russia, should preside at that tribunal? tolstoy-war-1881 Now, what are you pestewing me for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now, why have you kept this lad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now, why need you do it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | O God,he said with tears in his eyes,"how could you do it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | O God,she said,"how am I to stifle in my heart these temptations of the devil? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Of whom you imagine me to be one? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh God, what would happen to me if the Emperor spoke to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh dear, what am I thinking about? tolstoy-war-1881 Oh yes, and what do the Masonic brothers say about war? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh yes, why not? tolstoy-war-1881 Oh, I''m all right,"said he,"but why did they shoot those poor fellows? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, Nicholas, how can you talk like that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, Nikita, please go... where can I send him?... tolstoy-war-1881 Oh, but you were there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, do you know? tolstoy-war-1881 Oh, how can you sleep? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, is it you, Prince, who have freed your serfs? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, master, what are you saying? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, please... May I stay with you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, there was childish love? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, what are you talking about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, what can I do for him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, what sleep-? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, you know him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | On the contrary, but what dignity? tolstoy-war-1881 On your honor?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | One must be indulgent to little weaknesses; who is free from them, Andrew? tolstoy-war-1881 Only that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Only when will all that be? tolstoy-war-1881 Or are you afraid to play with me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Or is it yours? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Or perhaps they amuse your honor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Orders? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Our position? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Papa, is it all right-- I''ve invited some of the wounded into the house? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Papa, what are you doing that for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Paris?... tolstoy-war-1881 Perhaps it''s the state of affairs?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Platon Karataev? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Prince Andrew''s? tolstoy-war-1881 Prince Bolkonski?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Qu''est- ce qu''il chante? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Really? tolstoy-war-1881 Really?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Really? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Really? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Really? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Reinforcements? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Rides well, eh? tolstoy-war-1881 Rostov, where are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Schon fleissig? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Scoundrel, what are you doing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Second line... have you written it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Separate? tolstoy-war-1881 Shall I call up our men from beyond the hill?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall I join the army and enter the service, or wait? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall I loose them or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall I serve them up? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall we have three cold dishes then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall we have time to change clothes? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall you write to him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She is right, but how is it that we in our irrecoverable youth did not know it? tolstoy-war-1881 She will really begin to arrange a match... and Sonya...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shelter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Should n''t we now send for Berg? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sire, will you allow me to speak frankly as befits a loyal soldier? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sire? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sister must have taken her, or else where can she be? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So Monsieur Kuragin has not honored Countess Rostova with his hand? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So he may have something to drink? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So in your parts, too, the harvest is nothing to boast of, Count? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So it seems you''re a hero, eh? tolstoy-war-1881 So now you want me to retire beyond the Niemen-- only the Niemen?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So that''s what they hit with? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So the attack is definitely resolved on? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So then what do you think, Vasili Dmitrich? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So there''s nothing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So this gruel is n''t to your taste? tolstoy-war-1881 So we are to have visitors, mon prince?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So what are your orders? tolstoy-war-1881 So you are glad and I have done right?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you are going to Petersburg tomorrow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you are not afraid to play with me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you have never noticed before how beautiful I am? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you promise? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you think he is powerless? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you think we shall win tomorrow''s battle? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you understand the whole position of our troops? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you want to smell gunpowder? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you''re a messenger of victory, eh? tolstoy-war-1881 So you''ve come, you rascal? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you''ve decided to go, Andrew? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you''ve found your folk? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Some herb vodka? tolstoy-war-1881 Sonya, are you asleep? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sonya, is it well with thee? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sonya, what is the matter with you? tolstoy-war-1881 Sonya, what is this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sonya, will he live? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sonya, you''ve read that letter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sonya,she suddenly exclaimed, as if she had guessed the true reason of her friend''s sorrow,"I''m sure Vera has said something to you since dinner? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sonya? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Still aching? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Still inquisitive? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Suppose he finds out, and your brother, and your betrothed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Tell me, my dear,said she to Natasha,"is Mimi a relation of yours? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Tell me, when did the battle begin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Tell me, you did not know of the countess''death when you decided to remain in Moscow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That depends on our luck in starting, else why should n''t we be there in time? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That is the Dutch ambassador, do you see? tolstoy-war-1881 That one? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That''s for Belova? tolstoy-war-1881 The Anferovs? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The Elder? tolstoy-war-1881 The Emperor''s appeal? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The Emperor,Pierre repeated, and his face suddenly became sad and embarrassed,"is the Emperor...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The Emperor? tolstoy-war-1881 The Emperor?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The French have abandoned the left bank? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The Niemen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The Pavlograd hussars? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The commander in chief? tolstoy-war-1881 The count''s things? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The enemy in the rear of our army? tolstoy-war-1881 The field marshal is angry with the Emperor and he punishes us all, is n''t it logical? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The law, religion... What have they been invented for if they ca n''t arrange that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The only question is what will come of the meeting between the Emperor Alexander and the King of Prussia in Berlin? tolstoy-war-1881 The past always seems good,"said he,"but did not Suvorov himself fall into a trap Moreau set him, and from which he did not know how to escape?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The peasants are ruined? tolstoy-war-1881 The position?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The rice too? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The sniveling Anna Mikhaylovna? tolstoy-war-1881 The sovereigns? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The young ladies''? tolstoy-war-1881 Then I may reckon on it, your excellency?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then am I to order those large sterlets? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then he is alive,thought Princess Mary, and asked in a low voice:"How is he?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then how about our position? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then it is certain? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then it''s all right? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then she is here still? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then they''ve not gone to bed yet? tolstoy-war-1881 Then tomorrow you will speak to the Emperor?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then what is this blood on the gun carriage? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then when am I to have it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then why are you crying? tolstoy-war-1881 Then why are you here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then why are you leaving? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then you are Russians? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then you are his son, Ilya? tolstoy-war-1881 Then you are serving?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then you do n''t consider the Emperor Alexander the aggressor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then you have nobody in Moscow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There now, how good it is, what more does one need? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There was a letter from Prince Andrew today,he said to Princess Mary--"Haven''t you read it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There''s someone else we know-- Bolkonski, do you see, Mamma? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | These Germans are first- rate fools, do n''t you think so, Monsieur Pierre? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | They asked him,''Who gave it you?'' tolstoy-war-1881 They can have my trap, or else what is to become of them?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | They may die tomorrow; why are they thinking of anything but death? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | They tell me this is the room the Emperor Alexander occupied? tolstoy-war-1881 Think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | This is my niece,said the count, introducing Sonya--"You do n''t know her, Princess?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | This way, your excellency... Where are you going?... tolstoy-war-1881 Those verses... those verses of Marin''s... how do they go, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Though it was tete- a- tete,Anatole continued,"still I ca n''t...""Is it satisfaction you want?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Till death itself? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To Petersburg? tolstoy-war-1881 To be quite frank, Mary, I expect Father''s character sometimes makes things trying for you, does n''t it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To give or not to give? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To tell Pierre? tolstoy-war-1881 To try his luck or the certainty?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To what Mistress? tolstoy-war-1881 To what committee has the memorandum been referred?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To whom shall it be given? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Told whom? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Tushin, Tushin, do n''t you remember, who gave you a lift at Schon Grabern? tolstoy-war-1881 Vera,"she said to her eldest daughter who was evidently not a favorite,"how is it you have so little tact? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Very good? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Very likely it would be splendid, but it will never come about..."Well, why are you going to the war? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Very well,said Smolyaninov, and went on at once:"Have you any idea of the means by which our holy Order will help you to reach your aim?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Vesenny? tolstoy-war-1881 Vill you be so goot to come to ze front and see dat zis position iss no goot? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Voulez- vous manger? tolstoy-war-1881 Vous comptez vous faire des rentes sur l''etat;* you want to make something out of your company?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Vous etes le bourgeois? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wait a moment, I''ll get my work.... Now then, what are you thinking of? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wait, have n''t you dropped it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wait?... tolstoy-war-1881 Was it from the cold?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was it not fate that brought him to Bogucharovo, and at that very moment? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was that grapeshot? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was the cup left here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | We ought to go, do n''t you think so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | We should ask him... that''s he himself?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | We''ve got to it at last-- why did you not tell me about it sooner? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well and when the money''s gone, what then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well then, what do you want? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, I suppose it is time we were at table?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, Lelya? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, Mamma? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, Mamma?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, Michael Mitrich, sir? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, Prince? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, Rapp, do you think we shall do good business today? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, Savelich, do you still not wish to accept your freedom? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, Vasilich, is everything ready? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, adorer and courtier of the Emperor Alexander, why do n''t you say anything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and all this idiocy-- Gossner and Tatawinova? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and are you still true to Boris? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and have you little ones? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and how is Prince Alexander to blame? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, and how is she?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and how''s Moscow? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, and is that all?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and so he never got farther than:''Sergey Kuzmich''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and that boy? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and then, Sonya?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and to whom did you apply about Bory? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and what are you going to do? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, and what do you think of Kutuzov''s appointment?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and you? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, are n''t you ashamed of yourself, Captain Tushin?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, are they all right? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, are you glad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, are you ready? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, but supposing Mary Hendrikhovna is''King''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, do you recognize your little madcap playmate? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, do you think I shall prevent her, that I ca n''t part from her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, does no one speak French in this establishment? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, fwiend? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, good- by, Peter Kirilych-- isn''t it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, have you finished? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, have you heard the great news? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, have you sent Gabriel for some wine? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, how are you going to get out of that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, how are you? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, how are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, how d''you do, my dear fellow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, how did it go? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, how is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, is ev''wything weady? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, is it true that it''s peace and capitulation? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, let''s have another bottle of this Moscow Bordeaux, shall we? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, little countess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, mon cher, have you got the manifesto? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, my dear fellow, so you still want to be an adjutant? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, my dear, and how are we getting on?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, my dear? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, my dear? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, send for him... and how do you get on with that German? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, supposing I do love him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, tell me... now, how did you get food? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, then, are you refusing Prince Andrew? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what about it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what about my plan? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, what business is it of mine what goes on there-- whether Arakcheev is bad, and all that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what do you think about it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what do you think? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, what do you want us to do?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what does that lead up to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what happened? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, what is Bonaparte like? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what is it tonight? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what is it? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, what is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what of it, if you all know it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what of that? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, what then?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what would you do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what''s this now? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, what''s to be done if it can not be avoided? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, where did you disappear to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, why do n''t you speak? tolstoy-war-1881 Well, why not, if you''re not afraid?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, you know it''s burned, so what''s the use of talking? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, you old sinner,she went on, turning to the count who was kissing her hand,"you''re feeling dull in Moscow, I daresay? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, young cavalryman, how is my Rook behaving? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, young man? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well-- had a good time? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well? tolstoy-war-1881 Well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well? tolstoy-war-1881 Well?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well?... tolstoy-war-1881 Were n''t you asleep?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Were you kept under lock and key? tolstoy-war-1881 Wh- what is the matter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What about capitulation? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What about the left flank? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What about your master? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What about your son, your sister, and your father? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I to do with the people? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I to say to him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I? tolstoy-war-1881 What are Prince Vasili and that son of his to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are they about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are they doing? tolstoy-war-1881 What are you about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you disputing about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you doing here, sir, in civilian dress? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you doing? tolstoy-war-1881 What are you making such a noise about over there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you pushing for? tolstoy-war-1881 What are you saying about the government? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you saying about the militia? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you sharpening? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you staring at, you good- for- nothing?... tolstoy-war-1881 What are you staring at?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you thumping the table for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you up to? tolstoy-war-1881 What are you up to?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you waiting for? tolstoy-war-1881 What are you writing, Mary?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are your commands, little countess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are your orders about the pictures? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are''God''s folk''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What book? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What brings you here? tolstoy-war-1881 What brings you here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What business is it of yours? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can I do with them? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can I do, where can I go? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can be done? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can decent men do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can have happened? tolstoy-war-1881 What can he say? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can it be? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can one say about it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can one say or think of as a consolation? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What companion, my dear boy? tolstoy-war-1881 What could he wish or look for that he would not have obtained through my friendship?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What could we fasten this onto? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What d''you think of the treat? tolstoy-war-1881 What decision have you been pleased to come to?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What devil brought them here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did I tell about Kutuzov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did Nicholas''smile mean when he said''chosen already''? tolstoy-war-1881 What did he say? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did you say? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did you want to see the count for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What division are you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do I care? tolstoy-war-1881 What do I think about it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do I want with them? tolstoy-war-1881 What do I want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do the doctors say? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do they matter to you? tolstoy-war-1881 What do you mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you thank me for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think of it, Prince? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think of this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you want tomorrow? tolstoy-war-1881 What do you want, my pretty?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you want, sir? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you want, your honor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you want? tolstoy-war-1881 What do you want?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does he want the bits for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does it matter whether it is St. Nicholas or St. Blasius? tolstoy-war-1881 What does it mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does she want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does that mean? tolstoy-war-1881 What does that prove?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does that woman want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does this fellow want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does this mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What else did he say to you? tolstoy-war-1881 What else do you expect?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What error or evil can there be in my wishing to do good, and even doing a little-- though I did very little and did it very badly? tolstoy-war-1881 What for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What for? tolstoy-war-1881 What for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What for? tolstoy-war-1881 What for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What good are they? tolstoy-war-1881 What has Speranski to do with the army regulations?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has been decided? tolstoy-war-1881 What has been decided?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has happened to her? tolstoy-war-1881 What has happened to her?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has he been doing all this time? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has he said to you? tolstoy-war-1881 What have I said and what have I done?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have the young people come to nowadays, eh, Feoktist? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have they taken a baby in there for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have you been about? tolstoy-war-1881 What have you been after? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have you done to Mlle Scherer? tolstoy-war-1881 What have you killed a man for, you thief?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What if the Smolensk people have offahd to waise militia for the Empewah? tolstoy-war-1881 What is a''ticket''?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is bad, Father? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is he talking about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it you are afraid of, Lise? tolstoy-war-1881 What is it you have got into your heads, eh?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it you wish, Colonel? tolstoy-war-1881 What is it, Natasha?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it, Nicholas? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it, dear? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? tolstoy-war-1881 What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? tolstoy-war-1881 What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? tolstoy-war-1881 What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? tolstoy-war-1881 What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is she so glad about? tolstoy-war-1881 What is that pain like? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is that, mon cher ami? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the German for''shelter''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the commander in chief doing here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the connection of that man with my childhood and life? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the difficulty? tolstoy-war-1881 What is the matter with you, my angel? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the matter with you, my darling? tolstoy-war-1881 What is the matter with you, my dear?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the matter, Count? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the matter, Mary? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the matter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the something? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is there to see? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is this, my dear? tolstoy-war-1881 What is this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is to be done? tolstoy-war-1881 What is wrong? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is your conception of Freemasonry? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is your petition? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is''the talk of all Moscow''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What knights? tolstoy-war-1881 What makes you think so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What misfortune? tolstoy-war-1881 What news, sir?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What next? tolstoy-war-1881 What now?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What of Sweden? tolstoy-war-1881 What of it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What officers? tolstoy-war-1881 What orders, your excellency?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What people are these? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What people are these? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What prayer was that you were saying? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What prince? tolstoy-war-1881 What proof have I that you are not lying?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What relation are you to Intendant General Kiril Andreevich Denisov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What right has he not to wish to receive me into his family? tolstoy-war-1881 What shall we sing?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What sort of Polish mazuwka is this? tolstoy-war-1881 What sort of another blackguard are you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What then? tolstoy-war-1881 What then?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What trouble would it be to you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was I saying? tolstoy-war-1881 What was he thinking when he uttered that word? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was it about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was the good of bringing him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What were losses, and Dolokhov, and words of honor?... tolstoy-war-1881 What were you saying?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What were you thinking about just now, Nicholas? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What will happen now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would it be to Thee to do this for me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would it be to you?... tolstoy-war-1881 What would it cost you to say a word to the Emperor, and then he would be transferred to the Guards at once?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would she feel,thought he,"if she saw me here now on this field with the cannon aimed at me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would you have me do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would you have, my dear fellow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What year did you enter the service? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s burning? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s happening here? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s he talking about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s in it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s it all about? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s that that has fallen?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s that to you? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the good of denying it, my dear? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s the good of freedom to me, your excellency? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the good of making so much of it? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s the matter with her?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the matter with you? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s the matter with you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the matter? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s the matter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the matter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the use of talking about me? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s to be done? tolstoy-war-1881 What''s to be done? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s up with you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s your name? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What, Monsieur Pierre... Do you consider that assassination shows greatness of soul? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What, are you wounded, my lad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What, outside our line? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What, teasing again? tolstoy-war-1881 What, to Petersburg? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? tolstoy-war-1881 What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? tolstoy-war-1881 What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? tolstoy-war-1881 What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? tolstoy-war-1881 What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? tolstoy-war-1881 What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? tolstoy-war-1881 What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? tolstoy-war-1881 What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? tolstoy-war-1881 What?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whatever are you bothering about, gentlemen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whatever is this? tolstoy-war-1881 When I take little Masha into society? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When am I to receive the money, Count? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When am I to wear it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When are you starting? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When did you get the letter? tolstoy-war-1881 When they are dead, what shall I drive?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When will her mother come? tolstoy-war-1881 When would you like them, your excellency?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where am I going? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where am I? tolstoy-war-1881 Where am I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are all the folks going? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are headquarters? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are they off to now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are they taking you to, you poor dear? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are we? tolstoy-war-1881 Where are we?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are you going? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are you going? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are you off to so early? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are you off to? tolstoy-war-1881 Where are you off to?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are you off to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are you off to?... tolstoy-war-1881 Where are you shoving to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where can I go now? tolstoy-war-1881 Where did I disappear to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where has he gone? tolstoy-war-1881 Where have you been? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where have you put it, Wostov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where have you to go to? tolstoy-war-1881 Where is Dolokhov?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he to go? tolstoy-war-1881 Where is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is it, that lofty sky that I did not know till now, but saw today? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is she? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is she? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is the Emperor? tolstoy-war-1881 Where is the commander in chief?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is the manifesto? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is the princess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is your dispatch? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where the devil have the leg bands been shoved to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where the devil...? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where to now, your excellency? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where were you going? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where''s that huntsman from? tolstoy-war-1881 Where''s the Elder?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where''s the Elder? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where, on which side, was now the line that had so sharply divided the two armies? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where? tolstoy-war-1881 Where? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where? tolstoy-war-1881 Wherefore?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whether Dolokhov comes or not, we must seize it, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which house is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which is he? tolstoy-war-1881 Which is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which is the senior? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which lady? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which one do you want, Ma''am''selle? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which was most delighted? tolstoy-war-1881 Who are they? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who are they? tolstoy-war-1881 Who are you talking about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who are you? tolstoy-war-1881 Who are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who art thou? tolstoy-war-1881 Who brought it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who can tell, your honor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who do you belong to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who do you think should be sent there? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who do you want, sir? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who do you want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who gave the report? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who has told them not to capture me these twenty times over? tolstoy-war-1881 Who invented Him, if He did not exist? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is going to get me the flowers? tolstoy-war-1881 Who is he?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is that man? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is to blame for it? tolstoy-war-1881 Who is your Elder here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who looks after the sick here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who should it be? tolstoy-war-1881 Who the devil has put the logs on the road?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who told you that? tolstoy-war-1881 Who told you that?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who was that? tolstoy-war-1881 Who was that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who will plow the land if they are set free? tolstoy-war-1881 Who would spare himself now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who''s that curtseying there? tolstoy-war-1881 Who''s that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who''s that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who''s that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who''s to put it out? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who? tolstoy-war-1881 Who? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who? tolstoy-war-1881 Who?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom do you mean, Aunt? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom do you want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom have you come from? tolstoy-war-1881 Whom shall I announce?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whose caleche is that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whose company? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why a blue coat? tolstoy-war-1881 Why am I not free? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are n''t you asleep, sir? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are n''t you beginning, Michael Ilarionovich? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are n''t you serving in the army? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are there none? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are these people with frightened faces stopping me? tolstoy-war-1881 Why are they leaving the town?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you crying, Mamma? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you going? tolstoy-war-1881 Why are you going? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you silent? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you sitting there like conspirators? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you so glum? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you wandering about like an outcast? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why ca n''t you understand? tolstoy-war-1881 Why could that not be as well?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did I tell her that''Je vous aime''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did Sonya run away? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did n''t you bwing that one? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did n''t you bwing the first one? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did n''t you come in? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did n''t you mention it, Prince? tolstoy-war-1881 Why did n''t you say who you were?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did they write, why did Lise tell me about it? tolstoy-war-1881 Why did you come to me?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did you not succeed in impressing on Bonaparte by diplomatic methods that he had better leave Genoa alone? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did you push yourself in there by daylight? tolstoy-war-1881 Why do I strive, why do I toil in this narrow, confined frame, when life, all life with all its joys, is open to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do n''t you enter the service, Uncle? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do n''t you play? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do n''t you renew the acquaintance? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do n''t you speak, cousin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do n''t you speak? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do n''t you want to go? tolstoy-war-1881 Why do they want to make her sing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you remain silent when heaven knows who permits herself to interfere, making a scene on the very threshold of a dying man''s room? tolstoy-war-1881 Why do you say that, when you are going to this terrible war, and he is so old? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you say that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you say that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you say this young man is so rich? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you shout so? tolstoy-war-1881 Why does Mamma object?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why does Prince Andrew, who sees this, say nothing to me about his sister? tolstoy-war-1881 Why does n''t he openly ask for your hand? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why does n''t the red- haired gunner run away as he is unarmed? tolstoy-war-1881 Why does she bother me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why does she come prowling here? tolstoy-war-1881 Why have n''t they carried him away?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why have we stopped? tolstoy-war-1881 Why have you come here, Count?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why have you shut it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why have you thrown that away? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why have you, who do not believe in the truth of the light and who have not seen the light, come here? tolstoy-war-1881 Why is he cross with me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is it hard to imagine eternity? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is it others see things and I do n''t? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is it so long? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is it true? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is it wrong? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is it you were never at Annette''s? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is n''t she dull and ashamed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why joke? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why not wash? tolstoy-war-1881 Why not?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why not?... tolstoy-war-1881 Why ride into the middle of the battalion?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should I envy them? tolstoy-war-1881 Why should I mind Monsieur Pierre being here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should n''t I go? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should n''t I marry her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should n''t I speak? tolstoy-war-1881 Why should n''t S-- S-- get the same distinction?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should n''t you go away, your excellency? tolstoy-war-1881 Why should we give up everything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should you be God knows where out of sight, during the battle? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should you be ashamed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why talk nonsense? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why talk of me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why terrible? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why this delay? tolstoy-war-1881 Why too much?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why too much?... tolstoy-war-1881 Why were bundles of useless papers from the government offices, and Leppich''s balloon and other articles removed?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why were the holy relics, the arms, ammunition, gunpowder, and stores of corn not removed? tolstoy-war-1881 Why''What the devil''?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why''s that fellow in front of the line? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why, are you a soldier then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why, did n''t you know, Miss? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why, do n''t you hear it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why, have you too much money? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why, is it late? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why, whatever is the matter, my dearest? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why, you remember before you went away?... tolstoy-war-1881 Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? tolstoy-war-1881 Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? tolstoy-war-1881 Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will Papa be back soon? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will Your Highness please take command of the first army? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will Your Majesty allow me to consult the colonel? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will he agree? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will there be any orders, your honor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will they bring our horses or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will they burn the bridge or not? tolstoy-war-1881 Will they give up Moscow like this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you believe it, Theodore Ivanych, those animals flew forty miles? tolstoy-war-1881 Will you bet? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you come? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you have something to eat? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you have the portmanteaus brought in? tolstoy-war-1881 Will you have them fetched back?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you not rest here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you step into the study? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wine? tolstoy-war-1881 With Natasha Rostova, yes?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | With our business, how can we get away? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wo n''t you come over to the other table? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would it not be better if the end did come, the very end? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would misfortune make my Russians lose heart?... tolstoy-war-1881 Would not such a meeting be too trying for him, dear Anna Mikhaylovna?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would not the French ladies leave Paris if the Russians entered it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would not your Serene Highness like to come inside? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would not your excellency like a little refreshment? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would you like a little mash? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would you marry him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, I know him..."I expect he has told you of his childish love for Natasha? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, I will approach... and then suddenly... with pistol or dagger? tolstoy-war-1881 Yes, and where do you put the others?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, and you remember how Papa in his blue overcoat fired a gun in the porch? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, but what am I to do?... tolstoy-war-1881 Yes, he is an agreeable young man.... Why do you ask me that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, he writes that the French were beaten at... at... what river is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, is there a family free from sorrow now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, it''s all very well, but when a man''s feet are frozen how can he walk? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, or no? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, that''s it, she means to elope with him, but what am I to do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, we must ride up.... Shall we both course it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, yes, and so...? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, yes, of course,said Pierre,"is n''t that what I''m saying?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, yes... so he grew tranquil and softened? tolstoy-war-1881 Yes, you have seen him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes-- that is, how do you mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes... no... to Petersburg? tolstoy-war-1881 Yes? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are Count Ilya Rostov''s son? tolstoy-war-1881 You are a Cossack?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are a colonel? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are friendly with Boris, are n''t you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are going? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are not asleep? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are not wounded? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are off to the war, Prince? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are proposing new military laws? tolstoy-war-1881 You are speaking of Buonaparte?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are speaking of the poor countess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are staying the whole evening, I hope? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are the commander of the Emperor Alexander''s regiment of Horse Guards? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are wounded? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You call him Vaska? tolstoy-war-1881 You did not get my letter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You do n''t know what love is...."But, Natasha, can that be all over? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You do n''t mind your honor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You do n''t recognize me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You do n''t seem to be used to riding, Count? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You do n''t think Moscow is in danger? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You do n''t understand? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You give me your word of honor not to go? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You had not noticed that I am a woman? tolstoy-war-1881 You have been in Paris recently, I believe? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have known Bezukhov a long time? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have met him, Aunt? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have n''t read the letter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have not yet seen my husband? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have observed that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have only lately arrived? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have quite turned his head, and why? tolstoy-war-1881 You know Metivier? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know N-- N-- received a snuffbox with the portrait last year? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know Nicholas has received a St. George''s Cross? tolstoy-war-1881 You know Sonya, my cousin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know her husband, of course? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know my son''s going, Marya Dmitrievna? tolstoy-war-1881 You know that pair of women''s gloves?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know they''ve come, Marie? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know,he added, stopping at the door,"why I''m especially fond of that music? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know,said the princess in the same tone of voice and still in French, turning to a general,"my husband is deserting me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You like listening? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You mean the left flank? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You must look for husbands for them whether you like it or not...."Well,said she,"how''s my Cossack?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You noticed nothing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You picked it up?... tolstoy-war-1881 You promised Countess Rostova to marry her and were about to elope with her, is that so?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You remember when I looked in the mirror for you... at Otradnoe at Christmas? tolstoy-war-1881 You remember?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You saw him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You say he is dying? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You see, my dear... What''s that mess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You see?... tolstoy-war-1881 You think I''m an old man and do n''t understand the present state of affairs?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You think he went off just by chance? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You think so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You think so?... tolstoy-war-1881 You want a coffeepot, do n''t you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You were meaning to go out, were n''t you, Mamma? tolstoy-war-1881 You will change it, wo n''t you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You will, of course, command it yourself? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You wo n''t bear me a grudge, Prokhor Ignatych? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You wo n''t do it again, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ll call round? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ll come to the costume tournament, Countess? tolstoy-war-1881 You''re a gentleman, are n''t you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''re also waiting for the commander in chief? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''re here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''re not asleep? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''re not cold? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ve seen a lot of trouble, sir, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You? tolstoy-war-1881 You?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Your excellency, should not Mary Bogdanovna be sent for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Your excellency, the superintendent of the lunatic asylum has come: what are your commands? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Your excellency,said Rostov,"may I ask a favor?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Your excellency..."Well, your excellency, what? tolstoy-war-1881 Your name?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Zakhar is shouting that I should turn to the left, but why to the left? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''From whom did you get it?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''From whom did you get the proclamation?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''Hey, are you dumb?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''How could you have written it yourself?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''When, and in what month?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''Where did it happen, Daddy?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''Where is the old man who has been suffering innocently and in vain? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ''Will you please be silent?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | ( 2) What force produces the movement of the nations? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | * Do n''t you think so?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | * Do you know the proverb? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | *"Are you the master here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | *"Busy already?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | *"Tell me, is Colonel Gerard here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | *"What''s he singing about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | *"Who goes there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | *( 2) Suvorov now-- he knew what he was about; yet they beat him a plate couture,*(3) and where are we to find Suvorovs now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | --she was speaking hurriedly, evidently afraid her strength might fail her--"Will he ever forgive me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A daughter, I suppose?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A little later when he went up to the large circle, Anna Pavlovna said to him:"I hear you are refitting your Petersburg house?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A minister? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A misfortune for life? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A petition?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A pity you were not there-- what would you have said?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A slur on my name? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A storm?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A venial, or a mortal, sin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A very simple thought occurred to him:"What does it matter to me or to Bitski what the Emperor was pleased to say at the Council? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | A victory? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Afraid of the''minister''as that idiot Alpatych called him this morning?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | After all, one must be human, you know....""Where is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | After hearing him, Kutuzov said in French:"Then you do not think, like some others, that we must retreat?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Again they interrupted him: they had not asked where he was going, but why he was found near the fire? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah we to take Smolensk as our patte''n? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ah, I also wanted to ask you where our position is exactly?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | All I care about is to enjoy seeing the chase, is it not so, Count? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | All that is beautiful, but what do we, I mean the Austrian court, care for your victories? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Always the same and always a fraud? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I falling? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I hindering anyone?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I not right, Denisov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I not right, Monsieur Pierre?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I not right, good Christians?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I not too conceited and self- confident? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I right or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Am I uglier?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And I said,"I should have known you had I met you by chance,"and I thought to myself,"Am I telling the truth?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And I?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And a bed got ready, and tea?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And a house? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And a housewife? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And am I to be degwaded?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And by old habit he asked himself the question:"Well, and what then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And could she see him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And did I do it for my country''s sake? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And do n''t go to any meeting yourself, do you hear?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And do you know he has fallen in love with Sonya?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And do you know the new way of courting?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And even if they did arrest me for being here, what would it matter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And he said,"Tell me frankly what is your chief temptation? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And his plighted word? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how am I to find the nearest way to overtake my regiment, which must by now be getting near the Rogozhski gate?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how could she have a love letter from him in her hand? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how could she let Kuragin go to such lengths? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how do you, a young man and a young hussar, how do you judge of it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how has it ended? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how have you wriggled onto the staff?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how is it she has not pride enough to see it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how is our dear invalid?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how was he to blame, with his dimple and blue eyes? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how well he looks on his horse, eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And how... did he speak?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And if they have somehow been overlooked, you ought to know where they are, and must find them, because...""What next?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And is he very nice?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And is it not a palpable, unquestionable good if a peasant, or a woman with a baby, has no rest day or night and I give them rest and leisure?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And is it worth tormenting oneself, when one has only a moment of life in comparison with eternity?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And my father? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And my people? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And now, when shall we meet again? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And over there?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And perhaps they are both impostors?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And receiving the reply that there were more than two hundred churches, he remarked:"Why such a quantity of churches?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And so you no longer wish to marry Boris?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And the lathe?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And the walks in the avenues? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And there''s another has been beaten too-- they say he''s nearly done for.... Oh, the people... Are n''t they afraid of sinning?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And there?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And to feel not exactly dull, but sad?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what about your mother? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what am I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what are they doing here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what are they doing, all these courtiers? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what can they want with me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what did he say?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what do you think of the Boulogne expedition? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what do you think, Count? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what do you think, dear friend? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what have they promised? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what have you done with all these good gifts? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what is justice? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what is the time limit for such reactions? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what is there? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what sort of life would it be for Sonya-- if she''s a girl with a heart? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And what was it for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And when did it begin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And when he had said it for the tenth time, Molibre''s words:"Mais que diable alloit- il faire dans cette galere?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And when will all this end?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And where are you going, please?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who is that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who then would give us the Vladimir medal and ribbon? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who was to blame for it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And who would marry Marie for love? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why are they dawdling there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why do they all speak of a''military genius''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why do they stay on so long in Moscow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why expose his own children in the battle? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why if they were guilty of not carrying out a prearranged plan were they not tried and punished? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why is he doing this to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why not enjoy myself?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why was the Son...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why were all efforts exhausted and six thousand men sacrificed to defend it till late at night on the twenty- fourth? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And with this aim, in one of her talks with her Father Confessor, she insisted on an answer to the question, in how far was she bound by her marriage? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And would you now like to look round my place?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And you, Mamma?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And your old parents, are they still living?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | And,"he went on after a pause,"what will it be in five years, if he goes on like this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Anger? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Angry? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Anna Pavlovna in dismay detained him with the words:"Do you know the Abbe Morio? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Another time he interrupted, saying:"And will she soon be confined?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Any letters?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are n''t there plenty of troops on the march? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are n''t they laughing at me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are the lads asleep?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are there no women living unmarried, and even the happier for it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are things ready?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are we despicable Germans?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are we to continue firing?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are we to take him up to her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you content with yourself and with your life?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you going to be a guardsman or a diplomatist?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you going to have lunch too? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you going to remain as you are, dear princess?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you ill?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you ill?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you in command here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you lost or have the wolves eaten you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you satisfied now?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you satisfied with him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you satisfied?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you starting tomorrow?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you sure? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Are you the same as we? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Arriving at this conclusion we can reply directly and positively to these two essential questions of history:( 1) What is power? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | As they drove along he shuddered and exclaimed several times so audibly that the coachman asked him:"What is your pleasure?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ask Denisov whether it is not out of the question for a cadet to demand satisfaction of his regimental commander?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At a time of such love, such rapture, and such self- sacrifice, what do any of our quarrels and affronts matter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At breakfast Pierre told the princess, his cousin, that he had been to see Princess Mary the day before and had there met--"Whom do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At that moment he did not desire Moscow, or victory, or glory( what need had he for any more glory?). |
tolstoy-war-1881 | At your house?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Because I like his company? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Because Sonya is poor I must not love her,"he thought,"must not respond to her faithful, devoted love? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Been back long?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Been under fire already?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Bennigsen opened the council with the question:"Are we to abandon Russia''s ancient and sacred capital without a struggle, or are we to defend it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Bennigsen stopped speaking and, noticing that Pierre was listening, suddenly said to him:"I do n''t think this interests you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Besides who can tell whether I saw anything or not?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Besides, why should n''t he take bribes? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Between ourselves, mon cher, do you belong to the Masons?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But Bogdanich, without looking at or recognizing Rostov, shouted to him:"Who''s that running on the middle of the bridge? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But I may come again tomorrow?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But I-- what is to become of me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But Sonya? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But am I really to abandon forever the joy of Prince Andrew''s love, in which I have lived so long?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But as if this angered him, he bent his head quite low and muttered:"Why should we agree? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But can it be true that I am in Moscow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But can she love me?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But do I love my wife? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But do you know who rescued her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But even if one might, what feeling except veneration could such a man as my father evoke? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how about you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how cast off all the superfluous, devilish burden of my outer man? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how did God enjoin that law? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how did you come here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how do you do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how is Petya?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how is that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how will it be? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But how? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But if you want to know the truth... if you want to know whether I am happy? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But in general, I think...""So you do n''t want to do anything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But in order to begin negotiations, what is demanded of me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But she still hoped, and asked, in words she herself did not trust:"But how is his wound? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But that''s not the point... Come, how are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But the Guards, Rapp, the Guards are intact?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But the bits left over?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But the enemy has lost masses... What would it have cost him to hold out for another two days? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But to whom should I say that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what about me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what about your excellency?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what am I to do if I love her?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what am I to do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what am I to do?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what awaits us tomorrow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what is chance? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what is the aim of your alliance with England? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what is the matter with you, Mary?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what is there to oblige him to reply? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what is to be done, old man? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what then?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what''s the good?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what''s the matter with you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what''s the southern army to do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what''s the use of talking? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But what''s this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But when your father comes back tomorrow what am I to tell him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where am I?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where are you off to?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where is Prince Bolkonski''s regiment? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But where to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But who are we? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But who first joined his army? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why are you so anxious? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why did it not react on Louis XIV or on Louis XV-- why should it react just on Louis XVI? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why did they not blow up the bridge, if it was mined?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why did they not execute those maneuvers? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why do you ask me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But why''still?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But wo n''t you come to this other table?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But, above all, the French will be here any day now, so what are we waiting for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | But, my dear, will you not give us a little hope of touching this heart, so kind and generous? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | By the Lyadov upland, is n''t he?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | CHAPTER II What force moves the nations? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | CHAPTER V"And what do you think of this latest comedy, the coronation at Milan?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | CHAPTER XIV"Well, is she pretty? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ca n''t I go away from here, run away, bury myself somewhere?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ca n''t you do it more gently?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ca n''t you hurry up? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ca n''t you wait? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can I do anything for you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can I hope? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can I lift my arm? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can I never...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can I see him-- can I?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can I see him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can all that make me any happier or better?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be possible?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be that I have none?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be that they will take me too? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be true that there can be no more playing with life, that now I am grown up, that on me now lies a responsibility for my every word and deed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it be true? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can it have been yesterday when I ordered Platov to retreat, or was it the evening before, when I had a nap and told Bennigsen to issue orders? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can one be calm in times like these if one has any feeling?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can she have left off loving Prince Andrew? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can the French be so enormously superior to us that when we had surrounded them with superior forces we could not beat them? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can they be coming at me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can they be saved when the army has gone? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can you fancy the figure he cut?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Can you point it out to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Clever people, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Come now, what was this duel about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Come now, where has this great commander of yours shown his skill?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Compared to what preoccupied him, was it not a matter of indifference whether he lived with his wife or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Confused? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Could he be to blame toward her, or could her father, whom she knew loved her in spite of it all, be unjust? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Could one possibly make out amid all that confusion what did or did not happen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Could she be constant in her attachments? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Could she, like other women"( Vera meant herself),"love a man once for all and remain true to him forever? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Could the joy of love, of earthly love for a man, be for her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Courage conquest guarantees; Have we not Bagration? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Crushed?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Cut off? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did I hinder you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did I really take it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did he know that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did he say when the battles are to begin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did he thank us?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did n''t I tell you, Michael Mitrich, that if it was said''on the march''it meant in greatcoats?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did n''t he write in those idiotic broadsheets that anyone,''whoever it might be, should be dragged to the lockup by his hair''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did the Tugendbund which saved Europe"( they did not then venture to suggest that Russia had saved Europe)"do any harm? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you behave like that six months ago?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you know?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you not notice discouragement?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you see the Emperor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you take part in the campaign?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Did you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Disgrace the whole regiment because of one scoundrel? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t I feel in my soul that I am part of this vast harmonious whole? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t I know that at the rate we are living our means wo n''t last long? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t we know those''receipts''of yours? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you hear? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you hear? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you know that I love him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you pray?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you see it''s a woman?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you see the general wants to pass?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you see the plumes?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you see the skirmishers are retreating? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you see we''re all standing still? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you see you are not wanted here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you see? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you think so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you think so?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you understand?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do n''t you want any? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do palace revolutions-- in which sometimes only two or three people take part-- transfer the will of the people to a new ruler? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do they think we''re dogs?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you feel it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you hear?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know I am dissatisfied with your younger son? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know I have sent for Pierre? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know that profound thinker? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know that she has lost her father?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know that since your daughter came out everyone has been enraptured by her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know the Daniel Cooper?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know the tale about him and Count Markov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you know what he said to the Emperor?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you now see that it was not he but I who moved you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you promise?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember how we and Nicholas, all three of us, talked in the sitting room after supper? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember how we quarreled? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember how we went to the Sparrow Hills with Madame Jacquot?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember what I saw?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember what fun it was?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember when I was punished once about some plums? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you remember?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you suppose I... who could think?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you think I am not grateful?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you think the French are here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you understand that in consideration of the count''s services, his request would be granted?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you understand, my child?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you understand?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you understand?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you want a taste of this?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you want me to do it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you want me to go and tell him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you want some more to eat?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you want something to eat? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you want the carriage?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you wish or not to be Prince Anatole Kuragin''s wife? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Do you wish to enter the Brotherhood of Freemasons under my sponsorship?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Does he think me a scoundrel, or an old fool who, without any reason, keeps his own daughter at a distance and attaches this Frenchwoman to himself? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Does it mean that it''s the real thing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Does n''t he know that he is a man, just a man, while I...? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Does n''t it look as if that glow were in Moscow?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Dolokhov banged down the lid of his desk and turned to Anatole with an ironic smile:"Do you know? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh, Makeev?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Eh?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Even in the country do we get any rest? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Evidently it had to be....""But is it possible that all is really ended?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Falling? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Fine, is n''t it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Folks,''she says,''are all gone, so why,''she says,''do n''t we go?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | For a hunt and a gallop, eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | For me?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | For myself, I can tell you, Count, I enjoy riding in company such as this... what could be better?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | For whom then is the trial intended? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Forgive us for Christ''s sake, eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | From time to time he went out to ask:"Has n''t she come yet?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | From whom?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | From whom?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Gave you a twist?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Gluttony? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Go there? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Had he not established schools and hospitals and liberated his serfs? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Had he not told her, yes, told her to make a list, and not to admit anyone who was not on that list? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Had he repented of his unbelief? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Had you heard?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Halt, is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Harness, but how can I harness everything?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has he been degraded into a field marshal, or into a soldier? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has he not thought that I may do the same?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has he spoken to you of going away?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has it begun? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has n''t he been hanged yet?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has n''t she?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Has your regiment had its rice?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have I disgraced myself in any way? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have I killed anyone, or insulted or wished harm to anyone? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have n''t they hurt his feelings?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have n''t you seen a child?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have people since the Revolution become happier? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have the officer tried and disgrace the whole regiment? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have these people no feeling, or honor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have they fed him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have they reached Moscow at last?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have we fo''gotten the waising of the militia in the yeah''seven? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you been to the Horse Guards?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you chosen a post in which you might be of service to your neighbor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you ever thought of your tens of thousands of slaves? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you gone mad?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you got it, Denisov?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you got it, Makeev?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you heard he is getting married? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you heard of Raevski''s exploit?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you heard she has broken off her engagement without consulting anybody? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Have you helped them physically and morally? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He asked one,''From whom did you get it?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He asked,"Whose company?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He could not tell them what we say now:"Why fight, why block the road, losing our own men and inhumanly slaughtering unfortunate wretches? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He did not repeat to himself with a sickening feeling of shame the words he had spoken, or say:"Oh, why did I not say that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He has made me...""Made what?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He has spoken?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He is fine, dark- blue and red.... How can I explain it to you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He need not come so often....""Why not, if he likes to?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He was shouting in a gasping voice:"Are you mad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He''s nice?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He''s stupid, but he has experience, a quick eye, and resolution.... And what role is your young monarch playing in that monstrous crowd? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He, the sensitive, tender Prince Andrew, how could he say that, before her whom he loved and who loved him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | He, your father, I know him... if he challenges him to a duel will that be all right? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Her face said:"Why ask? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Here now-- wouldn''t one of these gentlemen like to ride over to the French camp with me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Hey, who''s there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Hey?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Hippolyte spluttered again, and amid his laughter said,"And you were saying that the Russian ladies are not equal to the French? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | His Serene Highness? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | His disillusionments?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | His former love? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | His hopes for the future?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | His looks and cold tone to his daughter seemed to say:"There, you see? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How am I to renounce forever these vile fancies, so as peacefully to fulfill Thy will?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How are you going to speak to her-- thou or you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How are you, how are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can I explain?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can I go and apologize like a little boy asking forgiveness?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can one do without government? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can one judge Father? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can one see all this and not feel sad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can she sing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can you chuck it in like that or shove it under the cord where it''ll get rubbed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can you laugh at it, Count?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can you talk such nonsense?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can you torture me and yourself like that, for a mere fancy?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How can you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How could I bring him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How could he be alive?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How could it go so far? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How could one help understanding? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How could that happen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How could the commanders lead their troops to a field of battle they considered impossible to hold? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How d''ye do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How d''ye do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How d''ye do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How d''you do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How dare you say he is dishonorable? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How dare you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did I come to do it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did he impress you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did it begin, when did it all come about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did it begin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did they all find place in her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did this happen?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did you get here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did you get things settled? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How did you manage to get here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do I know what I was before?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do matters stand?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do you do, my dear boy? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How do you feel?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How does God above look at them and hear them?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How does he use it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How does it hurt him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How have you spent it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How have you used it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it that millions of men commit collective crimes-- make war, commit murder, and so on? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it that we are staying on?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it that we women do n''t want anything of the kind, do n''t need it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it you are on foot? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it you know everything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is one to help feeling sad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How is your old fellow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How long shall they wield unlawful power? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How long, O Lord, how long shall the wicked triumph? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How many churches are there in Moscow?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How many houses? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How mend matters? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How much longer? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How much?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How shall I speak to the Emperor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How should the past life of nations and of humanity be regarded-- as the result of the free, or as the result of the constrained, activity of man? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How soon will he be here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How was he maimed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How was he wounded? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How was it I did not see that lofty sky before? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How was it that two guns were abandoned in the center?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How will she take that si? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How will they cross Pomerania?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | How would they stop it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | However, I think the regiment is not a bad one, eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Hullo, who''s there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Husband? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I always make it a rule to speak out... Well, what answer am I to take? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I am ashamed as it is to leave her on your hands...""Why talk nonsense? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I am guilty and must endure... what? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I am sorry for him as a man, but what can one do?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I am too old for her.... Why do n''t you speak?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I command it....""Why did I utter those words? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I congratulated him on Mack''s arrival... What''s the matter, Rostov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I did not think he would get it to you so quickly.... Well, how are you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I do n''t know what would become of him if Natasha did n''t keep him in hand.... Have you any idea why he went to Petersburg? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I do n''t quite remember how, but do n''t you remember that it could all be arranged and how nice it all was? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I do n''t speak of his capacity as a general, but at a time like this how they appoint a decrepit, blind old man, positively blind? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I do n''t want... to be tormented? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I embraced him and kissed his hands, and he said,"Hast thou noticed that my face is different?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I enter, and at the table... who do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I have confided in you....""But why this secrecy? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I hope, my dear friend, you will carry out your father''s wish?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I hope... but it will depend on her....""I will speak to her when I have your consent.... Do you give it to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I lift it, but ask myself: could I have abstained from lifting my arm at the moment that has already passed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I lived for glory.--And after all what is glory? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I myself thought like that, and do you know what saved me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I only need see Prince Vasili Sergeevich: he is staying here, is he not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I shall have my own orchestra, but should n''t we get the gypsy singers as well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I should like to know one thing....""Know what?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I suppose he wo n''t go?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I think I could?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I think he will not be out of place in a family consultation; is it not so, Prince?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I think you remember that, your excellency?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I wished to be at peace.... And what will become of me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | I?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Idleness? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If I see, clearly see, that ladder leading from plant to man, why should I suppose it breaks off at me and does not go farther and farther? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If Murat had not lost sight of the Russians? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If Napoleon had not remained inactive? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If Papa were alive... would he agree with you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If he had not known that he was dying, how could he have failed to pity her and how could he speak like that in her presence? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If not, then why was Napoleon I? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If power be the collective will of the people transferred to their ruler, was Pugachev a representative of the will of the people? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If the Emperor is wounded, am I to try to save myself?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If the Russian army at Krasnaya Pakhra had given battle as Bennigsen and Barclay advised? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | If you want me to do as you wish, eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | In Moscow they are saying heaven knows what about him.... What do you think of him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | In international relations, is the will of the people also transferred to their conqueror? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | In our times that is worth something, is n''t it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | In the evening, when Prince Andrew had left, the countess went up to Natasha and whispered:"Well, what?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | In the hall the porch door opened, and someone asked,"At home?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | In the midst of a description of the last Petersburg fete she addressed her brother:"So you are really going to the war, Andrew?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | In three days to forget everything and so...""Three days?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | In what does the substance of those reproaches lie? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Irritability? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is Timokhin here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is a man a genius who can order bread to be brought up at the right time and say who is to go to the right and who to the left? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is everyone all right?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he alive?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he glad of it or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he ill?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he quite well?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he to go up for examination?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is he very terrible, Denisov?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is his wife with him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it all right?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it better to give up Moscow without a battle, or by accepting battle to risk losing the army as well as Moscow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it for my own pleasure that I am at the farm or in the office from morning to night? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it long since he grew worse? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it my fault that you are enchanting?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it my fault?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it not all the same?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it not so, gentlemen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible that not one of all these men will notice me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible that on account of court and personal considerations tens of thousands of lives, and my life, my life,"he thought,"must be risked?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible that the meaning of life was not disclosed to him before he died?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it possible that the truth of life has been revealed to me only to show me that I have spent my life in falsity? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it time?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it true that Moscow is called''Holy Moscow''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it true, as they tell me, that I ca n''t even go away?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t Princess Mary mistaken? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t it all the same?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t it possible to help them? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t it so, Papa?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t it so, lads?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t it true?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t that friendship?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t that so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t the road wide enough?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is n''t there something to drink?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is she happy? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is she well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that how you look at it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that not so?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that right?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that true?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that true?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is that what you''re here for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is the army retreating or will there be another battle?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is the fire only for you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is the movement of the peoples at the time of the Crusades explained by the life and activity of the Godfreys and the Louis- es and their ladies? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is the way blocked? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is there any collective action which can not find its justification in political unity, in patriotism, in the balance of power, or in civilization? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is there any hope?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is this Melyukovka? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Is this his son?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It has been a delightful evening, has it not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It was a unique chance to show his devotion to the Emperor and he had not made use of it...."What have I done?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It was as if he said to them:"I know you, I know you, but why should I bother about you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It was lucky the maids ran in just then...""Now, why frighten them?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It was n''t your fault so why should you mind? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It was not the question"What for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It was plain that this"well?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s all a trick,"said Dunyasha,"and when Yakov Alpatych returns let us get away... and please do n''t...""What is a trick?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s not pleasant, but what''s to be done, my dear fellow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | It''s true he has been reinstated, but how could they fail to do that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Just the same?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Kutuzov is removed and he is appointed..."Well and then?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Kutuzov swayed his head, as much as to say:"How is one man to deal with it all?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Kutuzov?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Laziness? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Leave? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Lend a hand... will you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | MARY"Ah, you are sending off a letter, Princess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Mamma, are you asleep?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Mamma?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Mary, you have got thinner?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I ask to be attached to the first squadron?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I come with you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I hope?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I see to it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I speak to him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | May I?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Me whom everyone is so fond of?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Modern history replying to these questions says: you want to know what this movement means, what caused it, and what force produced these events? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Must I really? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | My dear, what does it mean?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | My immortal soul? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natalie is quite well again now, is n''t she?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha continued:"Do n''t you really understand? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha did not answer at once but only looked up with a smile that said reproachfully:"How can you ask such a question?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha, have you considered what these secret reasons can be?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Natasha-- are you glad?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Nearly ready? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Never again? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Nicholas understood that it was all over; but he said in an indifferent tone:"Well, wo n''t you go on? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No, really, have you anything against me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | No?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now do I love my finger? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now do you understand''Uncle''?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now tell me, Count, was it right, was it honorable, of Bezukhov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now tell me, my dear boy, are you serving in the Horse Guards?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now we see light...""Then why was it forbidden?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now what are you dawdling for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now what was the colonel to do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now why are you asking silly questions about the Fire Brigade? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Now, do me a service.... What horses have you come with? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Nowhere to hunt with your dogs? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | O God, why is n''t he here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Occupied? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Of course you know Dmitri Sergeevich? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Of what is she thinking? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Of what, of whom, are we speaking? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Often, speaking with vexation of some failure or irregularity, he would say:"What can one do with our Russian peasants?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, where am I to go? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, why does n''t he come?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Oh, you want a knife?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | On what, then, was Count Rostopchin''s fear for the tranquillity of Moscow based in 1812? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | One can see at once that they''re engaged....""Drubetskoy has proposed?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Only not quite my taste-- he is so narrow, like the dining- room clock.... Do n''t you understand? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Only one terrible doubt sometimes crossed his mind:"Was n''t it all a dream? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Only this, then: whatever may happen to you when I am not here...""What can happen?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Or are you afraid of me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Or have we already come up against the French?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Or is the baby born?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Or was it earlier still?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ought I to put it right?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Ours?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Out of sorts?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Perhaps it might really have been so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Perhaps you did not like it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Perhaps you think you have invented a novelty? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Perhaps you will go and live with him too?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Pierre suddenly began, lowering his head and looking like a bull about to charge,"why do you think so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Please forgive me, darling.... Mamma, what does it matter what we take away? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Please, my dear fellow, will you sharpen my saber for me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Presently he added:"That''s what we fathers have to put up with.... Is this princess of yours rich?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Prince Andrew interrupted him and cried sharply:"Yes, ask her hand again, be magnanimous, and so on?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Princess Mary looked at him with frightened inquiry, not understanding why he did not reply to what she chiefly wanted to know: how was her brother? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Really, eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Really... what do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Really? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Revolution and regicide a grand thing?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Rich, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Rostov let go of the horse and was about to ride on, when a wounded officer passing by addressed him:"Who is it you want?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Rostov shrugged his shoulders as much as to say:"Nor do I, but what''s one to do?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Satisfied, are you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Satisfied?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Saw the real Mack? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | See her knife?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | See this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Send two men? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sha n''t I be ashamed to remember this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall I go with some of my hussars to see?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall I have a talk with him and see what he thinks?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shall we join up our packs?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She again glanced rapidly from Pierre''s face to that of the lady in the black dress and said:"Do you really not recognize her?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She asked herself in perplexity:"What does he look for in me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She has heard from her niece how you rescued her... Can you guess?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She is so... you know?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She knew that, and asked herself,"What next?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She was finishing her last prayer:"Can it be that this couch will be my grave?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She was not expecting us?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | She wo n''t survive....""Who?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Shinshin?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Should n''t we put a cordon round to prevent the rest from running away?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Should we let them go on or not?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So I went for them with my ax, this way:''What are you up to?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So he did soften?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So is n''t it all the same not to send them?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So they asked the old man:''What are you being punished for, Daddy?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So what was the use of performing various operations on the French who were running away as fast as they possibly could? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So when Prince Volkonski, who was in the chair, called on him to give his opinion, he merely said:"Why ask me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So why should I not stay at his house? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So why should he have made such a sacrifice? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you are Boris? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you are Pwince Andwew Bolkonski?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you have abundance, then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you still love me, my romantic Julie? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you''ll give her the packet?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you''re not angry with me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So you, too, are in the great world?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | So, my dear boy, you wish to serve the Tsar and the country? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Some new relics?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Someone asks:"What moves it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Something in my pocket-- can''t remember...""Tikhon, what did we talk about at dinner?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Sonya, why?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Speak, Mamma, why do n''t you say anything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Standing or lying?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Still getting stouter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Strange, is n''t it, General?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Surely not to the Club or to pay calls?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Suvorov could n''t manage them so what chance has Michael Kutuzov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Tell me what this wretched war is for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Tell me, can I hope? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Tell me....""You love him?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Terrible in battle... gallant... with the fair"( he winked and smiled),"that''s what the French are, Monsieur Pierre, are n''t they?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That Napoleon has left Moscow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That dreadful question,"What for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That is true, but still why did n''t you capture him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That is why I told him... Was it all right?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That terrible question"Why?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | That''s it... Where are you shoving to?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The Military Governor himself?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The adjutant asked whether Napoleon wished the troops to cross it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The bolts? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The bullets having spared you, do you want to try typhus? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The commander in chief is expected and you leave your place? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The doctor thought he had guessed them, and inquiringly repeated:"Mary, are you afraid?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The little princess? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The looks the visitors cast on him seemed to say:"And what is he sitting here for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The nearest soldiers shrank back, the gun driver stopped his horse, but from behind still came the shouts:"Onto the ice, why do you stop? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The only question is, has it been destroyed or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The only thought in his mind at that time was: who was it that had really sentenced him to death? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The other day at the Apraksins''I heard a lady asking,''Is that the famous Prince Andrew?'' |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The peasants are rioting, and you ca n''t manage them? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The police tried to interfere, and what did the young men do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The question for him now was:"Have I really allowed Napoleon to reach Moscow, and when did I do so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The question: how did individuals make nations act as they wished and by what was the will of these individuals themselves guided? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The radiant eyes gazed at him questioningly: would he approve or disapprove of her diary? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The shaft horse swayed from side to side, moving his ears as if asking:"Is n''t it time to begin now?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The stomach? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The third thing-- what else was it you talked about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The troops are in complete disorder...""You have seen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | The valet''s sleepy, frightened exclamation,"What do you want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then Bezukhov, eh? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then I do n''t eat, do n''t wash... and how is it with you?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then followed other questions just as simple:"Was Kutuzov well? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then he opened them and whispered softly:"And the tea?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then it''s settled?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then there is only one thing left-- to go away, but where could I go?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then what are you up to now?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then who was executing him, killing him, depriving him of life-- him, Pierre, with all his memories, aspirations, hopes, and thoughts? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then why harm anyone?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then why push?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then why those severed arms and legs and those dead men?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then why was that scoundrel admitted? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Then you married, my dear sir-- took on yourself responsibility for the guidance of a young woman; and what have you done? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There are four hundred? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There has been an encounter with Mortier? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There he is, do you see him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There in the realms of eternal peace and blessedness?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There it is again, do you hear?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There''s Lise, married to Andrew-- a better husband one would think could hardly be found nowadays-- but is she contented with her lot? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There, you see? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | There, you see? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | They are still young...."She bent her head and continued in a whisper:"Has he performed his final duty, Prince? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | They have no bread?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Thinner?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | This combination of Austrian precision with Russian valor-- what more could be wished for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | This secret correspondence... How could you let him go so far?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Those pranks in Petersburg when they played some tricks on a policeman, did n''t they do it together? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To Kiev?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To all questions put to him-- whether important or quite trifling-- such as: Where would he live? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To each new arrival Anna Pavlovna said,"You have not yet seen my aunt,"or"You do not know my aunt?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To favor revolutions, overthrow everything, repel force by force?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To join the hussars? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To kill me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To play blindman''s bluff? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To that question,"What for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To unite all?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To weturn at once?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To whom did you apply?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To whom? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | To whom?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Truly?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Under what condition is the will of the people delegated to one person? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Vienna occupied?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wants to vanquish Buonaparte?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was I mistaken before, or am I mistaken now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was anybody ever so much in love with you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was he going to rebuild? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was he like that incessant moaning of the adjutant''s? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was he now there? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was it from Olmutz?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was it serious? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was n''t I fond of him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was n''t he my friend? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was that real or not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was the will of the Confederation of the Rhine transferred to Napoleon in 1806? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Was the will of the Russian people transferred to Napoleon in 1809, when our army in alliance with the French went to fight the Austrians? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | We are childwen of the dust... but one falls in love and one is a God, one is pua''as on the first day of cweation... Who''s that now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | We heard reports that Prince Auersperg was defending Vienna?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, Mr. Hussar, and what regiment do you serve in?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and what are we to do with this man?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and what do you think, dear friends?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and what do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and what harm is there in that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and what has been decided about Novosiltsev''s dispatch? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and what news from the army?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, and you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, are you coming with me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, are you off to the front?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, have you at last decided on anything? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, have you been to the Governor''s?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, he took that icon home with him for a few days and what did he do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, if he had carried you off... do you think they would n''t have found him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, mon cher, what are you doing personally?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what are you standing there for, you sca''cwow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what do you, what do you feel in your soul, your whole soul-- shall I live? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what else do you want?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what have you proved? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what is Paris saying?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, what is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well, why have n''t you taken one?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Well?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Were the Potemkins, Suvorovs, and Orlovs Germans? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Were you there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What about Austria?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What about you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I doing? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I going to do?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I to do if I love him and the other one too?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I to do with myself?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I to do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I to do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What am I to do?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What answer did Novosiltsev get? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are the habits of the military? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are they doing?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are they doing?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are those verses? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are we scared at and of whom are we afraid? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are we to do with her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you doing?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you stopping for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you thinking about? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you thinking of, eh?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are you waiting for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are your orders about Vereshchagin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What are your plans?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What art thou? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What baby...? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What business is it of yours?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can I do, Sonya?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can I do? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can I do?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can be keeping him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What can doctors cure? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What causes historical events? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What concern was it of his that somewhere or other that woman was leading the life she preferred? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What could I have lost? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What could all that matter in comparison with the will of God, without Whose care not a hair of man''s head can fall? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What could he have done to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What decision? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did I say?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did I tell you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did I want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did happen to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did he say? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did he say?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did he say?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did he say?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did it matter to anybody, and especially to him, whether or not they found out that their prisoner''s name was Count Bezukhov? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did you commit by so acting? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did you say? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What did you say?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do these reproaches mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do they mean by it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do they want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you make of it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you mean?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you say?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you seek from us? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think he replied? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think of Natalie? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think of it, my dear?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think, Prince?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you think?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you want of him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you want with him?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you want?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What do you want?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does all this mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does he feel? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does it all mean?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does it all mean?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does it mean?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does one live for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does she think about me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does she want? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does that mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does this duel prove? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does this mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What does this mean? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What force made men act so? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What had happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What had she to do with the justice or injustice of other people? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What had they to be afraid of?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has become of him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has become of you, you son of a bitch? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has happened?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What has she given you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What hast thou attained relying on reason only? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have I done to her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have I done to you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have I...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have they done?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have you been up to now, I should like to know?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have you come for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What have you done for your neighbor? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What holiness is there in giving concerts in the choir? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What if he gave me a place near him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What if what he seeks in me is not there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is Petersburg? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is anyone in the world to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is bad? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is conscience and the perception of right and wrong in actions that follows from the consciousness of freedom? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is genius? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is going on in the world?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is going to happen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is good? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is happening to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is he thinking now?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is her mind like? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is his general condition?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is in her heart? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it all? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it for?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it meant to prove? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it to me?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it, Princess?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it, gentlemen?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is life, and what is death? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is love?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is man''s responsibility to society, the conception of which results from the conception of freedom? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is needed for success in warfare? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is power? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is she thinking of? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is sin, the conception of which arises from the consciousness of man''s freedom? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the good of that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the matter?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the trial for, when he is not here and will never return? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is the use of that, when a third of their army has melted away on the road from Moscow to Vyazma without any battle?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is there to be surprised at?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is there to talk about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is this gnawing of conscience I am feeling now?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What is to be done in these circumstances? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What kind of ice pudding? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What kind, Marya Dmitrievna? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What kind?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What made those people burn houses and slay their fellow men? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What marked the change? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What minister? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What misfortune can happen to them? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What more could she write after all that had happened the evening before? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What need to hurry? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What news have you brought me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What news?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What of me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What of the bridge and its celebrated bridgehead and Prince Auersperg? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What pleasure is there to be so caustique?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What power governs all?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What produced this extraordinary occurrence? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What reason was there for assuming any probability of an uprising in the city? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What right have we to argue? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What right have you, monseigneur, to demand an account of my attachments and friendships? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What should one love and what hate? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What sort of governors are they to do that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What sort of warrior should I make? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What spark has set my inmost soul on fire, What is this bliss that makes my fingers thrill? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What sweets are we going to have?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What sweets are we going to have?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What then should I say, if I dared complain, I who am deprived of all who are dear to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What then?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What use will peace be when he is no longer here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was he now to say to the Tsar or to Kutuzov, even if they were alive and unwounded? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was left of him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was needed for him who, overshadowing others, stood at the head of that movement from east to west? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was passing in that receptive childlike soul that so eagerly caught and assimilated all the diverse impressions of life? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was that terror I felt of him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What was the cause of this movement, by what laws was it governed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What were its causes? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What were the causes of these events? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What were you thinking of, you fool?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What will Nicholas, dear noble Nicholas, do when he hears of it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What will be the result? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What will become of us if she dies, as I always fear when her face is like that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What will become of us? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would have happened had Moscow not burned down? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would have happened had the French attacked the Russians while they were marching beyond the Pakhra? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would have happened had the French moved on Petersburg?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What would the countess have done had she not been able sometimes to scold the invalid for not strictly obeying the doctor''s orders? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s he saying?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s he to do if he has such luck?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s his name?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s it all about?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s one to do, my dear?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s one to do?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the matter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the matter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s the matter?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What''s to be done? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What, me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What-- still alive?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | What?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When an apple has ripened and falls, why does it fall? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When did it happen and what has happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When did that end and when did this new, terrible state of things begin? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When did this happen?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When during those first days he remembered that he would have to die, he said to himself:"Well, what of it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When had he left Krems?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When had that question been settled? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When he had finished, he turned to Bezukhov, and said in a tone of indifferent politeness:"Where are you going to now, my dear sir?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When was it decided? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When was that done which settled the matter? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When will he come back? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | When, when was this terrible affair decided? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whence came thy conception of the existence of such an incomprehensible Being? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where am I to go?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where and why are you going, when you might remain here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are the candles?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where are you traveling from?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where do you get your information from? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where has she run off to? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where have they put him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is Alexander now, and of what is he thinking? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is Kutuzov?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he now?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he now?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where is she? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where to, now? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where was his spleen, his contempt for life, his disillusionment? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where''s the victory?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where''s your leg? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Where?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which is the principal aim of these three? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which is your house?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which of the two?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Which?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who are these men?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who are''they''? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who arranged everything for you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who asked you to?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who can be more just, more magnanimous than he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who does n''t have intrigues nowadays? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who does not love liberty and equality? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who else is there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who else should it be? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who found the priest and got the passport? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who gave orders?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who has let things come to such a pass?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who hindered his coming to the house? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is firing?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is it that''s starving us?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is right and who is wrong? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is she?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is there in Petersburg?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who is there?--there beyond that field, that tree, that roof lit up by the sun? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who needs it most? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who raised the money? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who then is it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who was doing this? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who was he? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who would have said that I should be a soldier and a captain of dragoons in the service of Bonaparte, as we used to call him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who''ll get there first? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Who?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom are they firing at? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom hast thou denied?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom have they brought? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom have you got there dressed up as a Hungarian?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom will you send for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom, I ask you, can we rely on?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whom? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Whose child is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why a year?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why and how were the battles of Shevardino and Borodino given and accepted? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are they here? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are they running? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are we not together as we were last summer, in your big study, on the blue sofa, the confidential sofa? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you going?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you hindering us?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you like this?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you not eating anything, gentlemen?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why are you upset?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why ask me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why carry you off as if you were some gypsy singing girl?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did I bind myself to her? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did I say''Je vous aime''* to her, which was a lie, and worse than a lie? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did he not retire at once by the Kaluga road, abandoning Moscow? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did he not take up a position before reaching Fili? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did it happen in this and not in some other way? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did it happen? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did n''t I enter the room?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did n''t I go in then? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did n''t he let me be there instead of Tikhon?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did they go? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did this thought never occur to me before?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did we lose the battle at Austerlitz? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did you bring him here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why did you bring me away? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do I alone not see what you see? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do n''t I pray for what I want?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you come in without being called?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you say all this to me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you suppose that I should look severely on your affection for that young man? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why do you think so badly of me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why does he have that pain? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why does n''t he come to the house?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why does n''t he come to the house?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why does n''t the Frenchman stab him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why doubt what you can not but know? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why had he fought the marauder? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why had such a splendid boy, so full of life, to die?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why has fate given you two such splendid children? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why has he taken on himself such a responsibility?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why have you interfered at all? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why have you quarreled with Helene, mon cher? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is he here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is it howling?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is she so glad?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is she so happy?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why is there a baby there? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why negotiate, and above all why retreat, when to retreat is so contrary to his method of conducting war? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why no betrothal?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why not? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should I be wasted like this, Mamma?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should I joke about it? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should I kill him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should not the same sort of thing happen to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should she marry? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should that cause the masses to riot? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why should you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why speak of me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why speak, when words can not express what one feels?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why such a terrible misfortune? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why take prisoners? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why this secrecy?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why was I in such a hurry with Sonya?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why was I so reluctant to part with life? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why was Napoleon III a criminal when he was taken prisoner at Boulogne, and why, later on, were those criminals whom he arrested? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why was he in the yard of a burning house where witnesses had seen him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why was it more strongly fortified than any other post? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why was the battle of Borodino fought? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why were thousands of inhabitants deceived into believing that Moscow would not be given up-- and thereby ruined?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why, are...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Why?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will he not always have a bitter feeling toward me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will it seem odd if I ask?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will they get there and fire the bridge or will the French get within grapeshot range and wipe them out?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will they let it stop at that? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will they set us down here or take us on to Moscow?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you come to dinner at the Rostovs''?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you give me a cup of tea?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you have coffee?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you have some tea?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you let them come? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you stay here if the enemy occupies the place?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Will you take an I.O.U.?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wisdom, virtue, enlightenment?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | With hands and feet?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Without raising his eyes, he said in a low voice:"Who are you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Without waiting to hear him out, Prince Andrew asked:"When did my father and sister leave?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wo n''t that be best?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wo n''t you have some tea?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Wolzogen took his place and continued to explain his views in French, every now and then turning to Pfuel and saying,"Is it not so, your excellency?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Women?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would he have approved of you now, do you think?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would n''t you like to?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would this disorderly crowd of soldiers attend to the voice of their commander, or would they, disregarding him, continue their flight? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would you like some?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Would you like to kiss me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Write to Kuragin demanding an explanation? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Write to Pierre, as Prince Andrew asked me to in case of some misfortune?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, but what did he ask me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, here it lies before me, but why is the deputation from the city so long in appearing?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, she loved him, or else how could that have happened which had happened? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, very noble? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes, who has not done it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yes?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Yet how many people have I hated in my life? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are not angry with me for coming? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You are offended at being put on duty a bit, but why not apologize to an old and honorable officer? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You ask his pardon? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You belong to the gentry?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You damned rascal, where do you always hide it?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You do n''t meet such men nowadays.... And which of us has not weaknesses of his own?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You do n''t remember Boris?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have seen?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You have twice been ordered to retreat, and you...""Why are they down on me?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You hear her?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You heard of the duel?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know my principles-- everything aboveboard? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know not a day passes now without some new fashion.... And what have you to do yourself?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know that there is a there and there is a Someone? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know the story of the handkerchief? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You know you let me call you so?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You remember? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You say the affair was decisive? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You see how he''s been with her all day... Natasha, what have I done to deserve it?..." |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You see it''s burned down, and there''s an end of it.... What are you pushing for? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You see, we were going away, so he would get it all; was n''t it so, your excellency?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You think I may hope? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You think I wo n''t get to him? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You think...?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You understand me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You were all dancing, and I sat sobbing in the schoolroom? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You will, wo n''t you, dear?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You wo n''t? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ll dig up your pot of money and take it away with you.... What does it matter to you whether our homes are ruined or not?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ll get there in time? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ll sit on the box, wo n''t you, Petya?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ll take me, wo n''t you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ll tell me the whole truth?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''re Pwince Bolkonski? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''re of the gentry yourself, are n''t you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | You''ve already been in action? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Your excellency, how come you to be here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Your father, or brother, or your betrothed? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | Your leg?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | and they say he''s not the right one.... How not the right one?... |
tolstoy-war-1881 | and,"Whatever made me say''Je vous aime''?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | but he really meant,"Are you frightened here?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | but the question"How?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | cried the officer, turning on him with tipsy rage,"who are you? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | dishonorable? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | does that satisfy you?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | he cried angrily; and turning to Denisov, who, showing off his courage, had ridden on to the planks of the bridge:"Why run risks, Captain? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | he said;"do you think it is easier for me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | he shouted through the doorway after Pierre,"is it true that the countess has fallen into the clutches of the holy fathers of the Society of Jesus?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | he shouted, choking and making a threatening gesture with his trembling arms:"How dare you, sir, say that to me? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | he whispered in French,"do you know I have made up my mind about Sonya?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | he whispered, pointing to the disordered battalion and at the enemy,"what''s that?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | replied a voice, a very human one compared to that which had said:"The Pavlograd hussars?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | said Bagration to Rostov,"are the enemy''s skirmishers still there?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | said Kutuzov, in the midst of Denisov''s explanations,"are you ready so soon?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | said the countess, raising her eyes from her letter as her niece passed,"Sonya, wo n''t you write to Nicholas?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | she demanded of the hussar,"and why are you exciting yourself? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | she said, turning to her brother, as if asking him:"What is it moves me so?" |
tolstoy-war-1881 | what am I to do if I love nothing but fame and men''s esteem? |
tolstoy-war-1881 | what have I been waiting for?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For what would he have done if he had desired it with passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hast thou an arm like God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | If a commissioner issue an order, are you to comply, if it is contrary to the bidding of the proconsul? aquinas-summa-2292 ''Doth God take care for oxen? aquinas-summa-2292 ''The Father who abideth in Me, He doth the works,''what works did He mean, then, but the words He was speaking? aquinas-summa-2292 ''in My mightier gifts,''or"''as my equal in the Godhead''"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 1) Whether the soul is a body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 1) Whether there is equality among the divine persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) How should alms be given? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether Baptism takes effect when the insincerity ceases? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether God has free will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether He has knowledge of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether He was at once wayfarer and comprehensor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether a circumstance places a moral action in the species of good or evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether a priest may lawfully refrain altogether from celebrating? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether a right intention is required therein? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether a vow is subject to dispensation or commutation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether he can of himself persevere in good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether he ought to love his mother more than his father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether human reason diminishes the merit of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether indulgences granted by the Church profit them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether it grows when charity grows? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether it is due to the human body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether it is necessary for the human will, in order to be good, to be conformed to the Divine Will, as regards the thing willed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether it is taken univocally or equivocally as signifying God, by nature, by participation, and by opinion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether it is to be received daily? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether it makes use of anger in its action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether prudence extends to the governing of many? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether serious deliberation with one''s relations and friends is requisite for entrance into religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether sin is aggravated by reason of the excellence of the person sinning? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether someone is required to stand for the person to be confirmed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether such fulness was proper to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether temporal goods fall under merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the Sacred Scripture of this doctrine may be expounded in different senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the children of Jews should be baptized against the will of their parents? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the created intellect knows at once what it sees in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the intelligence is distinct from the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the justification of the ungodly is miraculous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the mean of justice is the real mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the mode of charity comes under the precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the process for the dissolution of like marriages should always be by way of accusation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether the union of the two natures in Christ was brought about by grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether there can be in the higher reason a venial sin directed to its proper object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether this is true:"Christ as man is a creature"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether unbelievers can have authority over Christians? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether we ought to love the angels out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether weddings should be forbidden at certain times? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Whether, other things being equal, a religious sins more grievously by the same kind of sin than a secular person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 10) Who may lawfully swear, and when? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) The distinction of other moral precepts;( 12) Whether the moral precepts of the Old Law justified man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether He has knowledge of individual things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether a dispensation can be granted in a solemn vow of continence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether any merits preceded it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether anyone should be baptized in the mother''s womb? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether charity can be lost after it has been possessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether every circumstance that makes an action better or worse, places the moral action in the species of good or evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether he ought to love his wife more than his father or mother? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether in the state of this life any man can see the essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether it is a cardinal virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether it is lawful to refrain from it altogether? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether it remains in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether the act of justice is to render to everyone his own? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether the burial service profits the departed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether the grace of Christ was infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether the prudence which regards private good is the same in species as that which regards the common good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether the rites of unbelievers should be tolerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether the saints in heaven pray for us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether the speculative and practical intellect are distinct powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether the will of expression is distinguished in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether this is true:"Christ as man is God"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether this name,"Who is,"is the supremely appropriate name of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether this sacrament is given by bishops only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether three aureoles are fittingly assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether we ought to love the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 11) Whether witnesses should be called in such a case? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether Christ''s Passion is to be attributed to the Godhead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether He knows the infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether affirmative propositions can be formed about God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether by natural reason we can know God in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether five expressions of will are rightly assigned to the divine will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether it could have been increased? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether it is lawful to receive the body without the blood? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether it is lost through one mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether justice is the chief of the moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether madmen and imbeciles should be baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether prayer should be vocal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether prudence is in subjects, or only in their rulers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether suffrages for one dead person profit that person more than others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether the authority of a superior is required in a dispensation from a vow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether the children of unbelievers are to be baptized against their parents''will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether the grace of union was natural to the man Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether the virgin''s aureole is the greatest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether this is true:"Christ as man is a hypostasis or person"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether we ought to love those who are kind to us more than those whom we are kind to? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Whether"synderesis"is a power of the intellectual part? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 12) Which of the beatitudes and fruits correspond to it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) How this grace stood towards the union? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) Whether He knows future contingent things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) Whether attention is requisite in prayer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) Whether one has the same aureole in a higher degree than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) Whether prudence is in the wicked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) Whether suffrages for many avail each one as much as if they were offered for each individual? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) Whether the conscience is a power of the intellectual part? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) Whether the order of charity endures in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 13) Whether there is in this life any knowledge of God through grace above the knowledge of natural reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 14) Whether He knows enunciable things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 14) Whether prayer should last a long time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 14) Whether prudence is in all good men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 15) Whether prayer is meritorious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 15) Whether prudence is in us naturally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 15) Whether the knowledge of God is variable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 16) Whether God has speculative or practical knowledge of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 16) Whether prudence is lost by forgetfulness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) According to which nature did it become Him to ascend? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) By what is the will moved? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) By whom should this announcement be made? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Can he be in several places at once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Concerning the manner of His burial;( 3) Whether His body was decomposed in the tomb? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Did they need grace in order to turn to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Does one angel know another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) From what cause is it contracted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) From what motive did He deliver Himself up to the Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Granted that they differ only in idea, which is prior in thought? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) How and in what order does it know them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) How is daring related to hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) How many are there? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) How many are they? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) If by species, is it by connatural species, or is it by such as they have derived from things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) If in the reason, whether it is only in the practical, or also in the speculative reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) If it be a power, whether it is a passive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) If it be something created, whether it is an operation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) If it be the soul, whether this be through its essence, or through its powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) If not, whether every pleasure is good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) In how many ways is it expressed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) In regard to what is God called blessed; does this regard His act of intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) In what power of the soul does it reside? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Into which hell did He descend? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Is his being his understanding? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Its matter;( 3) Whether it is essential to the sacrament that the chrism should have been previously consecrated by a bishop? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of its comparison with flattery? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of its proper matter;( 3) Of its form;( 4) Whether imposition of hands is necessary for this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the different kinds of alms;( 3) Which alms are of greater account, spiritual or corporal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the distinction between spiritual and carnal sins;( 3) Whether sins differ in reference to their causes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the division of fear into filial, initial, servile and worldly;( 3) Whether worldly fear is always evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the institution of this sacrament;( 3) Whether water be the proper matter of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the matter about which it is;( 3) Whether heretics should be tolerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the necessity of the Gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the number of its parts;( 3) What kind of parts are they? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the rewards of the beatitudes: whether they refer to this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the species of lying;( 3) Whether lying is always a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of the species of this sin;( 3) Whether it can be forgiven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of their number;( 3) Which are they? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of unjust sales on the part of the thing sold;( 3) Whether the seller is bound to reveal a fault in the thing sold? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of what life is it the book? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of what things ought tithes to be paid? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of what virtue is it the act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Of what virtue is it the act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Supposing that an angel is such, we ask whether it is composed of matter and form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) The order of the sacraments among themselves;( 3) Their mutual comparison;( 4) Whether all the sacraments are necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) To what virtue is it opposed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) To which virtue is it opposed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) To whom are oblations due? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) To whom does it belong to pity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) To whom is it becoming? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) To whom is the grace becoming? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What are the precepts of the natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What distinguishes human acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What does observance offer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What does piety make one offer a person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is free- will--- a power, an act, or a habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is its matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is its matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is its object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is predestination, and whether it places anything in the predestined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is the end of this government? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is the matter of a vow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is the matter of modesty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What is this character? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What kind of error? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What kind of sins can be in them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What should it be about? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) What the first man coveted by sinning? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Where is it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether Christ had the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether God can create anything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether God is eternal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether God is everywhere? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether God is perfect universally, as having in Himself the perfections of all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether God is the supreme good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether God should be praised with song? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether God understands Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether God wills things apart from Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He advanced in this knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He assumed a person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He assumed the obligation of being subject to these defects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He assumed the soul through the medium of the spirit or mind? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He can immediately move a body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He could use this knowledge by turning to phantasms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He gave it to Judas? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He had omnipotence with regard to corporeal creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He had the knowledge which the blessed or comprehensors have? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He is composed of matter and form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He is subject to Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He is the Head of men as regards their bodies or only as regards their souls? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He loves all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He rose with His complete body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He should have been baptized with the baptism of John? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He should have led an austere life as regards food, drink, and clothing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He was predestinated as man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He will appear under the form of His glorified humanity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether He worked them by Divine power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether His death severed the union of Godhead and flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether His flesh is to be adored with the adoration of"latria"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether His justice can be called truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether His power is infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a character is imprinted in connection with all the Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a constant man can be compelled by fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a deacon can? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a deacon or another, who is not a priest, can grant indulgences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a determinate quantity of the same is required for the matter of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a gift differs from beatitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a heretic or any other person cut off from the Church can confer this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a man can be absolved from excommunication against his will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a man can be saved without Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a priest can always absolve his subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a priest can remit sin as to the punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a religious order can be established for the works of the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a slave can marry without his master''s consent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a solemn penance can be repeated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a solemn vow is a diriment impediment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a spell is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether a theologian should take note of the circumstances of human acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether above all it causes heat in the heart? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether adoration denotes an internal or an external act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether all are equal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether all are sent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether all copulation is unlawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether all infants would have been of the male sex? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether all the other sins of our first parent, or of any other parents, are transmitted to their descendants, by way of origin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether all the virtues existing together in one subject are equal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether all things desire peace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether all will be equally impassible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether among men there should be various states and duties? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether among them there is precedence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether anger is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether another, besides His eternal, birth should be attributed to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether any disposition towards grace is needed on the part of the recipient, by an act of free- will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether any habit is caused by acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether any names applied to God are predicated of Him substantially? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether any procession in God can be called generation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether any virtue is caused in us by habituation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether anything besides Him is infinite in essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether as regards the debate it will be conducted by word of mouth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether ashes are, or dust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether at the time of the Law the ceremonies of the Old Law had any power of justification? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether blasphemy is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether bodily health is an effect of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether by God''s mercy all punishment both of men and of demons comes to an end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether by dispensation it may become lawful to put away a wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether by reason of this subtlety it can be in the same place with another not glorified body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether carnal intercourse supervening to such a consent makes a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether certain persons should be prohibited from exercising the office of advocate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether charity is caused in man by preceding acts or by a Divine infusion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether charity should be loved out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether children should suffer any loss through being illegitimate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether choice is to be found in irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether command belongs to irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether concupiscence is a specific passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether confession delivers one in any way from punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether confession is according to the natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether confession is an act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether confession of faith is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether confession ought to be entire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether consent to marry a person for an immoral motive makes a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether contrition can take away the debt of punishment entirely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether counsel is of the end or of the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether defect is the cause of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether delight is subject to time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether derision is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether desire is a cause of sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether dimensive quantity is the subject of the other accidents? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether dulness of sense is a sin distinct from blindness of mind? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether each of them is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether every one will be able to read all that is on another''s conscience? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether every passion of the soul is morally evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether every reviling is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether every sign of a sacred thing is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether everyone that sins through habit, sins through certain malice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether everything comes under divine providence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether evil is found in things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether evil of nature is the object of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether exorcism should precede Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether fear is a special passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether folly is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether generation would have been through coition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether grace is a quality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether grace is required for it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether habits are distinguished by their objects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether hatred of God is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether he can change man''s will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether he could see the separate substances, that is, the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether he has existed from eternity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether he is bound to do so? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether he was impassible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether he was master over all creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether honor is due to those only who are in a higher position? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether hope is in the apprehensive, or in the appetitive faculty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether human law should repress all vices? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether hypocrisy is dissimulation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether ignorance is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in Christ there were several operations of the human nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in Christ there were virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in Christ''s human nature the will of sensuality is distinct from the will of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in either case the mean is take in the same way? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in honor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in one hierarchy there is only one order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in passing from place to place he passes through intervening space? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in preaching He should have avoided the opposition of the Jews? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in that same instant He had the use of free- will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in the state of innocence he had passions of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether in very truth the sun and moon will be darkened? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether incontinence is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether indulgences are as effective as they claim to be? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether ingratitude is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether intemperance is a childish sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether irregularity is contracted by one who has two wives at once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it belongs to Him as man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it belongs to man alone to eat this sacrament spiritually? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it belongs to the rational creature alone, or also to irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can arrive at the knowledge thereof by the knowledge of material things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can be diminished? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can be forgiven without the infusion of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can be in the saints in glory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can be said that Christ was conceived of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can be taken away altogether? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can be together with faith in the same person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can be without unbelief? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it can overcome the reason against the latter''s knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it depends on the object alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it desires anything of necessity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it exists in the sense? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it has an internal cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it has several parts or species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a daughter of anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a daughter of vainglory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a daughter of vainglory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a distinct species of quality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a general virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a matter of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a matter of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a part of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a part of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a part of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a part of temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a place apt for human habitation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a science? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue, distinct from prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is a species of superstition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is about Divine things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is about sensitive knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is always of necessity for salvation to restore what one has taken away? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is an act of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is an act of religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is an act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is an operative habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is assuaged by weeping? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is befitting to the Divine Nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is demonstrable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is divided into irascible and concupiscible as distinct powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is ever lawful to confess to another than a priest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is expedient to grieve continually for our sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is fitting to pray to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is fittingly defined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is fittingly distinguished by degrees and lines? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is fittingly named? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is from God by means of the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is graver than unbelief? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is in the blessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is known to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful for a judge, on account of the evidence, to deliver judgment in opposition to the truth which is known to him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful for a man to possess something as his own? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful for a person to be bound by vow to enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful for clerics to fight? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful for them to meddle in secular business? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful to accept money for the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful to adjure the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful to defend oneself with calumnies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful to judge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful to kill a sinner? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful to lend money for any other kind of consideration, by way of payment for the loan? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful to refuse the office of bishop definitively? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is lawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is moved by the sensitive appetite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is moved of necessity by its object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is of the end only, or also of the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is one or several sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is one sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is only of the last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is opposed to fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is opposed to fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is opposed to fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is opposed to magnanimity by excess? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is opposed to magnanimity by excess? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is opposed to magnanimity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is proper to the unjust man to do unjust deeds? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is something created in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is the cause of our justification? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is the greatest of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is the most grievous of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is the proper name of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is the proper name of the Son? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is to be found in irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is to be found in irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it is universally of all bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it knew all things in the Word? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it knows its own habits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it knows the infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it makes men suitable for counsel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it ought to be repeated during the same sickness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it ought to have been instituted before sin was committed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it pertains to Him in respect of His sensuality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it remains after the death of husband or wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it remains in the soul after the act of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it resides in the appetite, or in the judgment of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it resides only in the intellect composing and dividing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it should be always changed, whenever anything better occurs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it should be conferred in any kind of sickness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it should have been made known to some? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it takes place in the dispensation of spiritualities? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it thereby deserves praise or blame? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it took place in the Person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it understands separate substances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it understands them through its essence, or through any species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it was animated in the first instant of its conception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it was by way of atonement? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it was derived from David? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it was fitting that they should see Him rise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it was from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it was necessary for the restoration of the human race? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it will be effected by fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether it will be the self- same man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether its object is eternal happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether justice is always towards another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether knowledge is a cause of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether lack of the use of reason is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether lifeless faith is a gift of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether light, in corporeal things, is itself corporeal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether love is a passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether love is the cause of hatred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether magnanimity is only about great honors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether man can teach an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether man is freed from all punishment by Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether man ought to love God more than his neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether mission is eternal, or only temporal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether moral virtue differs from intellectual virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether more specially as regards certain sins they return, in a way, on account of ingratitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether movement is a cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether mutual indwelling is an effect of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether notions are to be attributed to the divine persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether obedience is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one angel moves the will of another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one can be perfect in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one contracts through it a tie that is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one is sometimes bound to pay without being asked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one man can be happier than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one man can make satisfaction for another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one may lawfully curse an irrational creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one sin can be the punishment of another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one virtue can be in several powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one who communicates with an excommunicated person is excommunicated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether one who is not a priest can excommunicate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether passion is in the appetitive rather than in the apprehensive part? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether perjury is always a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether pleasure causes thirst or desire for itself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether political and( 3) domestic economy are species of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether presumption is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether pride is the beginning of every sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether primary matter is created by God, or is an independent coordinate principle with Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether prodigality is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether prudence pertains to the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether rapture pertains to the cognitive or to the appetitive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether religion is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether religious are bound to all the counsels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether right is fittingly divided into natural and positive right? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether sacramental grace confers anything in addition to the grace of the virtues and gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether sacrifice should be offered to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether scandal is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether several priests can at the same time consecrate the same host? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether she was a virgin in His Birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether she was sanctified before animation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether simple fornication is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether slight or contempt is the sole motive of anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether sorrow can be a virtuous good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether sorrow is the same as pain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether souls are conveyed thither immediately after death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether that baptism was from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether that divine person Who is called the Holy Ghost, proceeds from the Father and the Son? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether that punishment is voluntary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether that they began to exist in an article of Faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether that time is hidden? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the Church should excommunicate anyone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the Father and the Son love each other by the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the New Law fulfils the Old? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the New Law makes sufficient provision in prescribing and forbidding external acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the Old Law contains any moral precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the accusation should be made in writing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the act of sin is from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the acts of the aforesaid powers remain in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the angel can understand many things at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the appetite should be divided into intellectual and sensitive as distinct powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the attaining of glory is an effect of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the cause of the ceremonial precepts was literal or figurative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the clarity of the transfiguration was the clarity of glory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the consent needs to be expressed in words? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the contrariety of passions in the irascible part is based on the contrariety of good and evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the corporeal creature obeys the mere will of the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the dead can be assisted by the works of the living? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the degrees of happiness should be called mansions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the demons have faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the devil induces us to sin, by persuading us inwardly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the effect of sorrow or pain is to burden the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the effects of law are to command, to forbid, to permit, and to punish, as the Jurist states? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the entire Christ is under each species of the sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the essence of God is seen by the intellect through any created image? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the evidence of two or three witnesses suffices? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the form for the consecration of the bread is appropriate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the gift of counsel corresponds to prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the good or evil of a human action is derived from its object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the hair and nails will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the heart is purified by faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the human soul is a subsistence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the image of God is in irrational creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the inferior speaks to the superior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the institution of the sacraments is from God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the intellectual principle is multiplied numerically according to the number of bodies; or is there one intelligence for all men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the intellectual soul is thus transmitted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the intellectual virtues remain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the intelligible species abstracted from the phantasms are what our intellect understands, or that whereby it understands? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the judicial power corresponds to voluntary poverty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the key is the power of binding and loosing, etc.? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the knowledge of the whole of Sacred Writ is required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the matter of all corporeal things is the same? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the mean of moral virtue is the real mean or the rational mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the moral precepts of the Old Law are about the acts of all the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the moral virtues can be without charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the moral virtues pertain to the contemplative life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the movement of the heavenly bodies will cease? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the object of anger is good or evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the person of the Father is properly signified by this name"Father"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the person who proceeds is equal to the one from Whom He proceeds in eternity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the prophetic revelation is effected by the infusion of certain species, or by the infusion of Divine light alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the relations distinguish and constitute the persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the scourges whereby God punishes man in this life, are satisfactory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the seal of confession extends to other matters than those which have reference to confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the semen, which is the principle of human generation, is produced from the surplus food? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the sorrow of contrition can be too great? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the soul is a subject of habit, in respect of its essence or in respect of its power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the sound of the trumpet is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the supreme good, God, is the cause of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the theological virtues are distinct from the intellectual and moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the tonsure is an Order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the whole goodness or malice of the external action depends on the goodness of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the will alone is the subject of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the will of the angel is his nature, or his intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the woman should have been made from man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether the worm by which they are tormented is corporeal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether their bodies will be corruptible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there are waters above the firmament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there can be a virtue about playful actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there can be anything superfluous therein? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there can be moral virtue with passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there exist in bodies certain seminal virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there is a natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there is but one original sin in each man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there is in them love of choice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there is marriage between unbelievers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there is one power of the soul, or several? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there is only one being in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there should be one or two? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there was any other possible means of delivering men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there was the"fomes"of sin in Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether there was true marriage between our Lord''s Mother and Joseph? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether these acts are necessary, or voluntary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether these souls suffer from a spiritual torment within themselves? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they are figurative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they are immediately preserved by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they are many, or one only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they are restored in equal measure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they are three, namely, wisdom, science and understanding? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they assume bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they avail religious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they can be taken away without Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they can enter religion before the consummation of the marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they differ from the beatitudes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they differ from the fruit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they differ generically? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they ever repent of the evil they have done? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they increase by addition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they know single things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they pity them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they were created on account of God''s goodness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they were necessary in the state that preceded sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they will be of equal stature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they will move? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they will see Him with the eyes of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they would have been born confirmed in righteousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether they would have had perfect use of reason at the moment of birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this belongs to Him according to the Divine Nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this belongs to Him by reason of His human nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this belongs to a priest, or to a bishop only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this clarity will be visible to the non- glorified eye? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this is an adequate division? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this is fitting to God the Father alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this is proper to the rational nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this is true:"Man is God"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this kind of joy is compatible with sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this name belongs to the Son alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether this was ever lawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether those assigned are sufficient? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether those moral virtues which are about operations, are distinct from those which are about passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether those relations are the divine essence itself, or are extrinsic to it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether to be immutable belongs to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether to each man is assigned a single guardian angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether to love considered as an act of charity is the same as goodwill? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether to tempt is proper to the devil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether transgression is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether vice is contrary to nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether we ought to be beneficent to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether we should beseech them to pray for us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether we should say that the three persons are of one essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether we were thereby delivered from the power of the devil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether wife- murder is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether without God''s grace man can do or wish any good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether without grace anyone can merit eternal life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether women sin mortally by excessive adornment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether"one"and"many"are opposed to each other? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether, if made, it was created? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether, on account of apostasy from the faith, subjects are absolved from allegiance to an apostate prince? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Whether, on account of original sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Which among the beatitudes and fruits correspond to it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Which is of greater account in happiness, delight or vision? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Which of the beatitudes and fruits corresponds to it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Which of the two is the more grievous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Which of them has the greater merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Who can contract a betrothal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 2) Who owes more thanks to God, the innocent or the penitent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Between whom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Can several angels be in the same place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Do the higher angels know by more universal species than the lower angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Does the angel know God by his own natural principles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) For what purpose was man placed in paradise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Granted that being is prior, whether every being is good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How God is said to have created heaven and earth in the beginning? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How are habits corrupted or diminished? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How does the intellect know its own act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How great should it be? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How is an accusation vitiated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How is it moved? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How many circumstances are there? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How many, and which are they? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) How the powers of the soul are distinguished from one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) If in any way it be of the means, whether it be moved to the end and to the means, by the same movement? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) If it is a passive power, whether there is an active intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) If it is a power, is it appetitive or cognitive? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) If through some species, whether the species of all things intelligible are naturally innate in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) In what manner should this announcement be made? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) In what sense a divine person is invisibly sent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Is his substance his power of intelligence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Is it unchangeable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Is there free- will in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of its act;( 4) Whether it pertains thereto to give rather than to take? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of its beginning: should it have been given at the beginning of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of its comparison with other sins;( 4) Whether it is a sin to listen to backbiting? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of its comparison with other virtues;( 4) Whether God must be obeyed in all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of its relation to constancy;( 4) Whether it needs the help of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of the cause of devotion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of the comparison between intemperance and timidity;( 4) Whether intemperance is the most disgraceful of vices? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of the genealogy of Christ which is given in the Gospels;( 4) Whether it was fitting for Christ to be born of a woman? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of the manner of taking vengeance;( 4) On whom should vengeance be taken? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of the obligation of vows;( 4) Of the use of taking vows;( 5) Of what virtue is it an act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of the order between command and use( 4) Whether command and the commanded act are one act or distinct? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of the power which Christ exercised over the sacraments;( 4) Whether He could transmit that power to others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of their number? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Of whom is this character? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) The comparison between incontinence and intemperance;( 4) Which is the worse, incontinence in anger, or incontinence in desire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) The number of the notions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) The various degrees of prophecy;( 4) Whether Moses was the greatest of the prophets? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) To what is it opposed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) To what species of virtue does it belong? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) To which capital sin is it reducible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) To which virtue it is opposed;( 4) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) To whom ought they to be paid? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) To whom should it have been made known? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Were they created in grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) What are the accompanying conditions of an oath? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) What did the angel seek in sinning? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) What does it know in them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) What is its matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) What is its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) What kind of body did He receive or give, namely, was it passible or impassible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) What the numeral terms signify in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) When did He begin to work miracles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Wherein does it reside as in its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether Baptism should be deferred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether Baptism takes away the penalties of sin that belong to this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether Christ by His human operation merited anything for Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether Christ may be called a lordly man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether God can reduce anything to nothingness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether God exists? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether God is everywhere by essence, power, and presence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether God is one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether God is the cause of spiritual blindness and hardness of heart? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether God is the exemplar cause of beings or whether there are other exemplar causes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether God is the first object of our knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether God should be loved for His own sake? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He acquired it by merits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He alone is essentially good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He ascended by His own power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He assumed a man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He can move the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He comprehends Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He contracted these defects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He had an imprinted or infused knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He had faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He had omnipotence with regard to His own body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He is almighty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He is essentially the beatitude of each of the blessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He is the Head of all men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He learned anything from man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He loves one thing more than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He ought to have assumed a soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He ought to have lived with the disciples after the Resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He proceeds from the Father through the Son? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He should have adopted a lowly state of life, or one of wealth and honor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He should have preached in an open or in a hidden manner? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether He was entirely in hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether His Godhead can be seen without joy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether His Godhead was separated from His soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether His predestination is the exemplar of ours? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether His was a glorified body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether Paul when in rapture saw the essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a betrothal can be canceled? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a bishop can grant them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a fruit is due to the virtue of continence only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a glorified body will of necessity be seen by a non- glorified body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a husband being converted to the faith can remain with his wife if she be unwilling to be converted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a judge can justly sentence a man who is not accused? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a layman can confer the sacrament of Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a man can be absolved from one excommunication without being absolved from another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a man is bound to restore just gains derived from money taken in usury? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a man who is already married can make himself a slave without his wife''s consent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a man''s actions are specified by their end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a man''s evidence may be rejected without any fault on his part? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a man''s previous satisfaction begins to avail when he recovers charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a natural disposition is requisite for prophecy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a priest can bind in virtue of the power of the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a religious order can be directed to soldiering? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a sacrament is a sign of one thing only, or of several? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a sin resulting from a passion is a sin of weakness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether a wife may demand the debt during the menses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether above all it hinders the use of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether accordingly, it is meritorious or demeritorious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether adoration requires a definite place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether all acts of virtue are prescribed by the natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether all are bound to confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether all souls were created at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether all the moral precepts of the Old Law are reducible to the ten precepts of the decalogue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether all the sins of men are to be set down to the assaults or temptations of the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether all will be of the same sex? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether an advocate sins by defending an unjust cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether an angel speaks to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether an exclusive term, which seems to exclude otherness, can be joined to an essential name in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether an indulgence should be granted for temporal assistance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether an inferior angel can enlighten a superior angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether anger is in the concupiscible faculty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether any habit can be caused by one act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether any man can be happy in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether any moral virtues are in us by infusion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether any movement of the free- will is required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether any names applied to God are said of Him literally, or are all to be taken metaphorically? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether any pleasure is the greatest good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether any sin incurs a debt of eternal punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether anyone can be blotted out of the book of life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether anyone can use the keys on his superior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether anyone should be excommunicated for inflicting temporal harm? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether anyone with grace may merit eternal life condignly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether anything can be infinitude in magnitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether anything false can come under faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether as regards the reason there were several wills in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether as regards these acts, a person proceeds from nothing or from something? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether at least the punishment of men comes to an end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether attrition can become contrition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether blasphemy is the most grievous sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether by a miracle two bodies can be in the same place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether by humility one ought to subject oneself to all men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether by receiving the tonsure one renounces temporal goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether by the power of his soul man can change corporeal matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether certain degrees are by natural law an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether charity can be without them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether choice is only the means, or sometimes also of the end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether comprehension is required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether compulsory consent invalidates marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether confession is an act of the virtue of penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether confession opens Paradise to us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether consent given in words expressive of the future makes a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether counsel is only of things that we do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether craftiness is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether creation is anything in the very nature of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether creatures can be said to be like God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether cursing is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether divine providence is immediately concerned with all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether dulia, which pays honor and worship to those who are above us, is a special virtue, distinct from latria? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether each act increases the habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether each is a part of temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether ecstasy is an effect of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether enjoyment is only of the last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether equal dignity is restored to the penitent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether essential names should be predicated of the persons in the plural, or in the singular? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether every act of ingratitude is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether every law is derived from it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether every one that sins through certain malice, sins through habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether every passion increases or decreases the goodness of malice of an act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether faith remains? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether fortitude is only about fear and daring? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether frenzy or madness is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether good is the subject of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether grace differs from infused virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether habit implies an order to an act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether habits are divided into good and bad? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether hatred is stronger than love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether hatred of one''s neighbor is always a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether he can change man''s imagination? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether he can make us sin of necessity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether he had all virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether he may put her away at his own judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether he possessed all knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether he stood in need of food? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether he was created before corporeal creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether his sin was more grievous than all other sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether hope and memory cause pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether hope is in dumb animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether human law is competent to direct all acts of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether if there had been no sin God would have become incarnate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in God there can be several relations distinct from each other? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in Him there is composition of quiddity, essence or nature, and subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in fame or glory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in one order there are many angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in seeing God they will see all that God sees? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in that same instant He could merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in the body the form of which is an intellectual principle, there is some other soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in the good or bad angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in the matter of internal acts it directs man sufficiently? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in the name of Word is expressed relation to creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in the powers of the sensitive part there can be a habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in the state of innocence all men were equal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether in virtue of this sanctification the fomes of sin was entirely taken away from her? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether irrational creatures ought to be loved out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether irregularity is contracted by marrying one who is not a virgin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it belongs to Him according to His human nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it belongs to the just man only to eat it sacramentally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it belongs to the priest alone to dispense this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it came from Him through the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it can be a useful good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it can be had without grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it can be said that the Holy Ghost is Christ''s father according to the flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it conferred grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it confers grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it contains ceremonial precepts in addition to the moral precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it depends on reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it differs from joy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it excuses from sin altogether? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it exists in the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it has an external cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a good habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a graver sin that covetousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a higher power than the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a matter of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a part of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a virtue distinct from abstinence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is abolished by custom, and whether custom obtains the force of law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is against the natural law to have a concubine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is always a mortal sin to communicate with an excommunicated person in matters not permitted by law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is an operation of the sensitive, or only of the intellectual part? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is assuaged by the sympathy of friends? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is becoming to Him to pray for Himself or only for others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is caused through unlawful intercourse? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is changed into the body and blood of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is derived from a circumstance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is directed to the end or to the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is fitting for Christ to have gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is fittingly defined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is in the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is infused according to the capacity of our natural gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is lawful for belligerents to lay ambushes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is lawful to accept money for spiritual actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is lawful to adjure irrational creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is lawful to escape condemnation by appealing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is moved of necessity by the lower appetite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is natural or miraculous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is necessary for salvation to believe in anything above natural reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is necessary that the same ashes should return to the same parts in which they were before? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is necessary to restore more than has been taken away? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is one or many? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is only about desires and pleasures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is only about future contingencies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is opposed to truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is proper to man to be adopted to the sonship of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is speculative or practical? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is the gravest sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it is the most grievous sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it knows contingent things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it makes one tremble? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it regards the means only, or the end also? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it should be conferred on madmen and imbeciles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it takes cognizance of singulars? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it takes place in showing honor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it took place in the suppositum or hypostasis? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it understands all natural things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it was assumed by the Word in the first instant of its conception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it was by way of sacrifice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it was lawful under the Mosaic law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it was made by angelic instrumentality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether it will take place at an unknown time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether its act is lawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether its form is charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether judgment should be based on suspicions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether life is properly attributed to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether light is a quality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether likeness is a cause of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether love is the same as dilection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether lust is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether man is always bound to give thanks for human favors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether mental abstraction of the relations from the persons leaves the hypostases distinct? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether mercy is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether more than himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether negligence is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether none but a bishop can confer it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether of man''s rib? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether omission is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether one can be taken away without the other? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether one can confess through another, or by writing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether one can intend two things at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether one can suffer injustice willingly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether one enlightens another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether one ought to check revilers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether one who is excommunicated or suspended, can excommunicate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether one will be able at one glance to see all merits and demerits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether order is an impediment to matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether original sin is concupiscence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether original sin is contracted by all those who are begotten of Adam by way of seminal generation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether other special sins should be called capital vices, besides pride and covetousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether our intellect naturally first understands the more universal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether outside a case of necessity one who is not a priest can hear the confession of venial sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether passion is in the sensitive appetite rather than in the intellectual appetite, which is called the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether peace is an effect of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether piety is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether pleasure hinders the use of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether prayer is an act of religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether priests alone have the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether prophetic revelation is always accompanied by abstraction from the sense? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether public penance should be imposed on women? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether religion is one virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether she remained a virgin after His Birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether slight contrition suffices to blot out great sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether some concupiscences are natural, and some not natural? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether sorrow for one sin ought to be greater than for another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether sorrow is compatible with moral virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether sorrow or pain is contrary in pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether sorrow or pain weakens all activity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether souls grieve for their sins even after this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether such a disposition can make grace follow of necessity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether such accidents can affect an extrinsic body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether teaching pertains to the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether that fire is of the same species as elemental fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the Blessed Virgin is His Mother in respect of His temporal birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the Father delivered Him up to suffer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the Gifts are habits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the Nature abstracted from the Personality can assume? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the New Law is contained in the Old? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the adoration of"latria"is to be given to the image of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the angel loves himself with natural love or with love of choice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the angel''s knowledge is discursive? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the angel''s movement is in time or instantaneous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the angels also will judge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the angels are? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the angels by their own power can immediately move bodies locally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the better man should be chosen for the episcopal office? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the character of Order presupposes of necessity the character of Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the contemplative life consists in one action or in several? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the contemplative life is hindered by the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the craving for unity is a cause of sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the debt of punishment remains the same for sins thus returned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the definition of satisfaction contained in the text is suitable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the degree of Orders is obtained by mere merit of life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the empyrean heaven was created contemporaneously with formless matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the entire Christ is under every part of the species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the essence of God can be seen by the corporeal eye? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the evil of sin is an object of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the firmament divides waters from waters? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the forgiveness of mortal sin is an effect of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the form for the consecration of the blood is appropriate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the gift of counsel remains in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the goodness and malice of the interior act are the same as those of the external action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the gravity of sin depends on its object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the guardianship belongs only to the lowest order of angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the heavenly bodies are the causes of what is done here by the inferior bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the heavenly bodies will be more brilliant? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the humors will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the image of God is in the angels more than in man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the intellect can be the subject of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the intellectual habit, which is art, is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the intellectual virtues observe the mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the irascible and concupiscible powers obey reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the matter of this sacrament is wheaten bread? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the name of person is becoming to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the offering of a sacrifice is a special act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the perfection of this life consists chiefly in observing the counsels or the commandments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the powers of the heavens will be moved when the Lord shall come? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the prayers they pour forth for us are always granted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the priest alone is bound by the seal of confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the resurrection will occur at night- time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the right of nations is the same as natural right? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the sacrament is the principal among the goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the sacraments contain grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the sensuality can be the subject of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the separated soul can suffer from a material fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the soul of Christ knew the infinite in the Word? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the soul was assumed previous to the flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the souls in Purgatory are punished by the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the souls of brute animals are subsistent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the state of slavery is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the suffrages of sinners profit the dead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the understanding which is a gift of the Holy Ghost, is only speculative, or practical also? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the use of wine is lawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the various mansions differ according to various degrees of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the wife can take another husband if her former husband has entered religion before the consummation of the marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the will moves itself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the will prior to the other powers is the subject of original sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether the world is governed by one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether theft is the secret taking of another''s property? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether their matter is uniform or manifold? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether their weeping is corporeal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there are ideas of all things known by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there are two keys or only one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there be any supreme evil, which is the first cause of all evils? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there can be voluntariness without any action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there is a human law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there is a natural fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there is any order among the divine persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there is any passion that has no contrary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there is but one moral virtue about operations? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there is mercy in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there should have been many of them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether there was ignorance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether these vices arise from sins of the flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they are able to leave those places? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they are bound to manual labor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they avail a person who does not fulfill the conditions for which the indulgence is given? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they can be legitimized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they ceased at the coming of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they exercise functions of life in the bodies assumed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they know the future? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they ought to be divided into those that are sacred and those that are not? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they rejoice in their sufferings? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they were created by God through the medium of the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they were necessary in the state after sin and before Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they will be impassible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they will move instantaneously? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether they would rather not be than be? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this dust has a natural inclination towards the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this impassibility renders the glorious bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this is lawful to a private individual, or to a public person only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this joy can be full? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this knowledge was collative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this precept binds all, or only superiors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this sacrament imprints a character? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this sacrament was instituted by Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether this was the more suitable means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether those heretics who err in one article, have faith in others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether those who are bound by vow to enter religion are bound to fulfil their vow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether those who are sent, assist? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether to God belongs the reprobation of some men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether to be eternal belongs to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether two suffice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether venial sin is a disposition to mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether virtue is adequately divided into moral and intellectual virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether voluntary poverty is required for the religious state? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether we ought to be more beneficent to those who are more closely united to us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether we were freed thereby from our debt of punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether what is done in catechizing and exorcizing, effects anything, or is a mere sign? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether whatever God wills, He wills necessarily? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether wisdom is only speculative or also practical? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether without grace man can love God above all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether"Father"in God is said personally before it is said essentially? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether, by the virtue of hope, one man may hope for another''s happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether, for every actual sin he has committed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Whether{ synesis} is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Which is worse, a vice or a vicious act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) Who are the cause of a man being ashamed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 3) of what things they should be made? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Are all things subject to fate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Did they merit their beatitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) From what vice does it arise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) How does it know the act of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) How many capital vices there are, and which are they? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) How should those be punished who have accused a man wrongfully? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) How the precepts of the decalogue are distinguished from one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) If it be an operation of the intellectual part, whether it is an operation of the intellect, or of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) If it is appetitive, is it the same power as the will, or distinct? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) In particular, as to first- fruits, whether men are bound to offer them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Is there an irascible and a concupiscible appetite in them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Is there in the angels an active and a passive intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Its form;( 5) Whether it imprints a character? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Its species;( 5) Whether it is a capital sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Of its effect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Of its species;( 5) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Of the comparison of this knowledge with the angelic knowledge;( 5) Whether it was a habitual knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Of the effects of this government? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Of the orders of the powers, one to another;( 5) Whether the powers of the soul are in it as in their subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Of the power of each form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Of what virtue is it an act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) On the comparison of predestination to election; whether, that is to say, the predestined are chosen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Supposing that some became evil by a sin of their own choosing, are any of them naturally evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) To what cause should goodness be reduced? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) To what things it belongs to be created? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) To whom especially is sobriety becoming? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) What does it signify in Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) What is its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) What kind of people are ashamed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether Christ can be called the adopted Son? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether Christ was a man during the three days of His death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether God can be loved immediately in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether Happiness once had can be lost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He ascended above all the corporeal heavens? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He assumed all these defects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He became incarnate to take away original sin rather than actual? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He can move the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He could make the past not to have been? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He had any acquired knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He had hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He had omnipotence as regards the execution of His own will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He is composed of essence and existence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He is in the highest degree one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He is the Head of the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He is the final cause of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He loves more the better things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He made any stay there? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He merited anything for us by it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He ought to have assumed an intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He received anything from angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He should have lived in conformity with the Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He should have made Himself known, or should He rather have been manifested by others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether He should have preached by word only, or also by writing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether His judiciary power is universal with regard to all men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether His miracles are a sufficient proof of His Godhead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether His soul was passible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether His understanding is His substance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether Penance takes away the guilt while the debt remains? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a bishop may pass over to the religious state? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a glorified body can be in the same place with another glorified body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a good life is requisite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a good or a wicked angel can sin venially? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a man can hate himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a man can receive a sacred order after being married? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a man may lawfully hope in man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a movement of faith is required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a prophet knows all possible matters of prophecy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a religious order can be established for preaching and the exercise of like works? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a sacrament is a sign that is something sensible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a superior angel enlightens an inferior angel in all that he knows himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a venial sin can be taken away without a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a venial sin can become mortal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a vicious act is compatible with virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a wife who has been divorced may take another husband? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether a woman can do this? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether above the priestly Order there should be an episcopal power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether all are bound to offer sacrifice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether all other beatitude is included in the divine beatitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether all sins are due to the devil''s suggestion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether all sorrow is contrary to all pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether all the dimensions of Christ''s body are in this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether all things are good by the divine goodness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether all things in God are life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether all who are in a state of grace have the gift of understanding? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether among those who have faith, one has it more than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether an excommunication unjustly pronounced has any effect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether an infinite multitude can exist? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether an irresistible power is a cause of sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether anger is accompanied by an act of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether any created intellectual substance is sufficient by its own natural powers to see the essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether any habits are infused in man by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether any names applied to God are synonymous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether any other passion of the soul is a cause of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether any passion is good or evil specifically? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether anyone can excommunicate himself, or an equal, or a superior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether anyone is excused from fulfilling this precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether anything is reduced to nothingness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether at least the punishment of Christians has an end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether beneficence is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether besides these it contains judicial precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether bigamy is removed by Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether blasphemy is in the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether bodily pain is the greatest evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether carnal intercourse belongs to the integrity of matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether choice is only of things that we do ourselves? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether compulsory consent makes a marriage as regards the party using compulsion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether concupiscence is infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether confession gives hope of salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether consent given in words expressive of the present, without inward consent, makes a true marriage outwardly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether consent to an act belongs to the higher part of the soul only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether continency is necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether converts should be received? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether corporal alms have a spiritual effect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether counsel is of all things that we do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether despair is contrary to hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether divine providence imposes any necessity upon things foreseen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether doubts should be interpreted favorably? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether eternity differs from time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether every action of unbelievers is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether every moral virtue is about a passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether every prayer of His was heard? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether evil totally corrupts good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether faith and hope can be without charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether favors should be withdrawn from the ungrateful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether fear itself can be feared? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether grace and virtues are bestowed on man by Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether grace is equal in all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he can change man''s senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he can justly remit the punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he can loose and bind according to his own judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he could err or be deceived? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he may leave his unbelieving wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he ought to love himself more than his neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he should have been created in paradise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he sins if he accept a fee for defending a suit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he understands by composing and dividing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he was withdrawn from his senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he who raises the unworthy to Orders sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether he would have obtained immortality by the tree of life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether holy men who are not priests have the keys or their use? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether homicide is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether hope remains? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in God there exists a power as regards the notional acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in any of these species the just is the same as counter- passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in every work of God there are justice and mercy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in that same instant He was a perfect comprehensor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in that state man would have been master over men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in the body there is any other substantial form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in them all the senses are in act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether in this matter husband and wife are of equal condition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether incest is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether injustice is a mortal sin according to its genus? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether intention of the end is the same act as volition of the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it arises from a betrothal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it arises from sloth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it belongs to the Father alone to be unbegotten? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it binds man in conscience? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it can be joined to a personal term? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it can be the subject of mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it causes taciturnity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it contains several species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it depends on the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it depends on the excellence of the virtue to which it is opposed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it diminishes sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it excuses from sin, or diminishes it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it excuses from sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it fittingly adds counsels to precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it hinders action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it inclines to that which is less? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it increases in the person who has it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a capital sin, and which are its daughters? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a capital sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a mortal sin to bear false witness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a mortal sin to have intercourse with a concubine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a mortal sin to observe them after the coming of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a part of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a part of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a part of modesty or temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a sin to enjoin an oath on a perjurer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is accordingly meritorious or demeritorious before God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is assuaged by contemplating the truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is chiefly through the instrumentality of charity that grace is the principle of merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is derived from the end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is fitting for each man to have an angel guardian? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is fitting that each person be sent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is fittingly prescribed that we should love God,"with thy whole heart"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is in the intellectual appetite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is in the will as its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is lawful for one who has been condemned to defend himself by violence if he be able to do so? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is lawful for the priest consecrating to refrain from communicating? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is lawful for them to live on alms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is lawful in trading to sell a thing at a higher price than was paid for it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is lawful to borrow money under a condition of usury? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is lawful to confess a sin of which one is not guilty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is lawful to fight on holy days? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is lawful to sell things connected with spirituals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is more grievous to sin through certain malice, than through passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is moved by an extrinsic principle? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is moved of necessity by the exterior mover which is God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is necessary for a man to confess to his own priest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is necessary to believe those things that are attainable by natural reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is necessary to restore what one has not taken away? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is only about fear of death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is only about pleasures of touch? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is only of the end possessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is possible to begin by sinning against the Holy Ghost before committing other sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is something in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is something proper to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is speculative or practical? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is the cause of our predestination? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is the greatest of all sins against our neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is the greatest of virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is the most grievous of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is unleavened or fermented bread? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it is virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it knows future things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it passes from husband to wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it presupposes of necessity the character of Confirmation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it saw the Word or the Divine Essence clearer than did any other creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it should be given to children? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it takes place in judicial sentences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it understands individuals and singulars? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it was becoming that He should assume human nature abstracted from all individuals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it was by way of redemption? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it was fitting for Christ to suffer on the cross? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it was fitting for Him to appeal to the disciples"in another shape"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it was fitting that He should suffer at the hands of the Gentiles, or rather of the Jews? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it was given to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it was made before the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it will happen suddenly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it will take place in the valley of Josaphat? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether it would be contracted by anyone formed miraculously from some part of the human body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether its act can be meritorious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether its form is expressed properly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether light was fittingly made on the first day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether living[ formata] faith and lifeless[ informis] faith are one identically? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether love is properly divided into love of friendship, and love of concupiscence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether lust is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether military prudence is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether necessary things are subject to the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether notional adjectives, or verbs, or participles, can be predicated of the essential names taken in a concrete sense? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether olive oil is a suitable matter for this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether one Person can assume without another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether one angel loves another with natural love as he loves himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether one habit may be made up of many habits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether one may love oneself out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether one sin is the cause of another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether original sin is equally in all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether others besides Christ should have received that baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether our intellect can know many things at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether peace is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether plain water be required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether pleasure is the measure or rule by which to judge of moral good and evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether pleasure perfects operation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether privation of mode, species and order is an effect of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether prophecy is always accompanied by knowledge of the things prophesied? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether prudence is a virtue distinct from art? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether rectitude of the will is required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether religion is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether right of dominion and paternal right are distinct species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether robbery is a species of sin distinct from theft? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether sadness causes pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether servile fear is good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether she is bound to pay it at that time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether she ought to be called the Mother of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether she took a vow of virginity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether sin incurs a debt of punishment that is infinite in quantity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether sinners should be baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether sorrow is more harmful to the body than all the other passions of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether suffrages for the dead profit those who perform them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether thanksgiving should be deferred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether that fire will cleanse also the higher heavens? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether that other procession can be called generation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the Blessed Virgin cooperated actively in Christ''s conception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the Father and the Son are one principle of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the Person or hypostasis of Christ is composite after the Incarnation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the accidents remain after the change? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the acts of the Orders are rightly assigned in the text? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the angelic speech is subject to local distance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the angels were created in the empyrean heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the application of human law should be changed by dispensation of those in authority? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the children should follow the condition of their father or of their mother? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the consideration of any truth whatever pertains to the contemplative life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the demons will carry out the Judge''s sentence on the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the distinction of hierarchies and orders is natural? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the divine persons are equal in greatness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the duties of piety should be omitted for the sake of religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the elements will receive an additional clarity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the external action adds any goodness or malice to that of the interior act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the flesh of Christ was assumed by the Word previous to being united to the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the good or bad angels can work miracles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the image of God is in every man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the impediment degrees can be fixed by the ordinance of the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the irascible and concupiscible faculties can be the subject of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the limbo of hell is the same as Abraham''s bosom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the marriage act is excused from sin by the aforesaid goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the natural law is the same in all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the object of faith can be anything seen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the passion of self- love is the cause of every sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the relations, according to our mode of understanding, presuppose the acts of the persons, or contrariwise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the result of this sanctification was that she never sinned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the separate soul of man can move bodies by local movement? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the sinner sins in eating it sacramentally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the sixteen conditions, which are assigned by the masters, are necessary for confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the soul is man, or is man composed of soul and body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the theological virtues do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the will moves the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the will of God is the cause of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the wisdom that is a gift is compatible with mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether the woman was made immediately by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether their darkness is material? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there are different moral virtues about different passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there can be moral without intellectual virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there is a Divine law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there is a habit in the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there is any last end of human life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there is any power in them for the causing of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there is certainty in the hope of the wayfarer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there is more than one heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there is mortal sin in touches, kisses and such like seduction? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether there was free- will in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether these species are derived by the soul from certain separate immaterial forms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether these things are directed to the salvation of those who are blinded or hardened? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they are subject to the precedence of the good angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they are the cause of human acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they avail him who grants them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they can be corrupted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they can be granted by one who is in mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they can work real miracles for the purpose of leading men astray? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they differ from one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they differ with respect to those who are sinned against? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they know secret thoughts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they were necessary after Christ''s coming? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they will rise again to the animal life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether they would wish others to be damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether this conception was natural or miraculous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether this ingratitude, on account of which sins return, is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether this is competent to the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether this is lawful to a cleric? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether this precept binds the subject to correct his superior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether those who are to be baptized should be catechized or exorcized by priests? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether those who vow to enter religion are bound to remain there in perpetuity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether three fruits are fittingly assigned to the three parts of continence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether time was created simultaneously with it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether to be everywhere belongs to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether venial sin as regards its guilt is expiated by the pains of Purgatory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether venial sin is forgiven by this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether violence can be done to the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether virtue acquired by habituation, is of the same species as infused virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether we may lawfully have various contrary opinions of these notions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether we ought to pray to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether we were thereby reconciled with God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether what belongs to the Son of Man may be predicated of the Son of God, and conversely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether what he did would have been as meritorious as now? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether whatever the body contained belonging to the truth of human nature will rise again? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether whoever is perfect is in the state of perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether without grace man can keep the commandments of the Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether works done without charity merit any good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether works of virtue are deadened by subsequent sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether zeal is an effect of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether"latria"is to be given to the Cross of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether, by permission of the penitent, the priest can make known to another, a sin of his which he knew under the seal of confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether, for actual sins he will commit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether, in the same power, there are any passions, differing in species, but not contrary to one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Whether{ gnome} is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Which are the most important of them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Which beatitude responds to it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Which is the more burdensome, the New or the Old Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Which sinned more grievously, the man or the woman? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Which, and how many are they? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 4) Who ought to pay tithes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) By what other means should it have been made known? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Did they at once enter into beatitude after merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) How it is compared with other sciences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) If it be an operation of the intellect, whether it is an operation of the speculative or of the practical intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Is it indelible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Is there in them any other power of knowledge besides the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Of its species;( 6) Whether anger is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Of the degree of this sin;( 6) Whether this sacrament should be refused to the sinner that approaches it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Of the effects of virtue which are conferred by Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Of the eternal duration of His priesthood;( 6) Whether He should be called"a priest according to the order of Melchisedech"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Of the qualities required in the body of which the intellectual principle is the form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Of the species of unbelief;( 6) Of their comparison, one with another;( 7) Whether we ought to dispute about faith with unbelievers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Of the truth of the expression? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Supposing that it is not so, could any one of them become evil in the first instant of his creation by an act of his own will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) The difference of aeviternity, as there is one time, and one eternity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) The extent of His sufferings;( 6) Whether the pain which He endured was the greatest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) The time of fasting;( 6) Whether it is requisite for fasting to eat but once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Their number;( 6) Their order;( 7) The manner in which they were given;( 8) Whether they are dispensable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) What this power means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) When are the characters of the Orders imprinted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) When does an angel''s guardianship of a man begin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether Christ is the Son of God the Father and of the Virgin Mother in respect of two filiations? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether Christ''s human will was always conformed to the Divine will in the thing willed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether God can be loved wholly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether God is truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether God works in every worker? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether He ascended above all spiritual creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether He could do what He does not, or not do what He does? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether He delivered the Holy Fathers from hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether He is composed of genus and difference? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether He ought to have demonstrated the Resurrection by proofs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether He understands other things besides Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether His body was formed from the purest blood of the Virgin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether His slayers knew who He was? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether His was the same body, living and dead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a comprehensor can be a prophet? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a dispensation can be granted to a bigamous person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a general confession blots out mortal sins that one has forgotten? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a glorified body necessarily requires a place equal to itself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a human action is good or evil in its species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a man can hate the truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a man may merit the first grace for himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a movement of the free- will against sin is required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a multitude can be excommunicated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a priest in sin can perform this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a prophet distinguishes that which he perceives by the gift of God, from that which he perceives by his own spirit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a religious order can be established for the study of science? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a sinner may correct anyone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether a venial sin can become mortal by reason of an aggravating circumstance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether affinity is caused through affinity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether after putting her away he may take another wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether all men are subject to human law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether all men will come up for judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether all the speech of one angel to another is known to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether all things are subject to Divine government? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether an aureole is due to virgins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether an unbaptized person can baptize? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether anger is more natural than desire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether any cause can be assigned to the divine will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether any prophecy is from the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether any remnants of sin remain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether any union of body and soul took place in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether anyone may know that he has grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether anything can be generated from them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether anything remains of faith or hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether besides the judgment that takes place now in time, we are to expect Him in the future general judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether both the Son and the Holy Ghost are invisibly sent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether carnal sins are more grievous than spiritual sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether charity can be without them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether children should be received into religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether choice is only of possible things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether conditional consent makes a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether consent given secretly in words expressive of the present makes a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether death and other bodily defects are the result of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether defective age is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether demons are subject to their influence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether each Person can assume? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether erring reason binds? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether especially prelates and religious are in the state of perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether every sin includes action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether every sin incurs a debt of eternal and infinite punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether every theft is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether experience is a cause of hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether faith is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether goodness consists in mode, species, and order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether he is bound to hide even what he knows through other sources besides? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether he may lawfully abandon his subjects in a bodily manner? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether heaven''s gate was opened to us thereby? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether hope is a theological virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether husband and wife are equal in this matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether illegitimate birth is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether in Christ there were the gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether in Him there was sensible pain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether in any good of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether in virtue of this sanctification she received the fulness of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether intention is within the competency of irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it belongs to God alone to create? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it can be anything known? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it can ever be excused from sin without them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it contains any others besides these? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it increases by addition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is a capital sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is a general virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is a part of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is about pleasures of taste, as such, or only as a kind of touch? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is assuaged by sleep and baths? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is changeable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is fittingly added:"With thy whole mind,"etc.? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is in all those who have sanctifying grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is lawful for anyone to confess to another than his own priest, in virtue of a privilege or of the command of a superior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is lawful for them to quest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is lawful to kill oneself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is moved by a heavenly body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is necessary for salvation to believe certain things explicitly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is necessary to make restitution to the person from whom something has been taken? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is one virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is only in warlike matters? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is proper to Christ to be the Redeemer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is substantially the same as filial fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is the most grievous of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it is the same as longanimity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it passes to the father''s carnal children? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it was becoming that He should assume human nature in all its individuals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it was binding on all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it was ever lawful to have a concubine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether it was fitting for God to become incarnate from the beginning of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether judgment should always be given according to the written law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether liberality is a part of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether limbo is the same as the hell of the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether love is a passion that is hurtful to the lover? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether man can attain Happiness by means of his natural powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether man ought to love his neighbor more than his own body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether merits are the cause or reason of predestination, or reprobation, or election? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether natural contingencies are subject to the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether nocturnal pollution is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether oaths are desirable, and to be employed frequently as something useful and good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether obedience is necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether one is bound to confess at once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether one man can have several last ends? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether one who is in sin can without committing a sin exercise the Order he has received? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether one''s own body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether original sin would have been contracted if the woman, and not the man, had sinned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether our intellect understands by the process of composition and division? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether our soul sees in the eternal ideas all that it understands? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether prudence is a virtue necessary to man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether real remuneration alone makes a man guilty of simony, or also oral remuneration or remuneration by service? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether religion is a theological virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether sins differ in relation to the debt of punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether some determinate sensible thing is required for a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether some names are applied to God and to creatures univocally or equivocally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether subjects are bound to obey their superiors in all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether such works avail for the mitigation of the pains of hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether sudden things are especially feared? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether suffrages profit those who are in hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether thanksgiving should be measured according to the favor received or the disposition of the giver? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether that baptism should have ceased when Christ was baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether that fire will consume the other elements? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the Gifts are connected? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the act of the will is commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the actions of others are a cause of pleasure to us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the active intellect is one in all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the angel loves God more than self with natural love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the animals and plants will remain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the body is necessary for man''s happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the body of Christ is in this sacrament locally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the character of one Order presupposes of necessity the character of another Order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the consequences of an external action increase its goodness or malice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the contemplative life of man in this state can arise to the vision of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the created intellect needs any created light in order to see the essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the demons who are overcome by men, are hindered from making further assaults? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the entire punishment due for sin is forgiven by this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the episcopate is an Order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the fire of Purgatory frees from the debt of punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the fire whereby they are tormented is corporeal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the giving of alms is a matter of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the grace of Christ as Head of the Church is the same as His habitual grace as an individual man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the habits of knowledge acquired in this life remain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the husband can marry again the wife whom he has divorced? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the image of God is in man by comparison with the Essence, or with all the Divine Persons, or with one of them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the matter of this sacrament is wine from the grape? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the moral virtues differ in point of the various objects of the passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the movements of unbelievers are venial sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the oil ought to be consecrated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the one divine person is in another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the perfect can be scandalized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the process of counsel is one of analysis? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the reason can be the subject of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the sacraments derive this power from Christ''s Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the same can be predicated of essential names taken in the abstract? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the sensitive powers of apprehension can be the subject of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the soul is composed of matter and form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the substantial form remains there? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the whole human nature was assumed through the medium of the parts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the wicked can have the power of administering the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the wicked hate God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether the will is divided into irascible and concupiscible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether there are more than two processions in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether there can be error in the angel''s intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether there can be moral virtue without passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether there is a habit in the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether there is a sorrow contrary to the pleasure of contemplation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether there is an end to the punishment of those who have performed works of mercy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether there is one Divine law, or several? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether they are fittingly divided into social, perfecting, perfect, and exemplar virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether they know all mysteries of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether this be a suitable form of this sacrament:"I baptize thee in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether this gift is to be found in those who are without grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether this sacrament has any matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether this sacrament is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether three gifts of the soul are rightly assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether to His Mother? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether violence causes involuntariness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether we ought to ask for something definite when we pray? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether what belongs to the Son of Man may be predicated of the Divine Nature, and what belongs to the Son of God of the human nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether whatever it contained materially will rise again? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether wicked priests have the effective use of the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether without grace he can merit eternal life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether works deadened by sin revive through Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether works of satisfaction should be enjoined on sinners that have been baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether, after being divorced, they must remain unmarried? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether, for the sins of others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether, in this sacrament, the whole body should be anointed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether, on the other hand, there can be intellectual without moral virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 5) Whether, when in that state, his soul was wholly separated from his body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Did they receive grace and glory according to their natural capacities? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) From what capital sin does it arise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) If it be an operation of the speculative intellect, whether it consists in the consideration of speculative sciences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Of its distinction from the other theological virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Of its relation to the other sacraments;( 7) Of its institution;( 8) Of its duration;( 9) Of its continuance;( 10) Whether it can be repeated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Of the comparison of the one form with the other? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Of the relationship of the gift of understanding to the other gifts;( 7) Which of the beatitudes corresponds to this gift? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Supposing that he did not, was there any interval between his creation and fall? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) To whom the invisible mission is directed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) What did he know, and what did he not know about this matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) What is the rule of temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether Christ derived exaltation from it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether Confession of sins is necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether He can do anything outside the order imposed on things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether He delivered the lost from hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether He has a proper knowledge of them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether He is composed of subject and accident? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether His Incarnation ought to have been deferred to the end of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether His death conduced in any way to our salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether His judiciary power extends likewise to the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether a glorified body is palpable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether a husband may put aside his wife on account of other sins as he may for unbelief? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether a mortal sin can become venial? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether a penitent, in danger of death can be absolved by any priest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether a religious order that is directed to the contemplative life is more excellent than one that is directed to the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether a thing can be the object of universal hatred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether affinity is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether after the consecration, the body of Christ is moved when the host or chalice is moved? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether all are equally bound to explicit faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether all human things are subject to it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether all prelates are in the state of perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether all things are immediately governed by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether all things are true by one truth, or by many? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether an action has the species of good or evil from its end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether anger is more grievous than hatred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether any of the good will be judged? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether any perfection of the body is necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether anything false can be the matter of prophecy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether certain parts are suitably assigned to be anointed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether charity remains? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether corporal alms should be given out of the things we need? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether creation is common to the whole Trinity, or proper to any one Person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether doing good to another is a cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether endurance is its chief act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether even children receive grace and virtues in Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether every sacrament imprints a character? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether fear causes involuntariness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether goodness is divided into the virtuous, the useful, and the pleasant? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether he can have anything of his own? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether he may merit it for someone else? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether he ought to love one neighbor more than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether his knowledge can be styled as morning and evening? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether hope abounds in young men and drunkards? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether in Christ there was the gift of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether in pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether in the Church there can be any power above the episcopate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether in their absence it is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it acquires intellectual knowledge from the senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it appoints the end to the moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it be united to such a body by means of another body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it can be abolished from the heart of man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it increases by every act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is a sin of the flesh or a spiritual sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is due to martyrs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is lawful for them to wear coarser clothes than other persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is lawful to kill a just man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is lawful to swear by a creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is more meritorious to do a thing from a vow, than without a vow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is necessary that these should be the matter of a vow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is of the same species as our fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is one virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is possible to fulfil this precept in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is the greatest of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is the most grievous of all sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it is the same as wisdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it was assumed through the medium of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it was becoming that He should assume human nature in any man begotten of the stock of Adam? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it was distinguished by various habits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it was given at a suitable time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it was proper to her to be thus sanctified? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether it will cleanse all the elements? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether judgment is perverted by being usurped? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether lack of members is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether love is cause of all that the lover does? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether man attains Happiness through the action of some higher creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether man chooses of necessity or freely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether man ordains all to the last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether memory is in the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether morose delectation or non- morose delectation be subjected in the higher reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether of those who see God, one sees Him more perfectly than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one and the same external action can be both good and evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one can be compelled by one''s father to marry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one can be dispensed from confessing to another man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one could baptize with this form:"I baptize thee in the name of Christ?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one is freed from that punishment sooner than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one ought to correct a person who becomes worse through being corrected? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one ought to pay back more than one has received? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one should be withheld from entering religion through deference to one''s parents? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether one who is already excommunicated can be excommunicated again? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether pain, or fault, has more the nature of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether prophecy advanced in perfection as time went on? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether prophets of the demons ever tell what is true? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether religion should be preferred to the other moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether servile fear departs when charity comes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether several Persons can assume one individual nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether several can at the same time baptize one and the same person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether several persons can be the term of one notional act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether signification expressed by words is necessary for a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether sinners should be loved out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether sorrow is to be shunned more than pleasure is to be sought? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the Mass of a wicked priest is of less value than that of a good one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the act of the reason is commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the angel guardians always watch over men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the cause of divorce was hatred of the wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the character of Confirmation presupposes the character of Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the debt of punishment can remain after sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the divine will is always fulfilled? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the faithful are bound to obey the secular power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the flesh of Christ was in the patriarchs as to something signate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the gravity of sins depends on their causes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the heavenly bodies impose necessity on those things which are subject to their influence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the human nature was united to the Word accidentally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the image of God is in man, as to his mind only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the intellect can err? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the limbo of the patriarchs is the same as the limbo of children? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the love of God is according to measure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the matter of this sacrament should be consecrated by a bishop? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the names of the persons can be predicated of concrete essential names? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the one without the other''s consent may take a vow that prohibits the payment of the debt? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the passion which causes a sin diminishes it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the person who has taken something away is bound to restore it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the powers flow from the essence of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the process of counsel is indefinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the remission of sins is to be reckoned with the foregoing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the removal of sin is the effect of Penance as a virtue, or as a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the sacraments of the Old Law caused grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the soul can use the habit of knowledge here acquired? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the soul is incorruptible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the things to be believed should be divided into a certain number of articles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the wicked sin in administering the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the will can be the subject of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the will is evil if it follows the erring reason against the law of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether the will is moved by God alone as by an extrinsic principle? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether theft is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether there is a habit in separate substances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether there is a law of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether there is only one aeviternity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether there was any contrariety of wills in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether there was sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they are equal in power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they are, in any way, natural to man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they can be reconciled after being divorced? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they can demerit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they can give scandal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they can nourish? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they differ in regard to omission and commission? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they profit those who are in purgatory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether they remain in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether this change is instantaneous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether this is true:"The Son of God was made man"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether this sacrament preserves man from future sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether those things are more feared against which there is no remedy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether those who are schismatics, heretics, excommunicate, suspended or degraded, have the use of the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether those who are under the law may act beside the letter of the law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether those who received John''s baptism had afterwards to receive Christ''s baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether to be Head of the Church is proper to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether venial sin can be in a man with original sin alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether water should be mixed with it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether we ought to ask for temporal things when we pray? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether what He makes He could make better? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether without grace man can prepare himself for grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether"eubulia,""synesis"and"gnome"are virtues annexed to prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether( the Passion) secured man''s salvation efficiently? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether, as a general virtue, it is essentially the same as every virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether, for each single mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Whether, supposing they are applied analogically, they are applied first to God or to creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) Which beatitude corresponds to it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 6) of the certainty of predestination; whether the predestined will infallibly be saved? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) After entering glory, did their natural love and knowledge remain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Concerning the order of hope to love;( 8) Whether love conduces to action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Of its daughters;( 8) Whether it has a contrary vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Of its relation to other sins;( 8) Whether it should be reckoned a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Of the breaking of the consecrated bread? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Of the precept:"Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself";( 8) Whether the order of charity is included in the precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Of the solemnizing of a vow;( 8) Whether those who are under another''s power can take vows? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Of the visible mission( 8) Whether any person sends Himself visibly or invisibly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Was the highest of them who fell, absolutely the highest among the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether Baptism opens the gates of the heavenly kingdom to those who are baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether Christ''s body, as it is in this sacrament, can be seen by the eye? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether God is its subject- matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether He delivered the children who died in original sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether He is in any way composite, or wholly simple? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether His entire soul suffered? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether affinity in itself admits of degrees? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether all men have the same last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether all that God does is miraculous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether an intention is required on the part of the one baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether an oath is binding? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether anger is only towards those with whom we have a relation of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether any actions of man are necessary in order that man may obtain Happiness of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether any created intellect can comprehend the essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether any external goods are necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether any names are applicable to God from time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether any of the wicked will be judged? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether any other person is bound to restitution? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether any trace of the Trinity is to be found in created things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether any true virtue is possible without it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether anyone can merit restoration after sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether by means of an accident? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether concupiscence causes involuntariness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether corporal alms should be given out of ill- gotten goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether determinate words are required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether essential attributes can be appropriated to the persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether every punishment is inflicted for a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether explicit faith in Christ is always necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether exterior pain is greater than interior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether fear is the beginning of wisdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether he ought to love more, a neighbor who is better, or one who is more closely united to him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether he sins mortally by not distributing ecclesiastical goods to the poor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether immersion is necessary for Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether in Christ there were any gratuitous graces? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether in any good of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it bestows grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it depends on their circumstances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it fixes the mean in the moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it increases indefinitely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it is a cardinal, or principal, virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it is due to doctors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it is essential that someone should raise the person baptized from the sacred font? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it is forbidden to ask for the debt at any particular time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it is lawful to kill a man in self- defense? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it is lawful to thieve in a case of necessity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether it is more miraculous than any other change? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether its action is directed to its own good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether likeness is a cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether local distance impedes the separated soul''s knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether nocturnal pollution prevents man from receiving this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether one Person can assume two individual natures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether one intellect can understand better than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether one power rises from another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether parish priests or archdeacons may enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether passion excuses from sin altogether? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether religion has any external actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether religious perfection is diminished by possessing something in common? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether secret correction should precede denouncement? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether sinners love themselves? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether so many places should be distinguished? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether spiritual goods are to be foregone on account of scandal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether that fire precedes or follows the judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the Divine government is frustrated in anything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the act of the sensitive appetite is commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the angel grieves over the loss of the one guarded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the angels can be ministers of the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the devil is the head of all the wicked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the flesh of Christ in the patriarchs was subject to sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the goodness of the will in regard to the means, depends on the intention of the end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the image of God is in man''s power or in his habits and acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the intellect can, through the species of which it is possessed, actually understand, without turning to the phantasms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the justification of the ungodly is a work of time or is sudden? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the knowledge of God is discursive? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the memory be distinct from the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the morning and evening knowledge are the same, or do they differ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the number of the predestined is certain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the orders will outlast the Day of Judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the reasons for divorce had to be written on the bill? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the same articles are of faith for all times? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the sin of consent in the act of sin is subjected in the higher reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the soul is of the same species as an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the species derived from the end is contained under the species derived from the object, as under its genus, or conversely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the temporal punishment should be enjoined in proportion to the sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the union itself is something created? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the vestments of the ministers are fittingly instituted by the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether the will of God is mutable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether there is a particular justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether there was fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether they avail the children in limbo? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether they can make use of the knowledge acquired in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether they differ according to their various stages? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether this fire is beneath the earth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether this is true:"Man became God"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether this sacrament benefits others besides the recipients? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether this sacrament has any form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether those who are deformed in the above parts ought to be anointed thereon? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether those who are heretics, schismatics, or excommunicated, can perform this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether water is of necessity for this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether we ought to pray for others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Whether without grace he can rise from sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Which is the better, to love one''s friend, or one''s enemy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 7) Which is the more perfect, the episcopal or the religious state? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) By what words it may be suitably expressed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Could they have sinned afterwards? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Of the natural order of the things concurring to justification;( 9) Whether the justification of the ungodly is God''s greatest work? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Of the number of articles;( 9) Of the manner of embodying the articles in a symbol;( 10) Who has the right to propose a symbol of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Was the sin of the foremost angel the cause of the others sinning? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether Anti- christ can be called the head of all the wicked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether Baptism produces an equal effect in all who are baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether Christ paid tithes in the loins of Abraham? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether He delivered men from Purgatory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether He enters into composition with other things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether His Passion hindered the joy of fruition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether a sin committed through passion can be mortal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether accidental homicide is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether all other creatures concur with man in that last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether all the powers of the soul remain in the soul after death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether any action is indifferent in its species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether anything can be mixed with the consecrated wine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether anything is contrary to the Divine Providence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether anything may be added to or subtracted from these words? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether degraded priests can do so? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether every man desires Happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether every robbery is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether faith is necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether he can merit for himself an increase of grace or charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether he ought to love more, one who is akin to him by blood, or one who is united to him by other ties? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether he who raises someone from the sacred font is bound to instruct him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether ignorance causes involuntariness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether in Christ there was prophecy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether in any created good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether in any way they profit those who are heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether initial fear is substantially the same as filial fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it consists in the sole contemplation of God seen in His Essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it depends on how much harm ensues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it is a matter of argument? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it is a mortal sin to ask for it at a holy time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it is due to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it is necessary for salvation to believe in the Trinity explicitly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it is the form of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it is the greatest of virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it is the same as assumption? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it is to be received only when one is fasting? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it takes pleasure in its own action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether it was more fitting for the Person of the Son of God to assume human nature than for another Divine Person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether its degrees extend as far as the degrees of consanguinity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether its proper act is command? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether men are taken up into the angelic orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether men are to be consumed by that fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether one delight can be contrary to another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether one is bound to restore at once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether one may pass from one religious order to another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether one person can incur punishment for another''s sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether our intellect understands the indivisible before the divisible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether particular justice has a matter of its own? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether predestination can be furthered by the prayers of the saints? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether religion is the same as holiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether religious who are appointed to the episcopal office are bound to religious observances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether rivalry exists among the angels as regards their guardianship? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether souls separated from the body know what happens here? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether temporal things are to be foregone on account of scandal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the act of the vegetal soul is commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the angels also will be judged? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the charity of a wayfarer can be perfect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the created intellect seeing the essence of God, knows all things in it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the degree of goodness or malice in the will depends on the degree of good or evil in the intention? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the fellowship of friends is necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the form of this sacrament should take the shape of a deprecatory phrase? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the image of God is in man by comparison with every object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the judgment of the intellect is hindered by an obstacle in the sensitive powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the knowledge of God is the cause of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the lower reason can be the subject of mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the minister''s intention is necessary in the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the reason is a distinct power from the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the religious life of solitaries is to be preferred to the religious life of those who live in community? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the soul is wholly in each part of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the true body of Christ remains in this sacrament when He is seen under the appearance of a child or of flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the will of God imposes necessity on the things willed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether the work of creation is mingled with the works of nature and of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether there was wonder? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether they differ in respect of excess and deficiency? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether they ever think of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether they ought to be compelled to the faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether this is true:"Christ is a creature"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether this name"God"is a name of nature, or of the operation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether trine immersion is necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether we ought to pray for our enemies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether we should love our enemies out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether without grace man can avoid sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether witnesses should be called before denouncement? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Whether wonder is a cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Which attributes should be appropriated to each person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Which is more binding, an oath or a vow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Which is the better, to love God, or one''s neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Which of the fruits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Who can give alms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 8) Who is competent to receive this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) After entering into glory, could they advance farther? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Did as many sin as remained steadfast? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) In what part of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Of the seven petitions of the Lord''s Prayer;( 10) Whether prayer is proper to the rational creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Of the various degrees of charity;( 10) Whether charity can diminish? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) The time of the Passion;( 10) The place;( 11) Whether it was fitting for Him to be crucified with robbers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) To whom should we give alms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether Baptism can be reiterated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether God has knowledge of non- existing things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether an individual action can be indifferent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether an oath is subject to dispensation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether children may be bound by vow to enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether communicants receiving at their hands are guilty of sinning? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether fear is a gift of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether fortitude deals chiefly with sudden occurrences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether he can merit final perseverance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether infants should be baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether insincerity hinders the effect of Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether it is about passions, or about operations only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether it is an obligation to pay it at the time of a festival? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether it is to be given to them who lack the use of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether it rightly employs metaphors and similes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether man having received grace can do good and avoid sin without any further Divine help? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether marriages of persons related to one another by consanguinity or affinity should always be dissolved by divorce? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether on the position of the person sinned against? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether one ought to induce others to enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether right faith is required therein; so that it be impossible for an unbeliever to confer a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether robbery is a more grievous sin than theft? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether solicitude or watchfulness belongs to prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the act of faith is meritorious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the acts of the external members are commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the goodness of the will depends on its conformity to the Divine Will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the higher reason can be the subject of venial sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the mode of observing a virtue comes under the precept of the Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the prayer of the Church, the Sacrament of the altar, and almsgiving profit the departed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the superior and inferior reason are distinct powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the union of the two natures is the greatest union? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether the wicked will be involved therein? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether there is in God the will of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether there was anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether there was the fulness of grace in Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether they differ according to their various circumstances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether they see the glory of the blessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether this is a suitable form for this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether this is true:"This man,"pointing out Christ,"began to be"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether this name"God"is a communicable name? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether to the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether we are bound to show them tokens of friendship? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether we ought to have communications with them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether what is there known is known by any similitudes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ( 9) Whether, out of charity, a man ought to love his son more than his father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ), in commenting on the text of John, asks, since Christ is Word and soul and body,"whether He putteth down His soul, for that He is the Word? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"How can the creature see the uncreated?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"If the rulers of the Church are Shepherds, how is there one Shepherd, except that all these are members of one Shepherd?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"Since all see God there with equal clearness, what do they not know, who know Him Who knows all things?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"What is more opposed to consent than error?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"What is predestination but the destination of one who is?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"When priests place their hands on believers for the grace of exorcism, what else do they but cast out the devils?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"When your children shall say to you: What is the meaning of this service? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"Whence hath water so great power, that it touches the body and cleanses the heart?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"Where is faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ):"Who ever perished innocent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | *( 2) Whether it is annihilated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ---that is, what makes them one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:1, says:"In Christ was offered up a sacrifice capable of giving eternal salvation; what then do we do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:12):"And now, Israel, what doth the Lord thy God require of thee, but that thou fear the Lord thy God, and walk in His ways, and love Him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:12):"And now, Israel, what doth the Lord thy God require of thee, but that thou fear the Lord thy God?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:12):"And now, Israel, what doth the Lord thy God require of thee, but that thou fear the Lord thy God?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:14):"How shall they believe in Him, of Whom they have not heard? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:14,15):"How shall they believe Him, of whom they have not heard? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:14:"How shall they believe Him, of Whom they have not heard? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:15) it is written:"How shall they preach unless they be sent?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:15):"Shall the axe boast itself against him that cutteth with it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:15:"How shall they preach, unless they be sent?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:18):"Are not they that eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:18):"Are not they that eat of the sacrifices, partakers of the altar?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:19):"What then? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:7):"Who shall not fear Thee, O King of nations?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 10:9,"Why is earth and ashes proud?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 112:4) it is written:"The Lord is high above all nations, and His glory above the heavens"; and farther on:"Who is as the Lord our God?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 115:12,"What shall I render to the Lord for all the things that He hath rendered to me?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 11:15):"What is the meaning that My beloved hath wrought much wickedness in My house?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 11:3):"Art Thou He that art to come, or look we for another?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 11:34,"Who hath been His counsellor?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 11:35):"Who hath first given to Him, and recompense shall be made to him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 11:35):"Who hath first given to Him, and recompense shall be made to him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 11:47):"What do we; for this man doth many miracles?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 12:13):"What is there that you have had less than the other churches, but that I myself was not burthensome to you?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 12:17),"If the whole body were the eye, where would be the hearing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 12:17),"If the whole body were the eye, where would be the hearing?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 12:42):"Who, thinkest thou, is the faithful and wise dispenser[ Douay: steward], whom his lord setteth over his family?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 12:5):"Have ye not read in the Law that on the Sabbath- days the priests in the Temple break the Sabbath, and are without blame?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 12:56):"You hypocrites, you know how to discern the face of the heaven and of the earth, but how is it that you do not discern this time?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 12:9:"Moreover we have had fathers of our flesh for instructors, and we reverenced them: shall we not much more obey the Father of Spirits, and live?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 13:15):"Doth not every one of you on the Sabbath- day loose his ox or his ass from the manger, and lead them to water?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 13:28) that the servants of the householder, in whose field cockle had been sown, asked him:"Wilt thou that we go and gather it up?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 13:3,"Wilt thou not be afraid of the power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:31):"O thou of little faith, why didst thou doubt?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:4):"Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:4):"Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:4):"Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:5):"Lord, we know not whither Thou goest; and how can we know the way?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:5):"Which of you shall have an ass or an ox fall into a pit, and will not immediately draw him out on the Sabbath- day?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:5,"He that is evil to himself, to whom will he be good?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:5,"He that is evil to himself, to whom will he be good?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:5:"He that is evil to himself, to whom will he be good?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 14:8):"Why wilt Thou be as a stranger in the land, and as a wayfaring man turning in to lodge?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 15:11,"Who is like to Thee among the strong, O Lord?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 15:12):"If Christ be preached that He rose again from the dead, how do some among you say, that there is no resurrection from the dead?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 15:12):"Now if Christ be preached that He rose from the dead, how do some among you say, that there is no resurrection of the dead?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 15:12, 14) that when the disciples of our Lord said:"Dost Thou know that the Pharisees, when they heard this word, were scandalized?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 15:12:"Dost thou know that the Pharisees, when they heard this word, were scandalized?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 15:29,"If the dead rise not again at all, why are they then baptized for them?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 15:8) that he said to the Lord:"Whereby may I know that I shall possess it?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 16]( 16) Whether sinners impetrate anything from God by praying? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 17:24,25, when our Lord asked Peter:"Of whom do the kings of the earth receive tribute, of their own children, or of strangers?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 17:9,10:"The heart of man is perverse and unsearchable, who can know it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 17:9:"The heart is perverse above all things, and unsearchable; who can know it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 18:13:"Who can understand sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 18:17):"Can I hide from Abraham what I am about to do?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 18:20:"How can it be said that He speaks in secret when He speaks before so many men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 18:21, when Peter asked:"How often shall my brother off end against me, and I forgive him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 18:21,22):"If in silent thought thou answer: How shall I know the word that the Lord hath spoken? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 18:7):"Will not God revenge His elect who cry to Him day and night?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 18:8) it is written:"But yet the Son of Man, when He cometh, shall He find think you, faith on earth?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 19:10):"What profit is there in my blood, whilst I go down to corruption?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 19:17):"Why askest thou Me concerning good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 19:4):"Have ye not read that He Who made man from the beginning''made them male and female''"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 19:9):"Who is he? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:13):"Was Paul crucified for you or were you baptized in the name of Paul?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:13:"Is Christ divided?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:13:"Was Paul then crucified for you? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:18):"Whereby shall I know this?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:24) that the devil cried out:"What have we to do with thee, Jesus of Nazareth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:24)* the demon cried out to Christ:"Why art Thou come to destroy us before the time?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:26,27:"How could we blame Herod or the Jews if they seem to persecute one who was born of adultery?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:27):"What is this new doctrine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:6):"If I be a father, where is My honor?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:6):"If, then, I be a father, where is my honor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 1:8):"If you offer the blind in sacrifice, is it not evil?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 20, to be a material book, who will be able to conceive its size and length? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 20:14,15,"Is it not lawful for me to do what I will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 20:32):"Wisdom that is hid and treasure that is not seen; what profit is there in them both?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 20:32:"Wisdom that is hid and treasure that is not seen: what profit is there in them both?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 20:8,"What man is there that is fearful and fainthearted?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 21):"Is not Christ slain as often as the Pasch is celebrated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 21:2:"O God, my God, look upon me: why hast Thou forsaken me?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 22:27):"Which is the greater, he that sitteth at table, or he that serveth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 22:35,36)"When I sent you without purse and scrip and shoes, did you want anything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 23:8):"Who is this king of glory?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 23:8,"How shall I curse whom God hath not cursed?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 24:26):"Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and so to enter into His glory?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 24:26:"Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and so to enter into His glory?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 24:45) our Lord says:"Who, thinkest thou, is a faithful and wise servant?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 24:45):"Who, thinkest thou, is a faithful and prudent[ Douay:''wise''] servant whom his lord hath appointed over his family?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 27:4):"Anger hath no mercy, nor fury when it breaketh forth; and who can bear the violence[ impetum] of one provoked?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 27:4,"Anger hath no mercy, nor fury when it breaketh forth: and who can bear the violence of one provoked?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 27:46) that Christ, while hanging upon the cross, cried out:"My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 28:9):"Whom shall He teach knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 29:10):"What profit is there in my blood?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 2:1,2:"Why have the Gentiles raged, and the people devised vain things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 2:11):"For what man knoweth the things of a man, but the spirit of a man that is in him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 2:11:"What man knoweth the things of a man, but the spirit of a man that is in him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 2:2):"Where is He that is born King of the Jews? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 2:4,"Knowest thou not that the benignity of God leadeth thee to penance?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 2:4,"Or despisest thou the riches of His goodness, and patience, and longsuffering?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 2:4:"Or despisest thou the riches of His goodness?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 31:10,"Who shall find a valiant woman?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 31:10:"Who shall find a valiant woman?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 32 and from Amos 5:25,26:"Did you offer victims and sacrifices to Me in the desert for forty years, O house of Israel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 32:6:"Is He not thy Father, who possessed, and made, and created thee?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 32:6:"Is not He thy Father, that hath possessed thee, and made thee and created thee?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 33:7):"Why does one day excel another, and one light another, and one year another year, one sun another sun? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 34:11):"He that hath not been tempted[ Douay:''tried''], what manner of things doth he know?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 34:30):"He that washeth himself[ baptizatur] after touching the dead, if he touch him again, what does his washing avail?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 34:4):"What can be made clean by the unclean?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 37:23,"Whom hast thou reproached, and whom hast thou blasphemed, and against whom hast thou exalted thy voice?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 37:3):"O wicked presumption, whence camest thou?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 37:3,"O wicked presumption, whence camest thou?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:1):"Who hath bewitched you, that you should not obey the truth?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:1):"Why hath God commanded you that you should not eat of every tree of paradise?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:1,2):"What advantage then hath the Jew? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:12);( 3) Whether man could sin venially in the state of innocence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:16:"Know you not that you are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:3):"Whereas there is among you zeal[ Douay:''envying''] and contention, are you not carnal, and walk according to men?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:3:"Shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:4,"Can"a man"enter a second time into his mother''s womb, and be born again?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:4,"How can a man be born again, when he is grown old?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:7):"Ye brood of vipers, who hath showed you to flee from the wrath to come?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 3:9):"Who can tell if God will turn and forgive, and will turn away from His fierce anger, and we shall not perish?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 40:18):"To whom have you likened God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 41:2):"Who hath raised up the just one form the east, hath called him to follow him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 44:15):"Know you not that there is no one like me in the science of divining?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 45:21:"Am not I the Lord, and there is no God else besides Me? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 48:4,5):"Who can glory like to thee? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 49:13,"Shall I eat the flesh of bullocks? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 49:13:"Shall I eat the flesh of bullocks? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 49:16,"But to the sinner God hath said: Why dost thou declare My justice?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:16):"Am I become your enemy because I tell you the truth?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:20):"He that loveth not his brother whom he seeth, how can he love God, Whom he seeth not?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:20:"He that loveth not his brother, whom he seeth, how can he love God, Whom he seeth not?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:3,"If Thou be the Son of God,"etc., Ambrose says:"What means this way of addressing Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:3,"Why do you love vanity, and seek after lying?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:6):"Offer up the sacrifice of justice,"as though someone asked what the works of justice are, adds:"Many say, Who showeth us good things?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:6,7),"Many say: Who showeth us good things?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:6,7):"Many say: Who showeth us good things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:7,"What hast thou that thou hast not received? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:7:"What hast thou that thou hast not received?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:8):"What other nation is there so renowned that hath ceremonies and just judgments, and all the law?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:9):"Now that He ascended, what is it, but because He also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:9):"Now that He ascended, what is it, but because He also descended first into the lower parts of the earth?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:9):"Turn you again to the weak and needy elements?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 4:9,"How turn you again to the weak and needy elements?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5) are acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 51:12,"Who art thou, that thou shouldst be afraid of a mortal man?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 51:3,"Why dost thou glory in malice?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 53:1:"Who hath believed our report?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 53:8):"Who shall declare His generation?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 53:8:"Who shall declare His generation?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 58:3,"Why have we fasted and Thou hast not regarded?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 58:5):"Is this such a fast as I have chosen, for a man to afflict his soul for a day?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:12):"Do not you judge them that are within?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:12):"What have I to do to judge them that are without?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:12):"What have I to do to judge them that are without?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:12):"What have I to do to judge them that are without?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:12:"What manner of joy shall be to me, who sit in darkness, and see not the light of heaven?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:22, where it is written:"Will you not then fear Me, saith the Lord, who have set the sand a bound for the sea?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:29):"Who shall give them to have such a mind, to fear Me?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:44): How can you believe, who receive glory one from another, and the glory which is from God alone, you do not seek?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:46):"If you love them that love you, what reward shall you have?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 5:7,8):"Knowest thou the way that leadeth to the city of Medes?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 63:1):"Who is this that cometh from Edom?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 63:1, where, on the angels asking,"Who is he who cometh up from Edom?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:1,"Why do you not rather suffer yourselves to be defrauded?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:14):"What concord hath light with darkness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:14):"What participation hath justice with injustice?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:14:"What participation hath justice with injustice?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:15):"What concord hath Christ with Belial?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:15):"What concord hath Christ with Belial?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:21:"What fruit had you therefore then in those things, of which you are now ashamed?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:3):"Know you not that we shall judge angels?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:3):"Know you not that we shall judge angels?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:6),"Who shall confess to Thee in hell?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 6:68,69),"Will you also go away?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 70:18,"O God, who is like Thee?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 72:25):"For what have I in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 76:8 are to the point, where it is said:"Will God then be angry for ever? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 7:15):"The Jews wondered, saying: How doth this Man know letters, having never learned?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 7:22,"Have not we prophesied in Thy name?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 7:23):"Are you angry at Me because I have healed the whole man on the Sabbath day?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 7:23):"Are you angry at Me because I have healed the whole man on the Sabbath- day?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 7:24):"Unhappy man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 7:24:"Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 7:26):"Hast thou daughters? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 7:4,"How sayest thou to thy brother?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 8:24):"What a man seeth, why doth he hope for?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 8:24):"What a man seeth, why doth he hope for?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 8:24):"What a man seeth, why doth he hope for?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 8:29:''Art Thou come hither to torment us before the time?'' |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 8:46):"Which of you shall convince Me of sin?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 8:46,"If I tell you the truth, why do you not believe Me?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 8:6) saying:"There is none that doth penance for his sin, saying: What have I done?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 8:6):"There is none that doth penance for his sin, saying: What have I done?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 9:11),"If we have sown unto you spiritual things, is it a great matter if we reap your carnal things?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 9:11,"If we have sown unto you spiritual things, is it a great matter if we reap your carnal things?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 9:19):"Who resisteth His will?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 9:19):"Who resisteth His will?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 9:7):"Who serveth as a soldier at any time at his own charge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | 9:7,"Who serveth as a soldier at any time at his own charges? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''Are they not''] all ministering spirits, sent to minister for them, who shall receive the inheritance of salvation(?)." |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''Can the children of the bridegroom mourn?'']." |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''Can you make the children of the bridegroom fast, whilst the bridegroom is with them?'']." |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''Have we not prophesied in Thy name? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''What fellowship hath light with darkness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''What fellowship hath light with darkness?'']" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''What''] can be made clean by the unclean?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''Which of you shall dwell with everlasting burnings? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''Who hath known the mind of the Lord?''] |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''Will God then cast off for ever?'']" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''devoureth''], the man that is more just than himself?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''ought not Christ''] to have suffered these things, and so to enter into His glory(?)." |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''seek of their God, for the living of the dead?'']" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''shall we not much more''] obey the Father of spirits and live?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''the Lord''] hath not done?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | :''us''] to this day?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ?''] |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ?''] |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ?'']" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ?'']. |
aquinas-summa-2292 | About His will itself there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is will in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | About sacrifices there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether offering a sacrifice to God is of the law of nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | About the first there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether love exists in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | About this are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is power in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | About this four points of inquiry arise:( 1) Whether falsity exists in things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | About this there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether truth resides in the thing, or only in the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | About this, four points of inquiry arise:( 1) To whom does it belong to live? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Accordingly four points of inquiry arise with regard to piety:( 1) To whom does piety extend? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Accordingly we must first treat of oaths: and under this head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) What is an oath? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Accordingly we must here consider scandal, under which head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) What is scandal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Again he adds afterwards:"Are we to suppose that the more holy they are, the less do they resemble the birds?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Again if the proconsul command one thing, and the emperor another, will you hesitate, to disregard the former and serve the latter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And Amos 3:6,"Shall there be evil in a city, which the Lord hath not done?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And about this there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there are ideas? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And can there be one operation where there are different substances?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And concerning this there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it belongs to a deacon to baptize? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And he said: In what then were you baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And how shall they hear without a preacher? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And how shall they hear without a preacher?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And how shall they hear without a preacher?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And how shall they preach unless they be sent?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And how shall we know this if no commandment declares it to us?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And if thou do justly, what shalt thou give Him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And if thou hast received, why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And she smiled at me with a persuasive mockery as though to say: Canst not thou what these youths and these maidens can? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And since all can not do this, why should all make this a pretext for being exempt? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial?'']" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And what could afford us a stronger proof of this than that the Son of God should become a partner with us of human nature?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And while He is doing all things wondrously, would He have taken away that which He accomplished in mercy?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And whilst He is doing all things wondrously, would He have taken away that which He accomplished in mercy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And who are they that shall be received by them into their dwellings, if not those who succor them in their needs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | And whom shall He make to understand the hearing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Are the Christian sacraments, by any chance, of a nature less lasting than this bodily mark?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Are they not hence, from your concupiscences which war in your members?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Art Thou come to destroy us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | As regards sobriety there are four points of inquiry:( 1) What is the matter of sobriety? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | As regards the first of these, there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the essence in God is the same as the person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | As to the first, there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether one man can teach another, as being the cause of his knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Baptism of Water, of Blood, and of the Spirit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Baptism,"unclean, by which he was sanctified?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Because man, by sinning, can do nothing against God; since it is written( Job 35:6):"If thy iniquities be multiplied, what shalt thou do against Him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But God is called the Father even of the irrational creature, according to Job 38:28:"Who is father of the rain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But Holy Scripture attributes the three dimensions to God, for it is written:"He is higher than Heaven, and what wilt thou do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But a man''s action, good or evil, does no good or harm to God; for it is written( Job 35:6,7):"If thou sin, what shalt thou hurt Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But according to the Church''s ritual, the man who comes to be baptized is asked concerning his faith:"Dost thou believe in God the Father Almighty?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But he is not always bound to do this actually: since not even did our Lord do so, for when He received a blow, He said:"Why strikest thou Me?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But hope is of things unseen:"for what a man seeth, why doth he hope for?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But the angel seems first to have announced what the virgin might doubt, and which, because of her doubt, would make her ask:"How shall this be done?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But the fire of hell gives no light, hence the saying of Job 18:5:"Shall not the light of the wicked be extinguished?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But to cleanse does not befit the demons, according to the words:"What can be made clean by the unclean?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But who ever thought it his duty to sacrifice to any other than one whom he either knew or deemed or pretended to be a God?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But why should our Lord, whose right by nature it is to forgive sins, avoid those whom He could make holier than such as abstain?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | But, as Augustine says:"When we say there are three who bear witness in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and it is asked, Three what? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | By what law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Can anything be more shameful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Can not the lesser operate as the greater? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Christ, began to be? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning God''s providence there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether providence is suitably assigned to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning His simplicity, there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God is a body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning Word there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Word is an essential term in God, or a personal term? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning anger there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is lawful to be angry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning choice there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Of what power is it the act; of the will or of the reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning corporeal actions there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a body can be active? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning evil, six points are to be considered:( 1) Whether evil is a nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning flattery there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether flattery is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning friendliness or affability, there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning humility there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether humility is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning knowledge, there are sixteen points for inquiry:( 1) Whether there is knowledge in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning liberality there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether liberality is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning lying there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether lying, as containing falsehood, is always opposed to truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning predestination there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether predestination is suitably attributed to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning procession there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is procession in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning studiousness there are two points of inquiry:( 1) What is the matter of studiousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning thankfulness there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether thankfulness is a special virtue distinct from other virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the Divine Essence, we must consider:( 1) Whether God exists? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first our consideration will be fivefold:( 1) What is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether happiness consists in wealth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether happiness is something uncreated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether nativity regards the nature or the person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the flesh of Christ was derived from Adam? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are eleven points of inquiry:( 1) Whether every human action is good, or are there evil actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ should have led a solitary life, or have associated with men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether circumcision was a preparation for, and a figure of, Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are six points of inquiry:( 1) What is the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether habits of the speculative intellect are virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the Blessed Virgin, Mother of God, was sanctified before her birth from the womb? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the sacraments of the New Law are the cause of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God is perfect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) What is Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first, there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ should have worked miracles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first, there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God is infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first, there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the proposition"God exists"is self- evident? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the first, three things must be considered:( 1) Of what things is the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the name"Holy Ghost"there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether this name,"Holy Ghost,"is the proper name of one divine Person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning the virtues themselves there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether clemency and meekness are altogether identical? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning their enlightenment there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether one angel moves the intellect of another by enlightenment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning this there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning this there are three points of inquire:( 1) Whether good can be the cause of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning this there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Confirmation is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning this there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether any part of the food is changed into true human nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning this, there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether beatitude belongs to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning truth there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether truth is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Concerning which there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God alone works inwardly in the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Dei iv):"Without justice, what else is a kingdom but a huge robbery?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Dei iv, 4):"If justice be disregarded, what is a king but a mighty robber? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Dei xii, 9),"Who wrought the good will of the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Dei xiv, 9):"Whenever these affections follow reason, and are caused when and where needed, who will dare to call them diseases or vicious passions?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Did not that rich man go away from His presence sorrowful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Did they not seek for this information from the story of times and places?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Do I say that what is offered in sacrifice to idols is anything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Do we not offer it up every day in memory of His death?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | First, thus:"If the dead rise not again, nor did Christ rise again, why are they baptized for them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For after he had pronounced sentence of excommunication, he adds as his reason:"Know you not that a little leaven corrupts the whole lump?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For as Augustine says, commenting on the words,"Simon, son of John, lovest thou Me? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For as Matthew relates( 27:46), when our Lord was hanging upon the cross He cried out:"My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For how can a creature see what is increatable?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For how shall we call Him omnipotent, if He is unable to heal what is beyond hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For is it not a mocking request to seek what we know He does not give, and what is in our power without His giving it?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For it is written( 1 Kings 15:17):"When thou wast a little one in thy own eyes, wast thou not made the head of the tribes of Israel?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For it is written( James 4:1):"Whence are wars and contentions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For nothing will be but what was at some time as to its species:"What is it that hath been? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For since we confess the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost to be one God and three persons, to those who ask:"Whereby are They one God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For this reason, against those who hold that there are several souls in the body, he asks( De Anima i, 5),"what contains them?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For what does the world every day but imitate, in its elements, our resurrection?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For what else is pain but a feeling of impatience of division or corruption?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For what wise man seeks of his own accord to submit to such servitude and peril, as to have to render an account of the whole Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For when sorrow ceases, repentance fails; and if repentance fails, what becomes of pardon?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For who is not aware that such is the case with some other streams?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For who would suffer a rich man to be chosen for the Church''s seat of honor, in despite of a poor man who is better instructed and holier?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | For, as we read in the( Twelfth) Council of Toledo,"What kind of a sacrifice is that, wherein not even the sacrificer is known to have a share?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | God, our neighbor, our body and ourselves? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Having become man, ought He to have made another world, that we might believe Him to be Him by whom the world was made? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | He is deeper than Hell, and how wilt thou know? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | He replies: Whereby shall I know this? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence Augustine says to Renatus( De Anima et ejus origine i):"Who may offer Christ''s body except for them who are Christ''s members?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence Jerome says on the words,"Why seest thou the mote?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence also in human affairs, if we ask, Who is this man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence he adds:"How can there be a creature in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence he did not say:"Art Thou He that hast come?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence it is written( 4 Kings 4:13):"Hast thou any business, and wilt thou that I speak to the king or to the general of the army?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence speaking of Achab who"put hair- cloth on his flesh,"the Lord said to Elias:"Hast thou not seen Achab humbled before Me?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence the Lord, knowing this to be true, asked Peter, saying:"Simon, son of John, lovest thou Me more than these?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence the Psalm does not say:"Will He from His anger shut up His mercies?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Hence the passage quoted continues:"Who can bear the violence of one provoked?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Here there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether one angel speaks to another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | How much more, do you think, he deserveth worse punishments, who hath trodden underfoot the Son of God,"etc.? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | How then, if it does a man no good to have the Gospels in his ears, will he find salvation by wearing them round his neck? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | I be a father, where is My honor?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | I be a master, where is My fear?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | If the whole were the hearing, where would be the smelling?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | If therefore any creature is like God, God will be like some creature, which is against what is said by Isaias:"To whom have you likened God?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | If this holds true, if all are fools with thee, who can be wise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | In fact is there greater folly than for reason to seek help from anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | In regard to the former there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it was fitting that John should baptize? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | In the first place, then, about schism, there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether schism is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | In the shapes of the letters or in the understanding of the sense? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | In treating of the knowledge of corporeal things there are three points to be considered:( 1) Through what does the soul know them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Is he cheerful in mind? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Is it a washing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Is it a written law or is it instilled in the heart? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Is it not lawful for me to do what I will?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Moreover, where is the power of the Gospel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Most valiant warriors, how shall I find words to proclaim the strength of your courage?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Now servile fear grows from a sinful root, because when commenting on Job 3:11,"Why did I not die in the womb?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Now the damned will consider their sins singly and will bewail them, wherefore they say( Wis. 5:8):"What hath pride profited us?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Now we can not benefit God, according to Job 35:7:"What shalt thou give Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Now what greater proof could we have of this than that God''s Son should deign to unite Himself to our nature?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Objection 2: Further, Jerome says in an Epistle( xlix):"What hast thou to do with women, thou that speakest familiarly with God at the altar?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Objection 2: Further, the interrogation"What?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Objection 3: Further, boasting seems to be occasioned by riches; wherefore it is written( Wis. 5:8):"What hath pride profited us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Objection 3: Further, it is written( James 4:1):"From whence are wars and quarrels[ Douay:''contentions''] among you? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Objection 3: Further, it is written( Malachi 1:8):"If you offer the lame and the sick, is it not evil?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Objection 4: Further, Job seems to have contended with God, according to Job 39:32:"Shall he that contendeth with God be so easily silenced?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Of the Holy Ghost it is also said,"Know you not that your members are the temple of the Holy Ghost?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Of works? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, Ambrose says( De Fide ii, 8):"How can the same operation spring from different powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, Gregory says, on Job 25:3:"Is there any numbering of His soldiers?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, It is said( Job 34:13):"What other hath He appointed over the earth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, It is said( Wis. 11:26),"How could anything endure, if Thou wouldst not?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, It is said:"Thinkest thou that I can not ask My Father, and He will give Me presently more than twelve legions of angels?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, It is written that when Moses asked,"If they should say to me, What is His name? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, It is written( Job 13:7):"Hath God any need of your lie, that you should speak deceitfully for Him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, It is written( Wis. 9:16):"The things that are in heaven, who shall search out?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the contrary, To those who had said,"Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | On the immutability of God there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God is altogether immutable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or can they either in themselves, and not rather in the Lord their God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or distress?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or he that is born of a woman appear clean?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or how can His generosity be known to any one who says it was despised on account of its ignoble sinfulness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or shall I drink the blood of goats?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or shall the saw exalt itself against him by whom it is drawn?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or should He have conformed Himself to others in these respects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or that the idol is anything?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or when were the just destroyed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or who begot the drops of dew?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or who hath been His counsellor?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or, again,"for that He is flesh?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Or, for that He is a soul?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Out of charity, think you, that you may save your neighbor?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Peter answered for the others:"Lord, to whom shall we go?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Reply to Objection 2: The term"what"refers sometimes to the nature expressed by the definition, as when we ask; What is man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Say, priest, say, cleric, how dost thou kiss the Son of God with the same lips wherewith thou hast kissed the daughter of a harlot? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Shall tribulation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | She says: How shall this be? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | So if some misunderstand{ homoousion}, what is that to me, if I understand it rightly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | So to those who ask, Three what? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Sometimes it refers to the"suppositum,"as when we ask, What swims in the sea? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | That, as they passed by, their very shadow healed the sick? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | The consideration about Contrition will be fourfold:( 1) What is it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | The first of these points offers a twofold consideration:( 1) What makes a human act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | The second is, what ought his benefactor to do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | The text of Mark reads:''Art Thou come to destroy us?''] |
aquinas-summa-2292 | There are under this head nine points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the image of God is in man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Therefore he says pointedly:"What image will you make for Him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Therefore it was foolish of them to seek human guidance besides that of the star, saying:"Where is He that is born King of the Jews?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | They are to be commended indeed if they work with their hands, but if they be unwilling, who will dare to force them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Thirdly, with regard to reading, he goes on to say:"Those who say they are occupied in reading, do they not find there what the Apostle commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | This does not belong to God, since, as the Apostle says:"Who hath first given to Him, and recompense shall be made him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Thus we find that on some of the angels inquiring, as it were, in ignorance:"Who is this King of glory?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | To Thy grace I ascribe also whatsoever I have not done of evil; for what might I not have done? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | To those who ask,"Three what?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Touching this there are three subjects of inquiry:( 1) Is the angel in a place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether hope is the same as desire or cupidity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head eight points of inquiry arise:( 1) Whether men are guarded by the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) What is faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God can move immediately the matter to the form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether anger is a special passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether charity is friendship? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether covetousness is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether delight is a passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether hope is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it belongs to man to act for an end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether magnanimity is about honors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether pain is a passion of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether perfection bears any relation to charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether pride is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether religion regards only our relation to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether temperance is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the debt of punishment is an effect of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the essence of the soul is its power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the soul knows bodies through the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the world is governed by someone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is anything voluntary in human acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Which is the more proper to charity, to love or to be loved? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) What is the matter of lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether every virtue is a moral virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether man''s first sin is transmitted, by way of origin to his descendants? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether moral virtue is a passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the consent is the efficient cause of matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there should be Order in the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there will be a renewal of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) In what the temptation of God consists;( 2) Whether it is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) The nature of the ceremonial precepts;( 2) Whether they are figurative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) What constitutes a state among men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) What is meant by the judicial precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) What is reviling? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) What is sacrilege? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) What kind of law is it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ had any knowledge besides the Divine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God is a cause of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God is the efficient cause of all beings? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Penance has any parts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a man can justly judge one who is not his subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether an angel can enlighten the human intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether any habit is from nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether beneficence is an act of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether blasphemy is opposed to the confession of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether chastity is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether corporeal creatures are from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether despair is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether devotion is a special act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether excommunication is suitably defined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether fear is a passion of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether fear is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether formlessness of created matter preceded in time its formation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether honor is a spiritual or a corporal thing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is of natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether joy is an effect of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether law is something pertaining to reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether love is in the concupiscible power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether man in the state of innocence was immortal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether man''s soul was something made, or was of the Divine substance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether moral virtue observes the mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether pride was the first man''s first sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether respect of persons is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether right is the object of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether sin has a cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether sloth is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the Son of God should have assumed in human nature defects of body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the bodies of the saints will be impassible after the resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the first man saw the Essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the first man was created in grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the word light is used in its proper sense in speaking of spiritual things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are nine points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Extreme Unction is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are seven points of inquiry:( 1) Whether any places are appointed to receive souls after death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are seven points of inquiry:( 1) Whether in hell the damned are tormented with the sole punishment of fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Concerning imprudence, whether it is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ''s Godhead and humanity are to be adored with one and the same adoration? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether all mortal sins are taken away by Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether confession is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether goodness and being are the same really? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether human nature was more capable of being assumed than any other nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is fitting for God to become incarnate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is possible to hate God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether prophecy pertains to knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the Old Law contains several precepts or only one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the Old Law was good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the good of nature is diminished by sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether venial sin is fittingly condivided with mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether vice is contrary to virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether wisdom should be reckoned among the gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are sixteen points of inquiry:( 1) Whether prudence is in the will or in the reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) What is the justification of the ungodly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) What is"to believe,"which is the internal act of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Penance is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) Whether one spouse is bound to pay the marriage debt to the other? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the object of faith is the First Truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the religious state is perfect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) Whether without grace man can know anything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are thirteen points of inquiry:( 1) Whether in the soul of Christ there was any habitual grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) What is the betrothal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Contrition is suitably defined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether adoration is an act of latria? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether an indulgence remits any part of the punishment due for the satisfaction of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether at the judgment every man will know all his sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether satisfaction is a virtue or an act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the body will rise again identically the same? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the saints will see God in His essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the sensitive soul is transmitted with the semen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the will is of good only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is any passion in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there ought to be keys in the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether all the moral precepts of the Old Law belong to the law of nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether fortitude is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the union of the Word Incarnate took place in the nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether this is true:"God is man"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether unbelief is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether we should love God alone, out of charity, or should we love our neighbor also? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ is one or two? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ is subject to the Father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether abstinence is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether by the grace of tongues a man acquires the knowledge of all languages? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether discord is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether in the state of innocence there would have been generation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether life is fittingly divided into active and contemplative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether modesty is a part of temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether presumption is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether superstition is a vice opposed to religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there can be anything pernicious in the worship of the true God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head there will be three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is to be a resurrection of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head, namely, boasting, there are two points of inquiry:( 1) To which virtue is it opposed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head, there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether habit is a quality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head, there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether human virtue is a habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first head, there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether ignorance is a cause of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are eight points for inquiry:( 1) Whether bread and wine are the matter of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a sacrament is a kind of sign? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Is the angel''s understanding his substance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the angel has a cause of his existence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is will in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are nine points for consideration:( 1) Can there be evil of fault in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are six points for inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ''s Passion brought about our salvation by way of merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the Eucharist is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Does an angel know himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether angels have bodies naturally united to them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first heading there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it was necessary for Christ to suffer for men''s deliverance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the first there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the appetite should be considered a special power of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the head of observance there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether observance is a special virtue, distinct from other virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under the head of perseverance there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether perseverance is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head arise four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether any angels are sent on works of ministry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether all the angels belong to one hierarchy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether any men will judge together with Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is a sin to kill dumb animals or even plants? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is lawful to desire the office of a bishop? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether our intellect understands by abstracting the species from the phantasms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether prudence of the flesh is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the soul separated from the body can understand? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are eleven points of inquiry:( 1) Whether affinity results from matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Order should be divided into several kinds? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether all the members of the human body will rise again therein? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether goodness of life is required of those who receive this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether impotence is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether irregularity attaches to the bigamy that consists in having two successive wives? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is against the natural law to have several wives? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether men are assailed by the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether patience is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether sanctifying grace is conferred in the sacrament of Order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the will desires something of necessity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Is there such a thing as fate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ was predestinated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a man is bound to accuse? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a man is bound to give evidence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a simple vow is a diriment impediment to matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a species of prudence is regnative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether all dissimulation is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether all will rise again in the youthful age? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether any oblations are necessary as a matter of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether consanguinity is rightly defined by some? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether counsel should be reckoned among the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether covetousness is the root of all sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether drunkenness is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether insensibility is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is a mortal sin to deny the truth which would lead to one''s condemnation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it knows singulars? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether man has free- will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether man in the state of innocence was master over the animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether matrimony is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether one may lawfully curse another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether paradise is a corporeal place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the condition of slavery is an impediment to matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the corporeal creature is governed by the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the firmament was made on the second day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the motive of anger is always something done against the one who is angry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the soul knows itself by its own essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the soul of Christ comprehended the Word or the Divine Essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the time of the resurrection should be delayed until the end of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the will is moved to anything naturally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the woman should have been made in that first production of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is justice in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there will be a general judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether these two are parts of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether{ euboulia}, is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are fourteen points of inquiry:( 1) Whether suffrages performed by one person can profit others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are nine points of inquiry:( 1) Whether every act of will in the damned is evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are nine points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is natural to man to possess external things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are seven points of inquiry:( 1) Whether those who are ordained ought to be shaven and tonsured in the form of a crown? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a believer can marry an unbeliever? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a man should be contrite on account of his punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether certain goods are necessary in order to excuse marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether compulsory consent is possible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether every priest can excommunicate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether gluttony is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether human law should be framed for the community? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is lawful for a husband to put his wife away on account of fornication? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether judiciary power is to be attributed to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether prophecy is natural? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether subtlety is a property of the glorified body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the female sex is an impediment to receiving this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the pain of Purgatory surpasses all the temporal pains of this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are six points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the soul of man is carried away to things divine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are ten points of inquiry:( 1) Whether those who are not practiced in the observance of the commandments should enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are thirteen points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the aureoles differ from the essential reward? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) What is adoption? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ will judge under the form or His humanity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether Christ''s resurrection is the cause of our resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a priest can use the key, which he has, on any man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is lawful to communicate in matters purely corporal with one who is excommunicated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether matrimony is a kind of joining? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the bodies of the damned will rise again with their deformities? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the glorified bodies will be agile? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the happiness of the saints will increase after the judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the saints have knowledge of our prayers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the saints see the sufferings of the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the sensitive powers remain in the separated soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there will be clarity in the glorified bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Whether those born out of true marriage are illegitimate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) What is a vow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are twelve points of inquiry:( 1) What is justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether God should be praised with the lips? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether a bishop alone can confer this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether any gratuitous grace attaches to words? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether error of its very nature is an impediment to matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether fortitude is a gift? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether in the state of innocence children would have been born with perfect knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is a gift of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether it is lawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether men would have been born in a state of righteousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether pusillanimity is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the consent that makes a marriage is a consent to carnal intercourse? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether these souls suffer from a bodily fire, and are inflicted with punishment by fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this head, there are twelve points for inquiry:( 1) Whether God can be named by us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this heading there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether man can attain Happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this heading there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether the angels know the natures of material things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this heading there are five points of inquiry:( 1) Whether there is natural love in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Under this heading there are three points of inquiry:( 1) Do the angels know everything by their substance, or by some species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Was Christ created by a command?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | We must now consider irony, under which head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether irony is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | We must now consider the vices opposed to magnificence: under which head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether meanness is a vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What could be so favorably offered and accepted as the flesh of our sacrifice, which was made the body of our Priest?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What does it mean that''no man shall pass through it,''save that Joseph shall not know her? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What else could be so appropriate for this immolation as mortal flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What else is there so clean for cleansing mortals as the flesh born in the womb without fleshly concupiscence, and coming from a virginal womb? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What is a bad minister to thee, where the Lord is good?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What means this, that this portion of things ebbs and flows alternately displeased and reconciled?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What sort of a physician is he who knows not how to heal a recurring disease? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What sort of perverseness is this, to wish to read but not to obey what one reads?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What word of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | What works--- but that from ungodly he should be made righteous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | When, therefore, the question is asked: Does the human soul know all things in the eternal types? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Whence it is said:"Who hath helped the Spirit of the Lord? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Wherefore Augustine says( Contra Quinque Haereses v):"God saith, the Creator of man: What is it that troubles thee in My Birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Whether fortitude is a cardinal virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Whether one is guilty of murder through killing someone by chance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Whether theft is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Who feedeth the flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Who is it that ascends? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Who planteth a vineyard and eateth not of the fruit thereof?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Whom did Christ compel?'' |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Why are you rich while another is poor, unless it be that you may have the merit of a good stewardship, and he the reward of patience? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Why better? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Why did the apostles thus provide for the needs of the saints?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Why do you not rather take wrong? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Why standest thou in thyself, and so standest not? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Why, in days long gone by, when famine was imminent, was grain sent to the holy fathers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Why, then, do you look for nature''s order in Christ''s body, since the Lord Jesus was Himself brought forth of a Virgin beyond nature?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | With regard to continence there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether continence is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | With regard to magnificence there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether magnificence is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | With regard to shamefacedness there are four points of inquiry:( 1) Whether shamefacedness is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | With regard to the gift of understanding there are eight points of inquiry:( 1) Whether understanding is a gift of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Wouldst thou then lay down the law for God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Yet is not the Gospel read in church and heard by all every day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | Yet our Lord asked the demon:"What is thy name?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | [* S. 10, C[1]]):"Are you thinking of raising the great fabric of spirituality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Did Paul know whether his soul were separated from his body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ ON WHOM SHOULD THIS SACRAMENT BE CONFERRED AND ON WHAT PART OF THE BODY? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Adam had all the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Adam in the state of innocence had mastership over the animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Adam in the state of innocence saw the angels through their essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Adam''s sin was more grievous than Eve''s? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Anti- christ may be called the head of all the wicked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Augustine fittingly defines confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Baptism can be conferred in the name of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Baptism has an equal effect in all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Baptism is the mere washing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Baptism may be reiterated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Baptism produces its effect when the insincerity ceases? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Baptism should be deferred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Baptism should take away the penalties of sin that belong to this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Baptism was instituted after Christ''s Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ Himself should have made His birth know? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ acquired His judiciary power by His merits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ advanced in acquired or empiric knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ alone should have been baptized with the baptism of John? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ as man had the power of producing the inward sacramental effect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ as man is the adopted Son of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ ascended above all the heavens? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ by His descent into hell delivered souls from purgatory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ can be called a lordly man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ conformed His conduct to the Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ contracted these defects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ could merit for others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ could merit in the first instant of His conception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ could use this knowledge by turning to phantasms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ delivered any of the lost from hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ descending into hell delivered the holy Fathers from thence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ died out of obedience? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ endured all suffering? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ gave His body to Judas? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ had a true body after His Resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ had an imprinted or infused knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ had any acquired knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ had any knowledge besides the Divine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ had the key? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ had the knowledge which the blessed or comprehensors have? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ is entire under every part of the species of the bread and wine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ is one or two? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ is sacrificed in this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ is subject to Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ is the Head of all men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ is the Head of men as to their bodies or only as to their souls? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ is the Head of the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ is the Head of the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ knew all things by this acquired or empiric knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ learned anything from man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ made any stay in hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ opened the gate of heaven to us by His Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ ought to have assumed all the bodily defects of men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ ought to have suffered on the cross? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ paid tithes in Abraham''s loins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ received His own body and blood? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ received and gave to the disciples His impassible body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ received knowledge from the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have appeared to the disciples"in another shape"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have associated with men, or led a solitary life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have been baptized in the Jordan? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have been born in Bethlehem? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have been born of an espoused virgin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have been circumcised? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have been tempted in the desert? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have committed His doctrine to writing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have demonstrated the truth of His Resurrection by proofs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have led a life of poverty in this world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have preached not only to the Jews, but also to the Gentiles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have preached to the Jews without offending them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have taught all things openly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ should have worked miracles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ suffered at a suitable time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ suffered in His whole soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ suffered in a suitable place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ took flesh of the seed of David? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was Himself both priest and victim? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was a man during the three days of His death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was a perfect comprehensor in the first instant of His conception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was at once a wayfarer and a comprehensor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was baptized at a fitting time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was becomingly presented in the temple? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was born at a fitting time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was born without His Mother suffering? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was buried in a becoming manner? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was in the tomb only one day and two nights? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was of necessity subject to these defects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was sanctified in the first instant of His conception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was slain by another or by Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was the cause of His own Resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ was the first to rise from the dead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ went down into the hell of the lost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ will judge under the form of His humanity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ worked miracles by Divine power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ worked miracles fittingly on irrational creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ worked miracles fittingly on men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Ascension is the cause of our salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Mother remained a virgin after His birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Mother was a virgin in His birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Passion brought about our salvation by way of atonement? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Passion brought about our salvation by way of merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Passion brought about our salvation by way of redemption? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Passion brought about our salvation efficiently? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Passion is to be attributed to His Godhead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Passion operated by way of sacrifice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Resurrection is the cause of the resurrection of our bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Resurrection is the cause of the resurrection of souls? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s Resurrection ought to have been manifested to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s birth should have been made known to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s birth should have been made known to some? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s birth was made known in a becoming order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body ascended above every spiritual creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body is in this sacrament as in a place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body is in this sacrament movably? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body ought to have risen with its scars? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body rose again entire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body rose glorified? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body was animated in the first instant of its conception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body was formed in the first instant of its conception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s body was reduced to dust in the tomb? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s conception was natural? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s cross should be worshipped with the adoration of"latria"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s death conduced in any way to our salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s entire soul enjoyed blessed fruition during the Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s flesh in the patriarchs was infected by sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s flesh was first of all conceived and afterwards assumed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s genealogy is suitably traced by the evangelists? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s humanity and Godhead are to be adored with the same adoration? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s humanity should be adored with the adoration of"latria"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s judiciary power extends to the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s persecutors knew who He was? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s prayer was always heard? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s predestination is the cause of ours? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s predestination is the exemplar of ours? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s soul was passible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s temptation should have taken place after His fast? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ''s was identically the same body living and dead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christ, is the Mediator of God and men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Christians are bound to obey the secular powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Extreme Unction avails for the remission of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Extreme Unction is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Extreme Unction is one sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God alone is the cause of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God always loves more the better things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can annihilate anything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can be feared? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can be known in this life by natural reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can be loved immediately in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can be loved wholly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can create anything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can do anything outside the established order of nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can do better than what He does? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can do what He does not? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can know infinite things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can make the past not to have been? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can move a body immediately? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can move the created will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God can move the matter immediately to the form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God comprehends Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God enters into the composition of other things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God exists? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God has a speculative knowledge of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God has free- will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God has immediate providence over everything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God has knowledge of things that are not? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is a body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is a cause of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is altogether immutable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is altogether simple? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is called blessed in respect of His intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is composed of matter and form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is contained in a genus? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is eternal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is everywhere by essence, presence and power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is everywhere? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is in all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is omnipotent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is perfect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is supremely one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is the beatitude of each of the blessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is the cause of spiritual blindness and hardness of heart? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is the final cause of all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is the first object known by the human mind? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is the object of this science? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is the same as His essence or nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is the supreme good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God is truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God knows enunciable things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God knows evil things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God knows singular things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God knows things other than Himself by proper knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God knows things other than Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God loves all things equally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God loves all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God moves the created intellect immediately? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God ought to be loved more than our neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God ought to be obeyed in all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God preserves every creature immediately? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God reprobates any man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God rested on the seventh day from all His work? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God should be praised with song? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God should be praised with the lips? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God the Father delivered up Christ to the Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God understands Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God wills evils? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God wills things apart from Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God works in every agent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether God''s mercy suffers at least men to be punished eternally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether His name was suitably given to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Holy Scripture should use metaphors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Isidore''s description of the quality of positive law is appropriate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Isidore''s division of human laws is appropriate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether John''s baptism should have ceased after Christ was baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Moses was the greatest of the prophets? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Order is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Order is properly defined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Paul, when in rapture, saw the essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Paul, when in rapture, was withdrawn from his senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Penance can be continuous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Penance is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Penance is a second plank after shipwreck? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Penance is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Penance is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Penance should be assigned any parts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Penance should last till the end of life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Scripture uses suitable words to express the work of the six days? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether Word in God is a personal name? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a beatified angel can sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a believer can marry an unbeliever? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a betrothal can be dissolved? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a betrothal is a promise of future marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a bishop alone confers the sacrament of Order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a bishop can grant indulgences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a body can be active? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a character can be blotted out from the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a character is a spiritual power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a character is imprinted by each sacrament of the New Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a child can be baptized while yet in its mother''s womb? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a circumstance aggravates a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a circumstance can make a venial sin to be mortal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a circumstance is an accident of a human act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a circumstance places a moral action in the species of good or evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a compulsory consent is possible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a constant man can be compelled by fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a deacon or another who is not a priest can grant an indulgence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a degraded priest can consecrate this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a divine person can be properly sent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a divine person is sent only by the person whence He proceeds eternally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a fruit is due to the virtue of continence alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a general confession suffices to blot out forgotten mortal sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a glorified body will be necessarily seen by a non- glorified body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a good life is requisite for prophecy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a good or a wicked angel can sin venially? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a habit can be caused by one act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a habit can be corrupted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a habit can diminish? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a habit is corrupted or diminished through mere cessation from act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a human action is good or evil from its end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a human action is good or evil in its species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a human action is right or sinful, in so far as it is good or evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a husband can marry again after having a divorce? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a husband could lawfully take back the wife he had divorced? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a husband is bound to pay the debt if his wife does not ask for it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a judge may condemn a man who is not accused? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a layman can baptize? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a layman can confer this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can be saved without Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can excommunicate himself, his equal, or his superior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can hate himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can hate the truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can justly judge one who is not subject to his jurisdiction? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can lawfully hope in man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can merit the first grace for another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can satisfy for one sin without satisfying for another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can sin first of all against the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man can use the keys with regard to his superior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man in grace can merit eternal life condignly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man is bound to accuse? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man is bound to give evidence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man is bound to give thanks to every benefactor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man is bound to have contrition for his future sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man is bound to immediate restitution, or may he put it off? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man is bound to repay a favor at once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man is bound to restore what he has not taken? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man is called unjust through doing an unjust thing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man may make oblations of whatever he lawfully possesses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man may merit anything from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man may merit for himself the first grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man may merit perseverance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man may merit restoration after a fall? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man may merit the increase of grace or charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man obtains the degrees of Order by the merit of one''s life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man ought to have contrition for another''s sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man ought to love himself out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man ought to love his body out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man ought to love his mother more than his father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man ought to love his neighbor more than his own body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man ought to love his wife more than his father and mother? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man ought to love more his benefactor than one he has benefited? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man ought, out of charity, to love his children more than his father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man should be debarred from receiving Orders on account of homicide? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man who is condemned to death may lawfully defend himself if he can? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man who is excommunicated or suspended can excommunicate another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man who is in sin can without sin exercise the Order he has received? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man''s evidence can be rejected without any fault of his? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a man''s excellence is the cause of his being angry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a mann is bound to correct his prelate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a mortal sin can become venial? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a movement of faith is required for the justification of the ungodly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a name can be given to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a natural disposition is requisite for prophecy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a part of prudence should be reckoned to be domestic? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a penance should be published or solemnized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a penitent, at the point of death, can be absolved by any priest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a person contracts affinity through the marriage of a blood- relation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a person''s defect is a reason for being more easily angry with him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a priest can always absolve his subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a priest can remit sin as to the punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a priest can use the key which he has, on any man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a religious order can be directed to soldiering? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a religious order can be established for preaching or hearing confessions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a religious order should be established for the purpose of study? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a religious order should be established for the works of the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a religious sins more grievously than a secular by the same kind of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sacrament imprints a character on the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sacrament is a kind of sign? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sacrament is a sign of one thing only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sacrament is always something sensible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sacred order can not supervene to matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sale is rendered unlawful through a fault in the thing sold? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a second marriage is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a second marriage is lawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sentence of excommunication can be passed on a body of men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sin committed through passion can be mortal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sin committed through passion, should be called a sin of weakness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sin of omission is more grievous than a sin of transgression? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a sinner ought to reprove a wrongdoer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a slave can marry without his master''s consent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a solemn penance can be repeated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a solemn vow dissolves a marriage already contracted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a species of prudence is regnative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a spell can be an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a temporal nativity should be attributed to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a tie that is an impediment to marriage is contracted through adoption? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a venial sin can become mortal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a vow consists in a mere purpose of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a vow is an act of latria or religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a vow should always be about a better good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a wicked priest can consecrate the Eucharist? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether a woman can baptize? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether above the priestly Order there ought to be an episcopal power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether abstinence is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether abstinence is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether abstract essential names can stand for the person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether active scandal can be found in the perfect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether adoption is rightly defined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether adoration denotes an action of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether adoration is an act of latria or religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether adoration requires a definite place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether adultery is determinate species of lust, distinct from the other species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether affinity in itself admits of degrees? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether affinity is a cause of affinity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether affinity is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether affinity is caused by betrothal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether affinity remains after the death of husband or wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether affirmative propositions can be formed about God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether after the Incarnation the Person or Hypostasis of Christ is composite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether after the resurrection every one will know what sins he has committed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether after the resurrection the saints will see God with the eyes of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all acts of virtue are prescribed by the natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all anger is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all are bound to confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all are bound to keep the fasts of the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all are bound to offer sacrifices? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all are bound to receive Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all are equally bound to have explicit faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all are subject to the law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all dissimulation is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all ecclesiastical prelates are in the state of perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all human affairs are subject to the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all men have the same last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all men were bound to observe the Old Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all men will be present at the judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all other beatitude is included in the beatitude of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all perjury is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all perjury is sinful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all sins are connected with one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all sins are due to the temptation of the devil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all sins are equal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all sins are taken away by Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all sins are taken away by Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all sorrow is contrary to all pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all sorrow is evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the actions of the moral virtues pertain to the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the angels are of one hierarchy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the angels are sent in ministry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the angels know what one speaks to another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the angels of the second hierarchy are sent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the angels who are sent, assist? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the elements will be cleansed by that fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the members of the human body will rise again? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the moral precepts of the Old Law belong to the law of nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the moral virtues are about the passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the powers of the soul are in the soul as their subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the powers remain in the soul when separated from the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the sacraments are necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the sins of men are due to the devil''s suggestion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all the virtues that are together in one man, are equal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all these days are one day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all things are good by the divine goodness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all things are immediately governed by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all things are life in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all things are subject to fate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all things are subject to the Divine government? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all things desire peace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all those who perform works of mercy will be punished eternally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all vows are binding? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all will be equally impassible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all will rise again from ashes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all will rise again of the male sex? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all will rise again of the same age? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether all will rise again of the same stature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether alms should be given in abundance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether almsgiving is a matter of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether almsgiving is an act of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ambition is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ambition is opposed to magnanimity by excess? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether among the demons there is precedence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether among the powers of the soul there is order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an accusation is rendered unjust by calumny, collusion or evasion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an action has the species of good or evil from its end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an actually infinite magnitude can exist? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an advocate is bound to defend the suits of the poor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an advocate sins by defending an unjust cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel by natural love loves God more than he loves himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel can be in several places at once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel can be moved locally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel can be the subject of penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel can change man''s imagination? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel can change the human senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel can enlighten man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel can understand many things at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel is altogether incorporeal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel is appointed to guard a man from his birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel is composed of matter and form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel is in a place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel knows himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel knows singulars? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel loves another with natural love as he loves himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel merits his beatitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel needs grace in order to turn to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel passes through intermediate space? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel speaks to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel''s act of understanding is his substance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel''s knowledge is discursive? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angel''s power of intelligence is his essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an angle knows God by his own natural principles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an aureole is also due to the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an aureole is due on account of virginity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an aureole is due to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an aureole is due to doctors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an aureole is due to martyrs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an aureole is due to the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an effect of law is to make men good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an exclusive diction can be joined to the personal term? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an excommunication unjustly pronounced has any effect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an illegitimate son can be legitimized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an individual action can be indifferent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an indulgence avails the person who grants it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an indulgence avails those who are in mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an indulgence ought to be granted for temporal help? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an inferior angel can enlighten a superior angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an infinite multitude can exist? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an irresistible power is a cause of sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an oath has a binding force? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an oath is an act of religion or latria? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an oath is more binding than a vow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether an oath is voided by a condition of person or time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether angels are appointed to the guardianship of all men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether angels assume bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether angels can administer sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether angels can work miracles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether angels grieve for the ills of those whom they guard? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether angels know secret thoughts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether angels know the future? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger above all causes fervor in the heart? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger above all causes taciturnity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger above all hinders the use of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger causes pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger is a special passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger is in the concupiscible faculty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger is more grievous than hatred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger is more natural than desire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger is only towards those to whom one has an obligation of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger is the most grievous sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger requires an act of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anger should be reckoned among the capital vices? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any action is indifferent in its species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any cause can be assigned to the divine will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any created good constitutes man''s happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any created intellect by its natural powers can see the Divine essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any created intellect can see the essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any creature can be like God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any demons are naturally wicked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any external goods are necessary for happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any gifts should be assigned as dowry to the blessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any good works are necessary that man may receive happiness from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any gratuitous grace attaches to words? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any habit is caused by acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any habit is from nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any habit is in the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any habits are infused in man by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any kind of worship is due to the relics of the saints? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any liquid can be mingled with the consecrated wine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any men will judge together with Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any merits preceded the union of the Incarnation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any moral virtues are in us by infusion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any name can be applied to God in its literal sense? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any name can be applied to God substantially? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any one can be perfect in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any other passion of the soul is a cause of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any other procession exists in God besides that of the Word? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any other virtues should be called principal rather than these? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any passion is good or evil in its species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any passion is in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any passion of the soul has no contrariety? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any pleasure is not natural? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any pleasure is the greatest good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any precept should be given about charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any preparation and disposition for grace is required on man''s part? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any priest can absolve his subject from excommunication? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any procession in God can be called generation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any prophecy comes from the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any signs will precede the Lord''s coming to judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any sin incurs a debt of eternal punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any true virtue is possible without charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any virtue is caused in us by habituation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether any virtue regards the outward movements of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anyone can be absolved against his will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anyone can dispense from an oath? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anyone in this life can see the essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anyone is punished for another''s sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anyone may be blotted out of the book of life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anyone should be excommunicated for inflicting temporal harm? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anyone sins through certain malice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anyone without grace can merit eternal life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anything but God can be essentially infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anything can be an object of universal hatred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anything can be generated from the sacramental species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anything can happen outside the order of the Divine government? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anything can resist the order of the Divine government? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anything false can come under faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anything is annihilated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether anything of faith or hope remains in glory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether apostasy pertains to unbelief? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether at the coming judgment the angels will be judged? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether at the judgment Christ will appear in His glorified humanity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether attention is a necessary condition of prayer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether attrition can become contrition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether backbiting is a graver sin than tale- bearing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether backbiting is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether backbiting is the gravest of all sins committed against one''s neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether beatitude belongs to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether before sin sacraments were necessary to man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether before the public denunciation witnesses ought to be brought forward? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether beneficence is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether beneficence is an act of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether bigamy is removed by Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether blasphemy is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether blasphemy is opposed to the confession of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether blessing and sanctifying are due to the seventh day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether blindness of mind and dulness of sense arise from sins of the flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether blindness of mind is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether boasting is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether boasting is opposed to the virtue of truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether bodies obey the angels as regards local motion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether bodily health is an effect of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether bodily pain is the greatest evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether both clemency and meekness are virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether boys and those who lack the use of reason can receive Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether bread can be converted into the body of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether by Divine justice an eternal punishment is inflicted on sinners? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether by His Passion Christ merited to be exalted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether by Penance one sin can be pardoned without another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether by grace a higher knowledge of God can be obtained than by natural reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether by receiving the tonsure a man renounces temporal goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether by this imprinted or infused knowledge Christ knew all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether carnal intercourse is an integral part of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether carnal sins are of less guilt than spiritual sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether catechism should precede Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether caution should be reckoned a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether certain blessings are necessary in order to excuse marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether certain definite counsels are fittingly proposed in the New Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity can be perfect in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity can be without faith and hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity can be without moral virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity can decrease? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity can increase? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity increases by addition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity increases indefinitely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity increases through every act of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is caused in us by infusion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is friendship? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is infused according to the capacity of our natural gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is lost through one mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is one virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is something created in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is the form of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is the form of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is the greatest of the theological virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity is the most excellent of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity precedes hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity remains after this life, in glory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether charity requires that we should love our enemies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether chastity is a distinct virtue from abstinence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether chastity is a general virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether chastity is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether children born out of true marriage are illegitimate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether children can bind themselves by vow to enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether children receive grace and virtue in Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether children should be baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether children should be received in religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether children should follow the condition of their father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether children should suffer any loss through being illegitimate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether children would have had perfect use of reason at birth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether choice is an act of will or of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether choice is of those things only that are done by us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether choice is only of possible things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether choice is only of the means, or sometimes also of the end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether choice is to be found in irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether chrism is a fitting matter for this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether circumcision bestowed sanctifying grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether circumcision was a preparation for, and a figure of Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether circumcision was instituted in a fitting manner? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether circumspection can be a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether clarity is becoming to the glorified body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether clemency and meekness are absolutely the same? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether clemency and meekness are the greatest virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether command and the commanded act are one act, or distinct? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether command belongs to irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether command is an act of the reason or of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether command is the chief act of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether comprehension is necessary for happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether compulsory consent invalidates a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether concupiscence causes involuntariness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether concupiscence is a specific passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether concupiscence is in the sensitive appetite only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether concupiscence is infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether conditional consent makes a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession can be lacking in form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession delivers from punishment in some way? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession delivers one from the death of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession gives hope of salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession is according to the natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession is an act of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession is an act of the virtue of penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession is an act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession of faith is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession opens paradise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confession should be entire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confidence belongs to magnanimity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether confirmation is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consanguinity is an impediment to marriage by virtue of the natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consanguinity is fittingly distinguished by degrees and lines? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consanguinity is rightly defined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether conscience be a power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consent given in words expressive of the future makes a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consent given secretly in words of the present makes a marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consent is an act of the appetitive or of the apprehensive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consent is directed to the end or to the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consent is the efficient cause of matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consent is to be found in irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consent to delectation is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether consent to the act belongs only to the higher part of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether constancy pertains to perseverance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether contemplation or meditation is the cause of devotion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether contention is a daughter of vainglory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether contention is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether continence is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether continence is better than temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether contrition can take away the debt of punishment entirely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether contrition is an act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether contrition is the greatest possible sorrow in the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether contrition should be on account of original sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether corporal alms are of more account than spiritual alms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether corporal almsdeeds have a spiritual effect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether corporeal creatures are from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether corporeal creatures were produced by God through the medium of the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether corporeal matter obeys the mere will of an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether corporeal things were made on account of God''s goodness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether counsel is about all things that we do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether counsel is an inquiry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether counsel is of the end, or only of the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether counsel is only of things that we do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether counsel should be reckoned among the gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether covetousness is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether covetousness is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether covetousness is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether covetousness is a spiritual sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether covetousness is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether covetousness is opposed to liberality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether covetousness is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether covetousness is the root of all sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether cowardice* is a greater vice than intemperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether craftiness is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether created truth is eternal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether creation is anything in the creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether creation is mingled with works of nature and art? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether creatures need to be kept in being by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether cruelty differs from savagery or brutality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether cruelty is opposed to clemency? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether curiosity can be about intellective knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether cursing is a graver sin than backbiting? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether cursing is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether custom can obtain force of law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether daring ensues from hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether daring is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether daring is contrary to fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether daring is opposed to fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether deacons can confer this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether death and other bodily defects are the result of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether death and other defects are natural to man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether death is essential to martyrdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether death is the punishment of our first parents''sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether death will be the term"wherefrom"of the resurrection in all cases? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether deeds deadened by sin, are revived by Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether defect is the cause of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether defective age is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether delight differs from joy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether delight is a passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether delight is in the intellectual appetite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether delight is in time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether delight is required for happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether demons can lead men astray by means of real miracles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether derision can be a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether derision is a special sin distinct from those already mentioned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether desire is a cause of sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether desires for pleasures of touch are the matter of continence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether despair arises from sloth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether despair is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether despair is contrary to hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether despair is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether determinate things are required for a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether determinate words are required in the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether devotion is a special act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether devotion is an act of religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether discord is a daughter of vainglory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether discord is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether disobedience is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether disobedience is the most grievous of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether dispensing of this sacrament belongs to a priest alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether divination by drawing lots is unlawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether divination by dreams is unlawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether divination by the stars is unlawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether divination is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether divination is a species of superstition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether divination practiced by invoking the demons is unlawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether docility should be accounted a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether doing good to another is a cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether doubts should be interpreted for the best? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether drink is the matter of sobriety? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether drunkenness excuses from sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether drunkenness is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether drunkenness is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether drunkenness is the gravest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether dulia has various species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether dulia is a special virtue distinct from latria? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether dulness of sense is a sin distinct from blindness of mind? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether duties differ according to their actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether each man is guarded by an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether each of the Divine Persons could have assumed human nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ecstasy is an effect of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether effeminacy* is opposed to perseverance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether endurance is the chief act of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether enjoyment is only of the end possessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether enjoyment is only of the last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether envy is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether envy is a kind of sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether envy is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether envy is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether essence and existence are the same in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether essential names should be predicated in the singular of the three persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether eternal happiness is the proper object of hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether eternity differs from time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether even virtuous men can be ashamed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every act increases its habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every act of an unbeliever is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every act of will in the damned is evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every being is good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every error is an impediment to matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every human action is good, or are there evil actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every human law is derived from the natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every law is derived from the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every lie is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every lie is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every man desires happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every one will be able to read all that is in another''s conscience? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every parish priest can grant indulgences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every passion of the soul is evil morally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every pleasure is evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every pleasure is good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every priest can excommunicate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every punishment is inflicted for a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every religious is bound to keep all the counsels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every sign of a holy thing is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every sin includes an action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every sin incurs a debt of eternal punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether every virtue is a moral virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether everyone that sins through habit, sins through certain malice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether everything is subject to the providence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether evil corrupts the whole good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether evil is a nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether evil is adequately divided into pain* and fault? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether evil is found in things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether evil is in good as in its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether evil is properly the motive of mercy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether evil is the cause and object of hatred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether evil of nature is an object of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether excess and deficiency diversify the species of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether exorcism should precede Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether expansion is an effect of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether experience is a cause of hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith alone is the cause of martyrdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith and hope can be without charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith can be greater in one man than in another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith has the effect of purifying the heart? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith is infused into man by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith is more certain than science and the other intellectual virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith is one virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith is required of necessity in the minister of a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith is required on the part of the one baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith is the first of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith precedes hope, and hope charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith remains after this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith resides in the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith, among the fruits, responds to the gift of understanding? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether faith, hope, and charity are fittingly reckoned as theological virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether falsity exists in things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether falsity is in the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fasting is a matter of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fasting is an act of abstinence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fasting is an act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fate is in created things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fate is unchangeable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether favors should be withheld from the ungrateful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear causes contraction? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear causes involuntariness simply? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear decreases when charity increases? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear excuses from sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear hinders action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear is a gift of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear is a passion of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear is a special passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear is an effect of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear is fittingly divided into filial, initial, servile and worldly fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear is the beginning of wisdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear itself can be feared? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear makes one suitable for counsel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear makes one tremble? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fear remains in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fearlessness is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fearlessness is opposed to fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether five expressions of will are rightly assigned to the divine will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether flattery is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether flattery is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether folly is a daughter of lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether folly is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether folly is contrary to wisdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether food or drink taken beforehand hinders the receiving of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether foresight* should be accounted a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether formlessness of created matter preceded in time its formation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fornication is the most grievous of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fortitude deals chiefly with sudden occurrences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fortitude excels among all other virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fortitude is a gift? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fortitude is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fortitude is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fortitude is about fear and dying? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fortitude is only about dangers of death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fortitude is properly about dangers of death in battle? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fraternal correction belongs only to prelates? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fraternal correction is a matter of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fraternal correction is an act of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether fraud pertains to craftiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether free- will is a power distinct from the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether free- will is a power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether free- will is an appetitive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether friendliness is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether gluttony is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether gluttony is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether gluttony is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether gluttony is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether good can be the cause of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether good is logically prior to the true? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether good is the only cause of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether goodness differs really from being? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether goodness has the aspect of a final cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether goodness is prior in idea to being? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether goodness of life is required of those who receive Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether goods of fortune conduce to magnanimity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace and virtues are bestowed on man by Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace implies anything in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace is a quality of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace is bestowed through this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace is fittingly divided into operating and cooperating grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace is fittingly divided into prevenient and subsequent grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace is fittingly divided into sanctifying grace and gratuitous grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace is greater in one than in another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace is the same as virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether grace was given in the baptism of John? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether gratuitous grace is nobler than sanctifying grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether gratuitous grace is rightly divided by the Apostle? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether guile is a sin pertaining to craftiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether habit implies order to an act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether habit is a distinct species of quality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether habit is a quality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether habits are distinguished by their objects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether habits are divided into good and bad? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether habits are necessary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether habits increase? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether habits increases by addition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether happiness consists in the consideration of speculative sciences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether happiness consists in the knowledge of separate substances, namely, angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether happiness is an operation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether happiness is something uncreated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether happiness once had can be lost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hatred arises from envy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hatred is a capital sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hatred is stronger than love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hatred of God is the greatest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hatred of one''s neighbor is always a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hatred of our neighbor is the most grievous sin against our neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether he sins who demands an oath of a perjurer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether he that has taken a thing is always bound to restitution? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether he that is appointed to the episcopate ought to be better than others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether he who is confirmed needs one to stand* for him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether he who is under a law may act beside the letter of the law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether he who raises anyone from the sacred font is bound to instruct him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether he who raises the unworthy to Orders commits a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether heavenly bodies can act on the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether heavenly bodies impose necessity on things subject to their action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether heresy is a species of unbelief? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether heresy is properly about matters of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether heretics and those who are cut off from the Church can confer Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether heretics ought to be tolerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether heretics, schismatics, and excommunicated persons can consecrate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether holy men who are not priests have the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether honesty is the same as virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether honesty should be reckoned a part of temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether honor denotes something corporal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether honor is properly due to those who are above us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope abounds in young men and drunkards? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope and memory causes pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is a cause of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is a help or a hindrance to action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is a theological virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is distinct from the other theological virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is in dumb animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is in the apprehensive or in the appetitive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is in the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is in the will as its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is the first of the irascible passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope is the same as desire of cupidity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope precedes faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hope remains after death, in the state of glory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human acts are specified by their end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human law binds a man in conscience? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human law prescribes acts of all the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human law should always be changed, whenever something better occurs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human law should be changed in any way? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human nature was more assumable by the Son of God than any other nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human souls were created together at the beginning of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human virtue is a good habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human virtue is a habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether human virtue is an operative habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether humility has to do with the appetite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether humility is a part of modesty or temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether humility is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether humility is the greatest of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether husband and wife are equal in the marriage act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether husband and wife are mutually bound to the payment of the marriage debt? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether husband and wife may be reconciled after being divorced? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hypocrisy is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hypocrisy is contrary to the virtue of truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether hypocrisy is the same as dissimulation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ideas are many? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether idolatry is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether idolatry is rightly reckoned a species of superstition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether idolatry is the gravest of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ignorance can be a cause of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ignorance causes involuntariness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ignorance diminishes a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ignorance excuses from sin altogether? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ignorance is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether image in God is said personally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether immersion in water is necessary for Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether impassibility excludes actual sensation from glorified bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether impotence is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether imprudence is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether imprudence is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there are several human operations? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there is any union of soul and body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there is only one operation of the Godhead and Manhood? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there was a will of sensuality besides the will of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there was faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there was hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there was ignorance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there was the fulness of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there was the gift of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there was the gift of prophecy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there were the gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there were two wills as regards the reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ there were virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ this knowledge was greater than the knowledge of the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Christ''s death there was a severance between His Godhead and His soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in God the essence is the same as the person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in God there are any accidents? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in God there is a power in respect of the notional acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in Holy Scripture a word may have several senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in creatures is necessarily found a trace of the Trinity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in every work of God there are mercy and justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in happiness vision ranks before delight? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in hell the damned are tormented by the sole punishment of fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in hell the damned would wish others were damned who are not damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in loving God we ought to observe any mode? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in man there is another form besides the intellectual soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in some cases it may be lawful to maim anyone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the Church there can be anyone above the bishops? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the Old Law there should have been given precepts of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the Soul of Christ there was any habitual grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the angel to understand is to exist? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the angels the will differs from the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the blessed there is hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the blessed, after the resurrection, all the senses will be in act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the demons there is faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the divine persons there exists an order of nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the resurrection the soul will be reunited to the same identical body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the state of innocence generation existed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the state of innocence man had need of food? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the state of innocence man would have been immortal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the state of innocence man would have been master over man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the state of innocence man would have been passible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether in the state of innocence there would have been generation by coition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether incest is a determinate species of lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether inconstancy is a vice contained under prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether incontinence is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether incontinence pertains to the soul or to the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether indulgences are as effective as they claim to be? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether indulgences avail religious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether indulgences can be granted by one who is in mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether infusion of grace is necessary for the remission of venial sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ingratitude is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ingratitude is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether ingratitude is always a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether initial fear differs substantially from filial fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether injustice is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether insensibility is a vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether inseparableness of the wife is of natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether insincerity hinders the effect of Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether intellectual knowledge is derived from sensible things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether intelligence is a power distinct from intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether intemperance is a childish sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether intemperance is the most disgraceful of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether intention is an act of the intellect or of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether intention is only of the last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether intention is within the competency of irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether intention of the end is the same act as the volition of the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether irony is a less grievous sin than boasting? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether irony is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether irrational creatures also ought to be loved out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether irregularity attaches to bigamy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether irregularity is contracted by marrying one who is not a virgin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it be unlawful to practice the observances of the magic art? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to Christ as God to sit at the right hand of the Father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to Christ as man to sit at the right hand of the Father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to God alone to create? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to a liberal man chiefly to give? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to a priest to catechize and exorcize the person to be baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to man alone to eat this sacrament spiritually? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to man to act for an end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to prudence to find the mean in moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to the Father to be the principle? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to the Sovereign Pontiff to draw up a symbol of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it belongs to the human law to repress all vices? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it can be demonstrated that God exists? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is a grave sin for the listener to suffer the backbiter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is a mortal sin to ask for the debt at a holy time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is a mortal sin to have intercourse with a concubine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is a sin to take usury for money lent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is a sin to tempt God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is against the natural law to have a concubine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is against the natural law to have several wives? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is allowable for a menstruous wife to ask for the marriage debt? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is always a mortal sin to give false evidence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is always sinful to wage war? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is always unlawful to give money for the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is an article of faith that the world began? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is becoming of Christ to pray? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is becoming to pray? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is befitting for a Divine Person to assume? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is befitting that Christ should be predestinated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is befitting to the Divine Nature to assume? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is ever lawful to confess to another than a priest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is expedient to grieve for sin continually? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is expedient to take vows? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting for the Holy Ghost to be sent visibly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting for the Son to be sent invisibly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting that Christ should be a priest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting that Christ should receive a dowry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting that Christ should sit at the right hand of God the Father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting that God should adopt sons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting that impediments should be assigned to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting that the whole Trinity should adopt? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fitting to distinguish six kinds of sin against the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is fittingly commanded that man should love God with his whole heart? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is forbidden to demand the debt on holy days? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for a bigamist to receive a dispensation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for a bishop to have property of his own? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for a husband to put away his wife on account of fornication? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for a man to confess a sin which he has not committed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for a man to possess a thing as his own? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for a private individual to kill a man who has sinned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for an advocate to take a fee for pleading? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for clerics and bishops to fight? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for clerics to kill evil- doers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for parents to strike their children, or masters their slaves? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for religious to beg? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for religious to live on alms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for religious to occupy themselves with secular business? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for religious to teach, preach, and the like? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for religious to wear coarser clothes than others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for the accused to defend himself with calumnies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful for the accused to escape judgment by appealing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to abstain altogether from communion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to adjure a man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to adjure an irrational creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to adjure the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to ask for any other kind of consideration for money lent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to be angry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to be solicitous about temporal matters? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to borrow money under a condition of usury? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to communicate with unbelievers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to curse an irrational creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to curse anyone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to desire the office of a bishop? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to fight on holy days? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to give and receive money for spiritual actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to have various contrary opinions of notions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to imprison a man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to judge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to kill a man in self- defense? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to kill oneself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to kill sinners? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to kill the innocent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to lay ambushes in war? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to pass from one religious order to another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to receive money for things annexed to spiritual things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to receive the body of Christ without the blood? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to receive this sacrament daily? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to sell a thing for more than its worth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to steal through stress of need? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to swear by creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is lawful to swear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is more grievous to sin through certain malice than through passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is more meritorious to love an enemy than to love a friend? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is more meritorious to love one''s neighbor than to love God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is natural for man to possess external things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is necessary for one to confess to one''s own priest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is necessary for perjury that the statement confirmed on oath be false? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is necessary for salvation to believe anything above the natural reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is necessary for salvation to believe explicitly in the Trinity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is necessary for the accusation to be made in writing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is necessary that every being be created by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is necessary to confess to a priest? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is necessary to have contrition for each mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is part of a deacon''s duty to baptize? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is possible for anyone to hate God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is possible in this life to fulfil this precept of the love of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is possible to assign a distinct division of the judicial precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is possible to be dispensed from a solemn vow of continency? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is possible to have patience without grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is possible, by a miracle, for two bodies to be in the same place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is proper to Christ to be Head of the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is proper to Christ to be the Mediator of God and man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is proper to Christ to be the Redeemer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is proper to Christ to sit at the right hand of the Father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is proper to the Father to be unbegotten? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is proper to the rational nature to act for an end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is proper to the rational nature to be adopted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is requisite for fasting that one eat but once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is right that schismatics should be punished with excommunication? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is right to reckon error as an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is right to say that religious perfection consists in these three vows? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is suitable for the articles of faith to be embodied in a symbol? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is the same place where souls are cleansed, and the damned punished? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is unlawful to form a judgment from suspicions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is unlawful to kill any living thing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it is unlawful to wear divine words at the neck? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it may have been lawful by dispensation to put away a wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it must be said that the three persons are of one essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it pertains to Christ to pray according to His sensuality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it should be said that Christ was conceived of[ de] the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it suffices to restore the exact amount taken? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was becoming that Christ should be tempted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was becoming that Christ should lead an austere life in this world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was ever lawful to have a concubine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was ever lawful to have several wives? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting for Christ to ascend into heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting for Christ to be baptized with John''s baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting for Christ to be buried? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting for Christ to be crucified with thieves? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting for Christ to descend into hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting for Christ to rise again on the third day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting for Christ to suffer at the hands of the Gentiles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting for man to be tempted by the devil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting that Christ should be baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting that Christ should be transfigured? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting that Christ should die? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting that Christ should pray for Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting that God should become incarnate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting that John should baptize? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was fitting that the disciples should see Him rise again? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was lawful for a divorced wife to have another husband? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was lawful to divorce a wife under the Mosaic law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was necessary for Christ to rise again? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it was useful for laws to be framed by men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether it will be identically the same man that shall rise again? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether joy is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether joy is an effect of devotion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether joy is effected in us by charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether judgment is an act of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether judgment is rendered perverse by being usurped? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether judiciary power belongs to Christ as man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether judiciary power belongs to Christ with respect to all human affairs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether judiciary power is to be specially attributed to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether justice is a general virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether justice is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether justice is about the passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether justice is always towards one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether justice is in the will as its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether justice is the chief of the moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether justice stands foremost among all moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether justice, as a general virtue, is essentially the same as all virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether knowledge is a cause of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether knowledge is a gift? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether knowledge of all Holy Writ is required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether lack of members should be an impediment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether law is something pertaining to reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether liberality is a part of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether liberality is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether liberality is about money? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether liberality is the greatest of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether lies are sufficiently divided into officious, jocose, and mischievous lies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether life is adequately divided into active and contemplative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether life is an operation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether life is fittingly divided into active and contemplative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether life is properly attributed to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether lifeless faith can become living, or living faith, lifeless? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether lifeless faith is a gift of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether light is a body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether light is a quality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether likeness is a cause of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether likeness is a cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether limbo is the same as the hell of the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether local distance impedes the knowledge in the separated soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether local distance influences the angelic speech? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love exists in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is a cause of hatred? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is a passion that wounds the lover? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is a passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is cause of all that the lover does? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is in the concupiscible power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is properly divided into love of friendship and love of concupiscence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is the cause of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is the first of the concupiscible passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether love is the same as dilection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether lust is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether lying is always opposed to truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether madmen and imbeciles should be baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether madness is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether magnanimity is a part of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether magnanimity is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether magnanimity is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether magnanimity is about honors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether magnanimity is essentially about great honors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether magnificence is a part of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether magnificence is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether magnificence is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man attains happiness through the action of some higher creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man by the power of his soul can change corporeal matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man can attain happiness by his natural powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man can attain happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man can know that he has grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man can make satisfaction to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man can merit everlasting life without grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man can rise from sin without the help of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man can teach the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man can wish or do any good without grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man chooses of necessity or freely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man could commit a venial sin in the state of innocence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man had mastership over all other creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man has free- will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man in his first state could be deceived? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man is bound to believe anything explicitly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man is freed by Baptism from all debt of punishment due to sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man is more shamefaced of those who are more closely connected with him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man is preserved by this sacrament from future sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man ought to ask God for temporal things when he prays? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man possessed of grace needs the help of grace in order to persevere? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man was created in paradise? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man was placed in paradise to dress it and keep it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man will all, whatsoever he wills, for the last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man without grace can avoid sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man''s action is good or evil from a circumstance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man''s happiness consists in any bodily good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man''s happiness consists in fame or glory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man''s happiness consists in honors? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man''s happiness consists in pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man''s happiness consists in power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man''s happiness consists in the vision of the divine essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether man''s happiness consists in wealth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether many habits can be in one power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether martyrdom is an act of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether martyrdom is an act of the greatest perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether martyrdom is an act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether matrimony confers grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether matrimony is a kind of joining? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether matrimony is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether matrimony is fittingly defined in the text? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether matrimony is fittingly named? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether matrimony is of natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether matrimony still comes under a precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether meanness is a vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether memory is a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether memory is in the intellectual part of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men are assailed by the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men are bound to pay first- fruits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men are bound to pay tithes of all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men are bound to pay tithes under a necessity of precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men are guarded by the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men are predestined by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men are taken up into the angelic orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men are under a necessity of precept to make oblations? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men were equal in the state of innocence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men were freed from the punishment of sin through Christ''s Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether men would have been born in a state of righteousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether mercy can be attributed to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether mercy is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether mercy is the greatest of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether military prudence should be reckoned a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether mission is eternal, or only temporal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether modesty is a part of temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether modesty is only about outward actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether moral good and evil can be found in the passions of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether moral virtue differs from intellectual virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether moral virtue is a passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether moral virtues can be without charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether moral virtues observe the mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether mortal and venial sin differ generically? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether mortal sin can be in the sensuality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether movement is a cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether mutual indwelling is an effect of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether names applied to God are synonymous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether names predicated of God are predicated primarily of creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether names which imply relation to creatures are predicated of God temporally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether nativity regards the nature rather than the person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether natural contingents are subject to the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether natural knowledge and love remain in the beatified angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether necessary and eternal things are subject to the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether negligence can be a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether negligence is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether negligence is opposed to prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether no venereal act can be without sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether nocturnal pollution is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether none but a bishop can confer this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether oaths are desirable and to be used frequently as something useful and good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether obedience belongs to religious perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether obedience is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether obedience is the greatest of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether oblations are due to priests alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether observance is a greater virtue than piety? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether observance is a special virtue, distinct from other virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether observances directed to the purpose of fortune- telling are unlawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether of those who see the essence of God, one sees more perfectly than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether offering a sacrifice to God is of the law of nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether olive oil is a suitable matter for this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether omission is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one Divine Person can assume two human natures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one Person without another can assume a created nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one and the same external action can be both good and evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one angel enlightens another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one angel knows another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one angel moves another angel''s will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one angel speaks to another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one can be compelled by one''s father''s command to marry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one can be dispensed from confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one can be happy in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one can intend two things at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one habit is made up of many habits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one is bound to confess at once? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one man can be happier than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one man can fulfill satisfactory punishment for another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one man can have several last ends? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one man can teach another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one man is bound to obey another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one man may hope for another''s eternal happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one may confess through another, or by writing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one may give alms out of ill- gotten goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one miracle is greater than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one ought to be bound by vow to enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one ought to dispute with unbelievers in public? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one ought to give alms out of what one needs? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one ought to give alms to those rather who are more closely united to us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one ought to induce others to enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one ought to suffer oneself to be reviled? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one ought, by humility, to subject oneself to all men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one person can understand one and the same thing better than another can? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one person has an aureole more excellently than another person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one person is delivered from this punishment sooner than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one pleasure can be contrary to another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one power of the soul arises from another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one sin is a cause of another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one spouse is bound to pay the debt to the other at a festal time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one that is not baptized can confer the sacrament of Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one virtue can be greater or less than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one virtue can be in several powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one who is under another''s power can give alms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether one who sins through certain malice, sins through habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether only a bishop can confer this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether only the sin of pride and envy can exist in an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether operation is the proper cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether order is an impediment to matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether original sin infects the will before the other powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether original sin is a habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether original sin is concupiscence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether original sin is equally in all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether original sin is in the essence of the soul rather than in the powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether original sin is more in the flesh than in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether other creatures concur in that last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether other sins dissolve marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our atmosphere is the demons''place of punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our intellect can know contingent things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our intellect can know the future? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our intellect can know the infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our intellect knows its own act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our intellect knows singulars? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our intellect knows the habits of the soul by their essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our intellect understands by composition and division? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our of charity, man ought to love himself more than his neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether our souls are contrite for sins even after this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether out of charity God ought to be loved for Himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether out of charity, man is bound to love God more than himself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether outward pain is greater than interior sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pain and sorrow are assuaged by sleep and baths? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pain and sorrow are assuaged by the contemplation of truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pain deprives one of the power to learn? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pain has the nature of evil more than fault has? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pain is a passion of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pain or sorrow are assuaged by the sympathy of friends? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pain or sorrow is assuaged by every pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pain or sorrow is assuaged by tears? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether paradise is a corporeal place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether paradise was a place adapted to be the abode of man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether parish priests and archdeacons are more perfect than religious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether parish priests may lawfully enter religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether particular justice has a special matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether passion excuses from sin altogether? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether passion increases or decreases the goodness or malice of an act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether passion is in the appetitive rather than in the apprehensive part? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether passions existed in the soul of the first man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether passive scandal may happen even to the perfect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether patience is a part of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether patience is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether patience is the greatest of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether patience is the same as longanimity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether peace is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether peace is the proper effect of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether peace is the same as concord? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether penance can be in the innocent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether penance is the first of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether penance originates from fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether perfection of the body is necessary for happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether perpetual continence is required for religious perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether perseverance is a part of fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether perseverance is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether perseverance needs the help of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pertinacity is opposed to perseverance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether piety extends to particular human individuals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether piety is a gift? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether piety is a special virtue distinct from other virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether piety provides support for our parents? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether places are appointed to receive souls after death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether plain water is necessary for Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pleasure causes thirst or desire for itself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pleasure hinders the use of reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pleasure is the measure or rule by which to judge of moral good or evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pleasure perfects operation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether political prudence is fittingly accounted a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether poverty is required for religious perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether poverty of spirit is the beatitude corresponding to the gift of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prayer is an act of religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prayer is an act of the appetitive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prayer is meritorious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prayer is proper to the rational creature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prayer should be vocal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prayer should last a long time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether precipitation is a sin included in imprudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether predestination can be furthered by the prayers of the saints? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether predestination is certain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether predestination places anything in the predestined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether presumption arises from vainglory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether presumption is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether presumption is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether presumption is more opposed to fear than to hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether presumption is opposed to magnanimity by excess? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether presumption trusts in God or in our own power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether previous satisfaction begins to avail after man is restored to charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pride is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pride is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pride is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pride is the beginning of every sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pride is the first sin of all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pride is the most grievous of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pride should be reckoned a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pride was the first man''s first sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether priests alone have the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether primary matter is created by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether privation of mode, species and order is the effect of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prodigality is a more grievous sin than covetousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prodigality is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prodigality is opposite to covetousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether promulgation is essential to a law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prophecy can be natural? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prophecy is a habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prophecy is only about future contingencies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prophecy pertains to knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prophetic revelation comes through the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prophets always know the things which they prophesy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether providence can suitably be attributed to God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether providence imposes any necessity on things foreseen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence appoints the end to moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence can be in sinners? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence can be lost through forgetfulness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence is a distinct virtue from art? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence is a virtue necessary to man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence is in all who have grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence is in subjects, or only in their rulers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence is in the cognitive or in the appetitive faculty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence is in us by nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence of the flesh is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence of the flesh is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence pertains to the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether prudence takes cognizance of singulars? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether purity belongs especially to chastity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pusillanimity is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether pusillanimity is opposed to magnanimity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether quarreling is a more grievous sin than flattery? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether quarreling is opposed to the virtue of friendship or affability? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether rape is a species of lust, distinct from seduction? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether rapture pertains to the cognitive rather than to the appetitive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether reason should be reckoned a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether reasons in support of what we believe lessen the merit of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether rectitude of the will is necessary for happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether relation in God is the same as His essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether relation is the same as person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion directs man to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion has an external act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion implies a state of perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion is a special virtue, distinct from the others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion is a theological virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion is one virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion is the same as sanctity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religion should be preferred to the other moral virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religious and prelates are in the state of perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religious are bound to manual labor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether religious perfection is diminished by possessing something in common? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether respect of persons is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether respect of persons takes place in showing honor and respect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether respect of persons takes place in the dispensation of spiritual goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether restitution is an act of commutative justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether restitution is binding on those who have not taken? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether restitution of what has been taken away is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether reviling arises from anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether reviling consists in words? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether reviling or railing is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether right is fittingly divided into natural right and positive right? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether right is the object of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether robbery may be committed without sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacraments are necessary for man''s salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacred doctrine is a matter of argument? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacred doctrine is a practical science? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacred doctrine is a science? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacred doctrine is nobler than other sciences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacred doctrine is one science? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacrifice should be offered to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacrilege can be a species of lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacrilege is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sacrilege is the violation of a sacred thing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sadness causes pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sanctifying grace is bestowed in this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sanctifying grace is conferred in the sacrament of Order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether satisfaction is a virtue or an act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether satisfaction is an act of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether satisfaction must be made by means of penal works? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether scandal is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether scandal is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether scandal is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether schism is a graver sin than unbelief? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether schism is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether schismatics have any power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether security belongs to magnanimity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sedition is a special sin distinct from other sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sedition is always a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether seduction should be reckoned a species of lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether self- love is the source of every sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sensuality is only appetitive? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether separated souls know that takes place on earth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether servile fear is good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether servile fear is substantially the same as filial fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether servile fear remains with charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether seven years is fittingly assigned as the age for betrothal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether several Divine Persons can assume one and the same individual nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether several angels can be at the same time in the same place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether several can baptize at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether several persons can be the term of one notional act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether several priests can consecrate one and the same host? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether shamefacedness is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether shamefacedness is about a disgraceful action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether shrewdness is part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether simple fornication is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin can be in the reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin can be pardoned without Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin can be the punishment of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin causes a stain on the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin diminishes the good of nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin has a cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin has an external cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin has an internal cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin incurs a debt of punishment infinite in quantity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin is aggravated by reason of its causing more harm? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin is alleviated on account of a passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sin is compatible with virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sinners impetrate anything from God by their prayers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sinners love themselves? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sinners should be baptized? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sinners who are going to be baptized are bound to confess their sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sins are fittingly divided into sins of thought, word, and deed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sins are the proper matter of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sins differ in species according to their objects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sins differ specifically in reference to their causes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sins differ specifically in respect of different circumstances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sins of commission and omission differ specifically? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sins once forgiven return through a subsequent sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether six daughters are fittingly assigned to anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether six daughters are fittingly assigned to gluttony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether six species are fittingly assigned to lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether slavery can supervene to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether slight contrition suffices to blot out great sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sloth is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sloth is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sloth is a special vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sloth should be accounted a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether so many abodes should be distinguished? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sobriety is by itself a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sobriety is more requisite in persons of greater standing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether solicitude belongs to prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether solicitude belongs to prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether some concupiscences are natural, and some not natural? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether some defect is a cause of daring? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether some good of the soul constitutes man''s happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether some part of the food is changed into true human nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow can be a useful good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow can be a virtuous good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow for one sin should be greater than for another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow is caused by the loss of good or by the presence of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow is compatible with moral virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow is more harmful to the body than the other passions of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow is the same as pain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow is to be shunned more than pleasure is to be sought? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow or pain is contrary to pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sorrow or pain weakens all activity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether souls are conveyed to heaven or hell immediately after death? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether spiritual goods should be foregone on account of scandal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether spiritual relationship is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether spiritual relationship is contracted by baptism only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether spiritual relationship passes from husband to wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether spiritual relationship passes to the godfather''s carnal children? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether spiritual sins are fittingly distinguished from carnal sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether strife is a daughter of anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether strife is always a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether studiousness is a part of temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether subjects are bound to obey their superiors in all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether subtlety is a property of the glorified body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether sudden things are especially feared? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether suffrages avail the children who are in limbo? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether suffrages offered by the living for the dead profit those who offer them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether suffrages performed by sinners profit the dead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether suffrages profit the saints in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether suffrages profit those who are in hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether suffrages profit those who are in purgatory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether superstition is a vice contrary to religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether synderesis is a special power of the soul distinct from the others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether tale- bearing is a sin distinct from backbiting? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether teaching is a work of the active or of the contemplative life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temperance is a cardinal virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temperance is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temperance is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temperance is about the pleasures proper to the taste? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temperance is only about desires and pleasures of touch? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temperance is only about desires and pleasures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temperance is the greatest of the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temporal goods fall under merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temporal goods should be foregone on account of scandal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether temptation of God is opposed to the virtue of religion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether thankfulness is a special virtue, distinct from other virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether that fire will cleanse also the higher heavens? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether that fire will consume the other elements? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether that fire will engulf the wicked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether that fire will have such an effect on men as is described? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Annunciation took place in becoming order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Baptism of Blood is the most excellent of these? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Blessed Virgin cooperated actively in the conception of Christ''s body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Blessed Virgin should be called the Mother of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Blessed Virgin was cleansed from the infection of the fomes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Blessed Virgin was sanctified before animation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Blessed Virgin was sanctified before her birth from the womb? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Church observes a suitable rite in baptizing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Church should excommunicate anyone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Church should receive those who return from heresy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Divine Person assumed a man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Eucharist is a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Eucharist is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Eucharist is one sacrament or several? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Eucharist is the greatest of the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Father and the Son are one principle of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Father and the Son love each other by the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Father can be fittingly sent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Gifts differ from the virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Godhead can be seen by the wicked without joy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Godhead was separated from the flesh when Christ died? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father through the Son? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Son? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Incarnation ought to have been put off till the end of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Mother of God should be worshipped with the adoration of"latria"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Mother of God took a vow of virginity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Mother of God was a virgin in conceiving Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Nature abstracted from the Personality can assume? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law directed man sufficiently as regards interior actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law fulfils the Old? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law is a written law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law is contained in the Old? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law is distinct from the Old Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law is more burdensome than the Old? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law justifies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law made sufficient ordinations about external acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law ought to prescribe or prohibit any external acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law should have been given from the beginning of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the New Law will last till the end of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law comprises ceremonial, besides moral, precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law contains moral precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law contains only one precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law enjoined fitting precepts concerning rulers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law set forth suitable precepts about the members of the household? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law should have been given to the Jews alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law was from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law was given through the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law was good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Old Law was suitably given at the time of Moses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Paschal Lamb was the chief figure of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Philosopher suitably assigns the species of anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son is equal to the Father in greatness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son is equal to the Father in power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son is in the Father, and conversely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son is other than the Father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God assumed a human mind or intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God assumed a person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God assumed a soul through the medium of the spirit or mind? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God assumed a soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God assumed flesh through the medium of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God in human nature ought to have assumed defects of body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God knew all things in the Word? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God ought to have assumed a carnal or earthly body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God ought to have assumed a true body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Son of God ought to have assumed human nature in all individuals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the Union of the Incarnate Word took place in the nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the accidents remain in this sacrament without a subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the act of God''s intellect is His substance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the act of justice is to render to each one his own? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the act of knowledge acquired here remains in the separated soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the act of sin is from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the act of the reason is commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the act of the sensitive appetite is commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the act of the vegetal soul is commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the act of the will is commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the actions of others are a cause of pleasure to us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the actions of the first man were less meritorious than ours are? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the actions performed in celebrating this sacrament are becoming? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the active intellect is one in all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the active intellect is something in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the active life is more excellent than the contemplative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the active life is of greater merit than the contemplative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the active life precedes the contemplative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the active life remains after this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the acts of law are suitably assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the acts of the Orders are rightly assigned in the text? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the acts of the external members are commanded? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the acts of the sensitive powers remain in the separated soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the adornment of women is devoid of mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the aforesaid expressions are true? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the aforesaid powers are more infected than the others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the aforesaid vices arise from lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the aforesaid virtues are parts of temperance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the aforesaid works avail for the mitigation of the pains of hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angel guardian ever forsakes a man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angel loves himself with both natural love, and love of choice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angel obtained beatitude immediately after one act of merit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angel was produced by God from eternity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angel''s intellect is sometimes in potentiality, sometimes in act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels are incorruptible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels are more to the image of God than man is? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels are sent on works of ministry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels can change the will of man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels differ in species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels exercise functions of life in the bodies assumed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels exist in any great number? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels have a cause of their existence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels have bodies naturally united to them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels know all things by their substance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels know material things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels know the mysteries of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels receive the dowries? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels understand by composing and dividing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels understand by species drawn from things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels were created before the corporeal world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels were created in beatitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels were created in grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels were created in the empyrean heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels will do anything towards the resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the angels will judge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the annunciation should have been made by an angel to the Blessed Virgin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the appetite is a special power of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the articles of faith are suitably formulated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the articles of faith have increased in course of time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the attaining of glory is an effect of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the aureole differs from the fruit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the aureole is the same as the essential reward which is called the aurea? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the baptism of John was from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the beatified angels advance in beatitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the beatitudes are suitably enumerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the beatitudes differ from the virtues and gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the believer who leaves his unbelieving wife can take another wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the blessed in heaven will see the sufferings of the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the blessed pity the unhappiness of the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the blessed rejoice in the punishment of the wicked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the bodies of the damned will be impassible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the bodies of the damned will be incorruptible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the bodies of the damned will rise again with their deformities? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the bodies of the saints will be impassible after the resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the body is necessary for man''s happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the body of man was given an apt disposition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the body of the first man was made of the slime of the earth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the book of life is the same as predestination? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the book of life regards only the life of glory of the predestined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the brave are more eager at first than in the midst of danger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the brave man acts for the sake of the good of his habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the brave man delights in his act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the brave man makes use of anger in his action? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the brightness of the heavenly bodies will be increased at this renewal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the burial service profits the dead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the cause assigned for the production of the lights is reasonable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the cause of idolatry was on the part of man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the causes of divorce had to be written in the bill? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the ceremonial precepts are figurative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the ceremonial precepts have a literal cause or merely a figurative cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the ceremonies of the Law were in existence before the Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the ceremonies of the Old Law ceased at the coming of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the character be subjected in the powers of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the character is imprinted on a priest when the chalice is handed to him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the character of Order presupposes the baptismal character? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the children who died in original sin were delivered by Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the circumstances are properly set forth in the third book of Ethics? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the clarity of the glorified body is visible to the non- glorified eye? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the cleansing of the world will be effected by fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the clergy also are bound to pay tithes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the completion of the Divine works ought to be ascribed to the seventh day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the concrete essential names can stand for the person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the condition of slavery is an impediment to matrimony? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the consecration of this sacrament belongs to a priest alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the consent needs to be expressed in words? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the consent that makes a marriage is a consent to carnal intercourse? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the consequences of the external action increase its goodness or malice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the contemplative life is continuous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the contemplative life is hindered by the active life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the corporeal creature is governed by the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the craving for unity is a cause of sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the creation of things was in the beginning of time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned are in material darkness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned blaspheme? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned by right and deliberate reason would wish not to be? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned can make use of the knowledge they had in this world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned demerit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned hate God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned repent of the evil they have done? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned see the glory of the blessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the damned will ever think of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the daughters of lust are fittingly described? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the dead can be assisted by the works of the living? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the debt of punishment is an effect of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the debt of punishment remains after sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the definition of satisfaction given in the text is suitable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the degrees of beatitude should be called mansions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the degrees of prophecy change as time goes on? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the demons will carry out the sentence of the Judge on the damned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the desire of glory is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the devil can induce man to sin of necessity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the devil can induce man to sin, by internal instigations? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the devil desired to be as God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the devil is directly the cause of man''s sinning? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the devil is the head of all the wicked? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the different kinds of almsdeeds are suitably enumerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the distinction of hierarchies and orders comes from the angelic nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the dove in which the Holy Ghost appeared was real? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the dowry is the same as beatitude*? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the effect of Baptism is to open the gates of the heavenly kingdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the effect of Christ''s priesthood is the expiation of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the effect of government is one or many? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the effect of sorrow or pain is to burden the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the effect of subsequent Penance is to quicken even dead works? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the effect of this sacrament is hindered by venial sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the elements will be renewed by an addition of brightness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the empyrean heaven was created at the same time as formless matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the end of the government of the world is something outside the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the entire good of human nature can be destroyed by sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the entire punishment due to sin is forgiven through this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the episcopate is an Order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the essence of God can be seen with the bodily eye? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the essence of God is seen by the created intellect through an image? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the essence of goodness consists in mode, species and order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the essence of the soul is its power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the essence of theft consists in taking another''s thing secretly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the essential names should be appropriated to the persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the eternal law is a sovereign type[* Ratio] existing in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the eternal law is known to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the evidence of two or three persons suffices? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the evil of fault can be in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the evil of sin is an object of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the excellence of the person sinning aggravates the sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the exclusive word"alone"should be added to the essential term in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the exemplar cause is anything besides God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the existence of God is self- evident? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fellowship of friend is necessary for happiness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the female sex is an impediment to receiving Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fire of Purgatory delivers from the debt of punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fire of hell is beneath the earth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fire of hell is of the same species as ours? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fire of hell will be corporeal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fire of the final conflagration is to follow the judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the firmament divides waters from waters? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the firmament was made on the second day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the first man knew all things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the first man saw God through His Essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the first man was created in grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the first man''s pride consisted in his coveting God''s likeness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the first movements of the sensuality in unbelievers are mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the first precept of the decalogue is fittingly expressed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the five exterior senses are properly distinguished? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the flesh of Christ was conceived of the Virgin''s purest blood? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the flesh of Christ was derived from Adam? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the foregoing prayer is a suitable form for this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the foreknowledge of merits is the cause of predestination? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the forgiveness of guilt is an effect of Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the forgiveness of mortal sin is an effect of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the forgiveness of sin is the effect of contrition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the form of this sacrament is suitably expressed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the form of this sacrament is:"I absolve thee"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the formless matter of all corporeal things is the same? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the forms of bodies are from the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the four cardinal virtues differ from one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the four species of pride are fittingly assigned by Gregory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fourth precept, about honoring one''s parents, is fittingly expressed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fruits are suitably enumerated by the Apostle? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fruits differ from the beatitudes? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fruits of the Holy Ghost are contrary to the works of the flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the fulness of grace is proper to Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of counsel corresponds to the virtue of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of counsel remains in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of knowledge is about Divine things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of knowledge is practical knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of tongues is more excellent than the grace of prophecy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of understanding is compatible with faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of understanding is distinct from the other gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of understanding is in all who are in a state of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gift of understanding is merely speculative or also practical? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gifts are necessary to man for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gifts are set down by Isaias in their order of dignity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gifts of the Holy Ghost are connected? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gifts of the Holy Ghost are habits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gifts of the Holy Ghost remain in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the glorified bodies will be agile? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the glorified body, by reason of its subtlety, will be impalpable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the good angels have precedence over the bad angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the good or evil of a man''s action is derived from its object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the good will be judged at the judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the goodness of the will depends on its conformity to the Divine will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the goodness of the will depends on reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the goodness of the will depends on the eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the goodness of the will depends on the object alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the goodness of the will depends on the object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the goods of marriage are sufficiently enumerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the grace of Christ could increase? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the grace of Christ is infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the grace of the word of wisdom and knowledge is becoming to women? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the grace of union was natural to the man Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the grades of the orders are properly assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gratuitous graces were in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gravity of a sin depends on its cause? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the gravity of sins varies according to their objects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the habit of knowledge here acquired remains in the separated soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the habits of the speculative intellect are virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the habitual grace of Christ followed after the union? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the hair and nails will rise again in the human body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the happiness of the saints will be greater after the judgment than before? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the heavenly bodies are the cause of human actions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the heavenly bodies are the cause of what is produced in bodies here below? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the heavens should have been opened unto Christ at His baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the higher and lower reason are distinct powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the highest angel among those who sinned was the highest of all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the honest differs from the useful and the pleasant? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the honest is the same as the beautiful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the human action of Christ could be meritorious to Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the human body was immediately produced by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the human intellect can attain to the vision of God in His essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the human nature was assumed through the medium of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the human nature was united to the Word of God accidentally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the human soul is incorruptible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the human soul is something subsistent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the human soul was produced before the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the humors will rise again in the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the image of Christ should be adored with the adoration of"latria"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the image of God is found in every man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the image of God is in man according to the Trinity of Persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the image of God is in man as regards the mind only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the image of God is in man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the image of God is to be found in irrational creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the image of God is to be found in the acts of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the imposition of the priest''s hands is necessary for this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the incontinent in anger is worse than the incontinent in desire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the incontinent man sins more gravely than the intemperate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the indulgences of the Church profit the dead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the inequality of things is from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the inferior angel speaks to the superior? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the innocent is more bound to give thanks to God than the penitent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the institution of this sacrament was appropriate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellect can be false? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellect can be the subject of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellect is a passive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellect is a power of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellect understands the act of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellect understands the indivisible before the divisible? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual habit, art, is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual memory is a power distinct from the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual principle is multiplied according to the number of bodies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual principle is united to the body as its form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual soul is produced from the semen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual soul is properly united to such a body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual soul knows itself by its essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual soul knows material things in the eternal types? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual virtues observe the mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the intellectual virtues remain after this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the interior senses are suitably distinguished? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the invisible mission is to all who participate grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the irascible and concupiscible appetites obey reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the irascible and concupiscible powers are the subject of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the irascible passions precede the concupiscible passions, or vice versa? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the judge can lawfully remit the punishment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the judgment will take place by word of mouth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the judgment will take place in the valley of Josaphat? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the judicial power corresponds to voluntary poverty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the judicial precepts of the Old Law bind for ever? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the judicial precepts were figurative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the just is absolutely the same as retaliation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the just man alone may eat Christ sacramentally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the justice of God is truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the justification of the ungodly is God''s greatest work? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the justification of the ungodly is a miraculous work? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the justification of the ungodly is the remission of sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the justification of the ungodly takes place in an instant or successively? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the key is the power of binding and loosing, etc.? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the knowledge of God is discursive? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the knowledge of God is of future contingent things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the knowledge of God is the cause of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the knowledge of God is variable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the law is always something directed to the common good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the law of nature can be abolished from the heart of man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the lights of heaven are living beings? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the lights ought to have been produced on the fourth day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the limbo of children is the same as the limbo of the Fathers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the limbo of hell is the same as Abraham''s bosom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the love of charity stops at God, or extends to our neighbor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the lust that is about venereal acts can be a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the manner and order of the first temptation was fitting? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the marriage act can be excused without the marriage goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the marriage act is always sinful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the marriage act is excused by the aforesaid goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the marriage act is meritorious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the matter of Christ''s body should have been taken from a woman? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the matter of lust is only venereal desires and pleasures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the matter of magnificence is great expenditure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the matter of this sacrament is bread and wine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the matter of this sacrament need be consecrated by a bishop? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the mean of justice is the real mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the mean of moral virtue is the real mean, or the rational mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the minister''s intention is required for the validity of a sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the miracles which Christ worked were a sufficient proof of His Godhead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the mixing with water is essential to this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the mode and order of the temptation were becoming? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the mode of charity falls under the precept of the Divine law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the mode of virtue falls under the precept of the law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the moral precepts of the Law are about all the acts of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the moral precepts of the Old Law justified man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the moral virtues are better than the intellectual virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the moral virtues are connected with one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the moral virtues differ in point of the various objects of the passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the moral virtues pertain to the contemplative life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the moral virtues remain after this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the moral virtues should be called cardinal or principal virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the more universal is first in our intellectual cognition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the morning and evening knowledge are one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the most important circumstances are"why"and"in what the act consists"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the motive of anger is always something done against the one who is angry? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the movement of an angel is instantaneous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the movement of the heavenly bodies will cease? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the movement of the saints will be instantaneous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the multitude and distinction of things come from God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the name of Image is proper to the Son? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the name"Word"imports relation to creatures? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the natural law can be changed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the natural law contains several precepts, or only one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the natural law is a habit? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the natural law is the same in all men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the ninth hour is suitably fixed for the faster''s meal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the notion of a state denotes a condition of freedom or servitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the notional acts are to be attributed to the persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the notional acts are voluntary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the notional acts proceed from something? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the number of the predestined is certain? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the numeral terms denote anything real in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the object of anger is good or evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the object of faith can be something seen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the object of faith is something complex, by way of a proposition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the object of faith is the First Truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the object of fear is good or evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the offering of sacrifice is a special act of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the oil ought to be consecrated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the order of charity endures in heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the order of charity is included in the precept? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the order of the sacraments, as given above, is becoming? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the orders of the angels are properly named? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the orders will outlast the Day of Judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the other six precepts of the decalogue are fittingly expressed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the pain of Christ''s Passion was greater than all other pains? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the pains of Purgatory surpass all the temporal pains of this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the parts of fortitude are suitably assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the parts of temperance are rightly assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the parts to be anointed are suitably assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the perfection of the Christian life consists chiefly in charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the perfections of all things are in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the persons are distinguished by the relations? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the persons can be predicated of the essential terms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the plants and animals will remain in this renewal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the power of God is infinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the power of begetting signifies a relation, and not the essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the power of the keys extends to the remission of guilt? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the powers are distinguished by their acts and objects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the powers of the soul flow from its essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the prayers which the saints pour forth to God for us are always granted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precept of love of our neighbor is fittingly expressed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precepts of fortitude are suitably given in the Divine Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precepts of temperance are suitably given in the Divine law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precepts of the decalogue are dispensable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precepts of the decalogue are precepts of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precepts of the decalogue are suitably distinguished from one another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precepts of the decalogue are suitably formulated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precepts of the decalogue are suitably set forth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the precepts of the decalogue should have included a precept of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the predestined are chosen by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the priest alone is bound by the seal of confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the priest can bind and loose according to his own judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the priest can bind through the power of the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the priest of the Law had the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the priest ought to deny the body of Christ to the sinner seeking it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the priest who consecrates is bound to receive this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the priesthood of Christ endures for ever? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the priesthood of Christ was according to the order of Melchisedech? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the process of counsel is indefinite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the process of counsel is one of analysis? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the procession of love in God is generation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the production of light is fittingly assigned to the first day? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the production of the human body is fittingly described in Scripture? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the proper matter of studiousness is knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the properties presuppose the notional acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the prophetic vision is always accompanied by abstraction from the senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the prophets of the demons ever foretell the truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the prophets see the very essence of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the punishment of Christians is brought to an end by the mercy of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the punishment of sacrilege should be pecuniary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the rational soul is produced by God immediately? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the reason can be overcome by a passion, against its knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the reason for divorce was hatred for the wife? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the reason for taking pity is a defect in the person who pities? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the reason is distinct from the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the reason of any man is competent to make laws? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the relations in God are really distinguished from each other? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the religious state is more perfect than that of prelates? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the remnants of sin are removed when a mortal sin is forgiven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the repayment of gratitude should surpass the favor received? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the resurrection is natural? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the resurrection of Christ is the cause of our resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the resurrection will be for all without exception? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the resurrection will happen suddenly or by degrees? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the resurrection will take place at night- time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the rewards assigned to the beatitudes refer to this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the rewards of the beatitudes are suitably enumerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the right of nations is the same as the natural right? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the rite of circumcision was fitting? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the rite of this sacrament is appropriate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the rites of unbelievers ought to be tolerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the rule of temperance depends on the need of the present life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the rulers of the people can dispense from human laws? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacrament is the chief of the marriage goods? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacrament of Confirmation imprints a character? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacrament of Penance may be repeated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacramental character is the character of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacramental species are broken in this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacramental species can be corrupted? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacramental species can nourish? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacraments are instituted by God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacraments are the cause of grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacraments can be conferred by evil ministers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacraments of the New Law contain grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacraments of the New Law derive their power from Christ''s Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sacraments of the Old Law caused grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the saints have knowledge of our prayers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the saints in glory have penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the saints in heaven pray for us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the saints will never use their agility for the purpose of movement? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the saints, seeing God, see all that God sees? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the scourges of the present life are satisfactory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the second precept of the decalogue is fittingly expressed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the seller is bound to state the defects of the thing sold? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the semen is produced from surplus food? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sensitive and intellectual appetites are distinct powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sensitive powers of apprehension are the subject of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sensitive powers remain in the separated soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sensitive soul is transmitted with the semen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the separate human soul can move bodies at least locally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the separated soul can suffer from a bodily fire? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the separated soul can understand anything? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the separated soul knows all natural things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the separated soul knows singulars? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the separated soul understands separate substances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the seven capital vices are suitably reckoned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost are suitably enumerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the seven petitions of the Lord''s Prayer are fittingly assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the seventh beatitude corresponds to the gift of wisdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin against the Holy Ghost can be forgiven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin of blasphemy is the greatest sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin of consent to the act is in the higher reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin of fear is contrary to fortitude? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin of morose delectation is in the reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin of our first parents was more grievous than other sins? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin of respect of persons takes place in judicial sentences? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin of the highest angel was the cause of the others sinning? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sin of those who crucified Christ was most grievous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sinner sins in receiving Christ''s body sacramentally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sixteen conditions usually assigned are necessary for confession? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sole motive of anger is slight or contempt? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sorrow of contrition can be too great? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul in Purgatory are punished by the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul is a body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul is composed of matter and form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul is in each part of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul is man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul is of the same species as an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul is united to the animal body by means of a body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul knows bodies through the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul of Christ can know the infinite in the Word? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul of Christ comprehended the Word or the Divine Essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul of Christ had omnipotence as regards the execution of His will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul of Christ had omnipotence with regard to His own body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul of Christ had omnipotence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul of man is carried away to things divine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul understands all things through innate species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul understands corporeal things through its essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul was assumed before the flesh by the Son of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul was made or was of God''s substance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the soul was produced by creation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the souls of brute animals are subsistent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the souls who are in heaven or hell are able to go from thence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the sound of the trumpet will be the cause of our resurrection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the species of anger are suitably assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the species of fear is suitably assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the species of gluttony are fittingly distinguished? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the species of sacrilege are distinguished according to the sacred things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the species remaining in this sacrament can change external objects? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the speculative and practical intellects are distinct powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the spiritual joy which proceeds from charity, can be filled? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the stain remains in the soul after the act of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the star which appeared to the Magi belonged to the heavenly system? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the state of slavery is an impediment to receiving Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the subject of continence is the concupiscible power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the subject of pride is the irascible faculty? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the subject of virtue is a power of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the suffrages of one person can profit others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the superior angel enlightens the inferior as regards all he himself knows? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the supreme good, God, is the cause of evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the temporal punishment is imposed according to the degree of the fault? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the temptation of God is a graver sin than superstition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the ten precepts of the decalogue are set in proper order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the theological virtues observe the mean? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the time for celebrating this mystery has been properly determined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the time of our resurrection is hidden? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the time of our resurrection should be delayed till the end of the world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the time of the future judgment is unknown? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the times for the Church fast are fittingly ascribed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the tonsure is an Order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the trinity of the divine persons can be known by natural reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the true and being are convertible terms? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the unbelief of pagans or heathens is graver than other kinds? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the union of the Divine nature and the human is anything created? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the union of the Incarnate Word took place in the Person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the union of the Incarnation took place by grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the union of the Word Incarnate took place in the suppositum or hypostasis? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the union of the two natures in Christ is the greatest of all unions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the universe of creatures always existed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the unnatural vice is a species of lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the unnatural vice is the greatest sin among the species of lust? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the use of wine is altogether unlawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the validity of a sacrament requires a good intention in the minister? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the vestments of the ministers are fittingly instituted in the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the vice of curiosity is about sensitive knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the virgin''s aureole is the greatest of all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the virtue of penance is a species of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the virtue of truth inclines rather to that which is less? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the virtues annexed to justice are suitably enumerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the virtues are more excellent than the gifts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the virtues are restored through Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the virtues of heaven will be moved when our Lord shall come? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the vow of obedience is the chief of the three religious vows? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the weeping of the damned will be corporeal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the whole Christ is contained under each species of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the whole Christ is contained under this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the whole Christ was in hell? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the whole body should be anointed in this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the whole dimensive quantity of Christ''s body is in this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the whole of this life is the time for contrition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the wicked can work miracles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the wicked will be judged? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will alone is the subject of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will can be the subject of virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will desires of necessity, whatever it desires? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will desires something of necessity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is a higher power than the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is a subject of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is evil when it is at variance with erring reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is good when it abides by erring reason? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved by God alone, as exterior principle? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved by a heavenly body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved by a passion of the senstive appetite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved by an exterior principle? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved by the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved by the same act to the end and to the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved by the sensitive appetite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved of necessity by the exterior mover which is God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved to anything naturally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved, of necessity, by its object? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is moved, of necessity, by the lower appetite? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is of good only? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is properly the subject of penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will is the subject of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will moves itself? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will moves the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will of God imposes necessity on the things willed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will of God is always fulfilled? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will of God is changeable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will of God is the cause of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will of expression is to be distinguished in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the will of the demons is obstinate in evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the witnesses of the transfiguration were fittingly chosen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the woman should have been made in the first production of things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the woman was fittingly made from the rib of man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the woman was formed immediately by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the word"light"is used in its proper sense in speaking of spiritual things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the word"person"should be said of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the words spoken in this sacrament are properly framed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the works of satisfaction are suitably enumerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the world is governed by anyone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the world is governed by one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the world is to be cleansed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the world will be renewed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether the worm of the damned is corporeal? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether theft and robbery are sins of different species? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether theft is a more grievous sin than robbery? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether theft is always a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether theologians should take note of the circumstances of human acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are any seminal virtues in corporeal matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are any theological virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are different moral virtues about different passions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are five notions? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are four cardinal virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are habits in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are ideas of all things that God knows? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are ideas? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are many angels in one order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are more than three persons in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are more than two processions in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are notions in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are only four species of sorrow? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are orders among the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are real relations in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are seven Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are several orders in one hierarchy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are several original sins in one man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are several persons in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are several powers of the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are several species of unbelief? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are to be distinguished five genera of powers in the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are two filiations in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are two keys or only one? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are two ways to be distinguished of eating Christ''s body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are two wills in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are various actions pertaining to the contemplative life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are various species of superstition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there are waters above the firmament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there be in the sacraments a power of causing grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there be one supreme evil which is the cause of every evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there be such a thing as fate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be a virtue about games? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be any excess in the worship of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be any habits in the powers of the sensitive parts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be any suitable cause for the sacraments of the Old Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be anything pernicious in the worship of the true God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be despair without unbelief? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be falsehood in the intellect of an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be intellectual without moral virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be marriage between unbelievers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be moral virtue with passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be moral virtue without passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be moral without intellectual virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be mortal sin in touches and kisses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be sin in the excess of play? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be sin in the sensuality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be strife or discord among the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be venial sin in the higher reason as directing the lower powers? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be virtue and vice in connection with outward apparel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there can be voluntariness without any act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a degree of prophecy in the blessed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a different matter for both kinds of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a gratuitous grace of working miracles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a habit in the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a human law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a law in the fomes of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a natural fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a particular besides a general justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a sin in lack of mirth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a vice opposed to anger resulting from lack of anger? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a vice opposed to meanness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is a"morning"and an"evening"knowledge in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is an active and a passive intellect in an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is an active intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is an eternal law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is an irascible and a concupiscible appetite in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is any habit in the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is any sorrow contrary to the pleasure of contemplation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is anything voluntary in human acts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is anything voluntary in irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is but one Divine law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is certainty in the hope of a wayfarer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is delight in contemplation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is enlightenment in the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is equality in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is falsity in the senses? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is free- will in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is in us a natural law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is justice in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is knowledge[* Scientia]? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is love of choice in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is natural love or dilection in an angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is one last end of human life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only intellectual knowledge in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only one aeviternity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only one being in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only one heaven? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only one moral virtue about operations? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only one moral virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only one religious order? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only one truth, according to which all things are true? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is only one world? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is order in charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is power in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is procession in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is sorrow in the demons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is to be a resurrection of the body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is trinity in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is will in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there is will in the angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should be Order in the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should be a precept of hope? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should be different duties or states in the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should be keys in the Church? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should be seven sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should have been given a precept of fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should have been given two precepts of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should have been man ceremonial precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there should have been sacraments after sin, before Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was a true marriage between Mary and Joseph? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was anger in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was any cause for the ceremonial precepts? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was any interval between the creation and the fall of the angel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was any need for a Divine law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was any reasonable cause for the ceremonial observances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was contrariety of wills in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was faith in the angels, or in man, in their original state? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was fear in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was free- will in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was need for any sacraments after Christ came? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was sensible pain in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was sin in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was sorrow in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was the"fomes"of sin in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there was wonder in Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether there will be a general judgment? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether these are the four principal passions: joy, sadness, hope and fear? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether these days are sufficiently enumerated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether these three are integral parts of Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether these vices arise from covetousness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether things known or declared prophetically can be false? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this change is wrought instantaneously? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this clarity was the clarity of glory? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this doctrine is the same as wisdom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this is true:"Christ as Man is God"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this is true:"Christ as Man is a creature"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this is true:"Christ as Man is a hypostasis or person"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this is true:"Christ is a creature"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this is true:"God is man"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this is true:"God was made man"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this is true:"Man is God"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this is true:"Man was made God"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this kind of friendship is a part of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this knowledge is collative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this knowledge was distinguished by divers habits? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this knowledge was habitual? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this name"Father"is applied to God, firstly as a personal name? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this name"Father"is properly the name of a divine person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this name"God"is a name of the nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this name"God"is communicable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this name"Holy Ghost"is the proper name of one divine person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this name, HE WHO IS, is the most proper name of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this proposition is false:"The body of Christ is made out of bread"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this punishment is voluntary? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament benefit others besides the recipients? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament has a form? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament has any matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament imprints a character? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament is necessary for salvation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament is suitably called by various names? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament ought to be celebrated in a house and with sacred vessels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament ought to be conferred on those who are in good health? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament ought to be given in any kind of sickness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament ought to be given to madmen and imbeciles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament ought to be made of unleavened bread? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament ought to be repeated during the same sickness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament ought to be repeated? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament ought to have been instituted before sin was committed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament should be given to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament should be given to children? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament should be given to man on the forehead? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament was instituted by Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this sacrament was suitably instituted in the New Law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this term"person"can be common to the three persons? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether this word"person"signifies relation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those miracles were fitting which Christ worked in spiritual substances? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those of illegitimate birth should be debarred from receiving Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those things are more feared, for which there is no remedy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those things that are of faith should be divided into certain articles? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those to whom Christ''s birth was made known were suitably chosen? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who are deformed in those parts should be anointed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who are not priests can excommunicate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who are ordained ought to wear the tonsure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who are subject to another''s power are hindered from taking vows? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who have not the use of reason ought to receive this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who received the gift of tongues spoke in every language? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who see the essence of God comprehend Him? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who see the essence of God see all in God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who see the essence of God see all they see in it at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether those who sinned were as many as those who remained firm? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether thoughtlessness is a special sin included in prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether three dowries of the soul are suitably assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether three fruits are fittingly assigned to the three parts of continence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether three parts of prudence are fittingly assigned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether time was created simultaneously with formless matter? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether tithes should be paid to the clergy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to baptize is part of the priestly office, or proper to that of bishops? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to be created belongs to composite and subsisting things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to be essentially good belongs to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to be eternal belongs to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to be everywhere belongs to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to be immutable belongs to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to be loved is more proper to charity than to love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to believe is meritorious? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to believe is to think with assent? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to create is proper to any person? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to create is to make something from nothing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to decline from evil and to do good are parts of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to enjoy is an act of the appetitive power? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to guard men belongs only to the lowest order of angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to live belongs to all natural things? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to love considered as an act of charity is the same as goodwill? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to swear is to call God to witness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether to tempt is proper to the devil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether transgression is a special sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether trine immersion is essential to Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether true and false are contraries? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether truth is a part of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether truth is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether truth is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether truth is immutable? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether truth resides only in the intellect composing and dividing? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether truth resides only in the intellect? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether two precepts of charity suffice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether unbelief is a sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether unbelief is in the intellect as its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether unbelief is the greatest of sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether unbelievers may have authority or dominion over the faithful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether unbelievers ought to be compelled to the faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether understanding is a gift of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether understanding* is a part of prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether union is an effect of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether union is the same as assumption? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether unlawful intercourse causes affinity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether use is an act of the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether use is to be found in irrational animals? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether use precedes choice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether use precedes command? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether use regards also the last end? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether using money is the act of liberality? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vainglory is a capital vice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vainglory is a mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vainglory is opposed to magnanimity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vengeance is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vengeance is lawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vengeance should be taken on those who have sinned involuntarily? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vengeance should be wrought by means of punishments customary among men? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sin can be forgiven without Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sin can be in anyone with original sin alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sin can be in the higher reason as such? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sin can be taken away without mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sin causes a stain on the soul? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sin is a disposition to mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sin is expiated by the pains of Purgatory as regards the guilt? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sin is fittingly condivided with mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sins are forgiven through this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sins are removed by the sprinkling of holy water and the like? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether venial sins are suitably designated as"wood, hay, and stubble"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vice is contrary to nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vice is contrary to virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vice is worse than a vicious act? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether violence can be done to the will? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether violence causes involuntariness? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virginity consists in integrity of the flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virginity is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virginity is more excellent than marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virginity is the greatest of virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virginity is unlawful? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virtue by habituation belongs to the same species as infused virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virtue is adequately divided into moral and intellectual? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virtue is in us by nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virtue is suitably defined? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether virtuous deeds done in charity can be deadened? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether volition is of the end only, or also of the means? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether vows admit of dispensation? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether water is the proper matter of Baptism? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether water should be added in great quantity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether water should be mixed with the wine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we are bound to love the demons out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we can lose charity when once we have it? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we can suffer injustice willingly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we can understand many things at the same time? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we may say that Christ is subject to the Father? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to ask for something definite when we pray? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to call upon the saints to pray for us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to distinguish several Orders? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to distinguish several species of divination? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to do good to all? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to do good to those rather who are more closely united to us? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to love more those who are connected with us by ties of blood? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to love one neighbor more than another? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to love sinners out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to love the angels out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to pray for others? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to pray for our enemies? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we ought to pray to God alone? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we should always judge according to the written law? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we should be solicitous about the future? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we should have contrition for every actual sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we should love charity out of charity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we were delivered from sin through Christ''s Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we were delivered from the devil''s power through Christ''s Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether we were reconciled to God through Christ''s Passion? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether weddings should be forbidden at certain times? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether what belongs to the human nature can be predicated of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether what belongs to the human nature can be predicated of the Divine Nature? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether what is done in the exorcism effects anything, or is a mere sign? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether what is said of God and of creatures is univocally predicated of them? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether whatever God does outside the natural order is miraculous? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether whatever God wills He wills necessarily? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether whatever was materially in a man''s members will all rise again? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wheaten bread is required for the matter of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether whoever does an injustice sins mortally? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether whoever is perfect is in the state of perfection? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wicked men sin in administering the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wicked priests have the use of the keys? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wife- murder is an impediment to marriage? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wine of the grape is the proper matter of this sacrament? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wisdom can be without grace, and with mortal sin? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wisdom is in all who have grace? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wisdom is in the intellect as its subject? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wisdom is merely speculative, or practical also? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wisdom is the greatest of the intellectual virtues? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wisdom should be reckoned among the gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether without grace man can know any truth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether woman should have been made from man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether wonder is a cause of pleasure? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether words are required for the signification of the sacraments? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether works done without charity merit any, at least temporal, good? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether worldly fear is always evil? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether zeal is an effect of love? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"Gift"is a personal name? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"Gift"is the proper name of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"Love"is the proper name of the Holy Ghost? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"Word"is the Son''s proper name? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"epikeia"[*{ epieikeia}] is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"epikeia"is a part of justice? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"eubulia, synesis, and gnome"are virtues annexed to prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"likeness"is properly distinguished from"image"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"one"adds anything to"being"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"one"and"many"are opposed to each other? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether"person"is the same as hypostasis, subsistence, and essence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether, after Penance, man rises again to equal virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether, besides philosophy, any further doctrine is required? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether, by Penance, man is restored to his former dignity? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether, if man had not sinned, God would have become incarnate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether, in the primitive state, women would have been born? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether, while in this state, Paul''s soul was wholly separated from his body? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether{ euboulia}( deliberating well) is a special virtue, distinct from prudence? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether{ euboulia}( deliberating well) is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether{ gnome}( judging well according to general law) is a special virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | __________________________________________________________________ Whether{ synesis}( judging well according to common law) is a virtue? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | a solitary,"what business have you in a city?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | almsdeeds, fasting, and prayer? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | and besides Thee what do I desire upon earth?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | and by considering God''s greatness, according to Job 15:13,"Why doth thy spirit swell against God?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | and if I be a master, where is my fear?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | and lead them to water?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | and love Him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | and not that he should be converted and live?'' |
aquinas-summa-2292 | and whereby are They three persons?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | and( Malachi 1:6):"If I be a master, where is My fear?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | angels? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | art Thou come to destroy us?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | but the question of equality is, Of what kind, or how great, is he?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | but"Art Thou He that art to come?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | clxxx):"When a man says:''By God,''what else does he mean but that God is his witness?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | commutative and distributive? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | corresponds to the gift of counsel? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | corresponds to the gift of knowledge? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | cried out, saying: What have we to do with Thee, Jesus of Nazareth? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | distinguish, the body of the Lord from other meats, how must he be''condemned''who, feigning himself a friend, comes to His table a foe?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | distributive and commutative? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | do so no more?'' |
aquinas-summa-2292 | does it justify? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | especially if what He says to few He wishes through them to be made known to many?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | fill his stomach with burning heat?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | for the justification of the ungodly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | found certain disciples; and he said to them: Have you received the Holy Ghost since ye believed? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | from your concupiscences which war in your members?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | from your concupiscences, which war in your members?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | i):"Was Christ made by a word? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | i, 1):"Who dares to say that learning is an evil?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | i, 26), if to leave off sinning was the same as to have no sin, it would be enough if Scripture warned us thus:"''My son, hast thou sinned? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | i, 5):"How are they free from sin in sight of Divine providence, who are guilty of taking a man''s life for the sake of these contemptible things?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | i, 7):"Who dares to call the Holy Ghost a creature, Who in all things, and everywhere, and always is, which assuredly belongs to the divinity alone?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ii):"Blessed martyrs, with what praise shall I extol you? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ii):"Do you wish to repay a favor? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | ii):"Why is perseverance besought of God, if it is not bestowed by God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iii):"Since Christ is perfect God and perfect man, what foolhardiness have some to dare to affirm that Christ as man is not a substance?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iii):"What means this closed gate in the House of the Lord, except that Mary is to be ever inviolate? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iii, 1):"If God the Father could not beget a co- equal Son, where is the omnipotence of God the Father?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iii, 13),"The question of origin is, Who is from whom? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iii, 7),"Were He unable to beget one equal to Himself, where would be the omnipotence of God the Father?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | is it not rather acknowledged and approved? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | is not he that sitteth at table?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iv):"Mary answered the announcing angel:''How shall this be done, because I know not man?'' |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iv):"We do not speak of the Father''s right hand as of a place, for how can a place be designated by His right hand, who Himself is beyond all place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iv):"What do they not see, who see Him Who sees all things?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iv):"What else could be so fittingly partaken of by men, or offered up for men, as human flesh? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iv):"What greater cause is there of the Lord''s coming than to show God''s love for us?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iv):"Who is it that descends? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iv, 25):"If then,"he says,"the souls of the just are in heaven now, what will they receive in reward for their justice on the judgment day?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | iv, D, 44):"If the incorporeal spirit of a living man is held by the body, why shall it not be held after death by a corporeal fire?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | lxxi):"What are these''greater works''which believers in Him would do? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | lxxxiii, 46):"Who would venture to say that God made all things irrationally?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | on the Epiphany:"What will He be like in the judgment- seat; since from His cradle He struck terror into the heart of a proud king?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | one of flesh and blood? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or shall I drink the blood of goats?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or the length of time required for the reading of a book that contains the entire life of every individual?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or were you baptized in the name of Paul?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or what advantage hath the boasting of riches brought us?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or what image will you make for Him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or what shall He receive of thy hand?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or who begot the drops of dew?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or whom hath He set over the world which He made?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or whom hath He set over the world which He made?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | or"always was"? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | please the Lord in the ceremonies, having a sorrowful heart?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | purposely? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | revenge our blood on them that dwell on earth?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | save that, though He knew that the Son of God was to come, yet he did not think that He had come in the weakness of the flesh?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | saying, What shall we eat, or what shall we drink, or wherewith shall we be clothed?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | shall see his brother in need, and shall put up his bowels from him, how doth the charity of God abide in him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | shall see his brother in need, and shall shut up his bowels from him: how doth the charity of God abide in him?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | since what is a robber but a little king?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | take the members of Christ, and make them the members of a harlot?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | that is, in the shedding of My blood,"while I go down,"as by various degrees of evils,"into corruption?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | that is, the gall proper;"and why not the black gall?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | that is, the phlegm;"why not also the yellow gall?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | the angels are the works of Christ: and does that man do greater works than these, who co- operates with Christ in the work of his justification? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | the confession of faith: under which head there are two points of inquiry:( 1) Whether confession is an act of faith? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | the generative power, the concupiscible part, and the sense of touch? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | the steadfast from the unstaid, the trusty from the untrustworthy, the healthy from the sick?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | thy boasting? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | till seven times?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | true and pure doctrine,"come in to be put under a bushel?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | unbelievers,"and not before the saints?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | v):"What kind of sacrifice is that wherein not even the sacrificer is known to have a share?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | vii) that the question,"Who is this that cometh from Edom?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | vii), the inferior angels said to the superior:"Who is this King of Glory?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | vii, 1):"What is more absurd than to say that an image is referred to itself?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | vii, 4) that when we ask,"Three what?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | vii, 4):"When we ask, Three what? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | viii),"why should not this perfection be prescribed to man, although no man attains it in this life? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | viii):"If we both see that what you say is true, and we both see that what I say is true; where, I ask, do we see this? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | viii):"Why then should not this perfection be prescribed to man, although no man has it in this life?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | viii, 3):"What means this, O Lord my God, whereas Thou art everlasting joy to Thyself, and some things around Thee evermore rejoice in Thee? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | was it from heaven or from men?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | we answer, Socrates, which is the name of the"suppositum"; whereas, if we ask, What is he? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | what shall I say to them?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | where did you take them from and bring them into being?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | whether it is a thing or a proposition? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | whether it will last until the end, or will another law take its place? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | who hath esteemed the blood of the testament unclean, by which he was sanctified?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | who will be able to urge sinners to virtue?'' |
aquinas-summa-2292 | who will convert worldlings? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | why do you not rather suffer yourselves to be defrauded?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | why hast Thou forsaken Me? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | wisdom, science and understanding? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | works that are done without charity, are quickened by Penance? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | would He not have strengthened an erroneous opinion, and made it impossible for us to believe that He had become a true man? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | x, 31):"Who is it, Lord, that does not eat a little more than necessary?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xii):"What is pain of the soul, except for the soul to be deprived of that which it was wo nt to enjoy, or had hoped to enjoy? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xii, 13):"How is it that the soul can not always have this power of divination, since it always wishes to have it?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xii, 18):"Why are you rich while another is poor, unless it be that you may have the merit of a good stewardship, and he the reward of patience?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xii, 18]:"Tell me: which are thine? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xii, 25):"If we both see that what you say is true, and if we both see that what I say is true, where do we see this, I pray? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xii, 3):"If the Apostle doubted the matter, who of us will dare to be certain about it?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xix):"What else is a corporeal sacrament but a kind of visible word?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xv, 7):"Who dares to say that the Father loves neither Himself, nor the Son, nor the Holy Ghost, except by the Holy Ghost?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xvii in the Opus Imperfectum falsely ascribed to St. John Chrysostom] thus:"That is---''With what object?'' |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xvii):"What sort of perverseness is this, to wish to read, but not to obey what one reads?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xviii]:"If one has to speak, and is so busy that he can not spare time for manual work, can all in the monastery do this? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xxix):"What is more yours than yourself?" |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xxv, n. 12; xxvi, n. 1):"Why make ready tooth and belly? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xxviii):"If it be a daily bread, why do you take it once a year, as the Greeks have the custom in the east? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | xxxv, 1):"Who shall have everlasting dwellings unless the saints of God? |
aquinas-summa-2292 | your temporal goods,"as coming from God, is He unjust because He apportions them unequally? |