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 |
---|---|
3012 | ( 1) And why dress in these miserable tragic rags? |
3012 | ( 1) What do you bring? |
3012 | ( 1) Will you give me back my garlic? |
3012 | AMBASSADOR Do you understand what he says? |
3012 | AMBASSADOR What does he say? |
3012 | AMPHITHEUS Has anyone spoken yet? |
3012 | AMPHITHEUS Oh, Triptolemus and Ceres, do ye thus forsake your own blood? |
3012 | AMPHITHEUS Well? |
3012 | Am I a beggar? |
3012 | And as to the rest, what do you wish to sell me? |
3012 | And this other one? |
3012 | And you, Dracyllus, Euphorides or Prinides, have you knowledge of Ecbatana or Chaonia? |
3012 | Art thou sensible of the dangerous battle we are about to engage upon in defending the Lacedaemonians? |
3012 | BOEOTIAN Anchovies, pottery? |
3012 | BOEOTIAN And what will you give me in return? |
3012 | BOEOTIAN What harm have I done you? |
3012 | But HAVE you brought me a treaty? |
3012 | But as you are so strong, why did you not circumcise me? |
3012 | But come( there are only friends who hear me), why accuse the Laconians of all our woes? |
3012 | But how, great gods? |
3012 | But what else is doing at Megara, eh? |
3012 | But who would make so sorry a deal as to buy you? |
3012 | But will you buy anything of me, some chickens or some locusts? |
3012 | CHORUS Acharnians, what means this threat? |
3012 | CHORUS But what will be done with him? |
3012 | CHORUS Listen to you? |
3012 | CHORUS What do you purport doing? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And Attic figs? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And do we give you two drachmae, that you should treat us to all this humbug? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And how long was he replacing his dress? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And who is this Lamachus, who demands an eel? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And why do you always receive your pay, when none of these others ever gets any? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And why do you bite me? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS But what is this? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Can they eat alone? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Can you eat chick- pease? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Come, what do you wish to say? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Do you want to fight this four- winged Geryon? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Euripides.... EURIPIDES What words strike my ear? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Is Euripides at home? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Is it a feather? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Is it salt that you are bringing? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Is this not sufficient to drive one to hang oneself? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Of the Odomanti? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Of what King? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS On what terms? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Phaleric anchovies, pottery? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Prytanes, will you let me be treated in this manner, in my own country and by barbarians? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Take back, take back your viands; for a thousand drachmae I would not give a drop of peace; but who are you, pray? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Well, how are things at Megara? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What DO you bring then? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What can I do in the matter? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What do they like most? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What do you want crying this gait? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What has happened to you? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What is the matter? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What is this? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What medimni? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What other news of Megara? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What plague have we here? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What then will you say when you see the thrushes roasting? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who am I? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who are you? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who are you? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who dares do this thing? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who ever saw an oxen baked in an oven? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Why, what has happened? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Women, children, have you not heard? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS''Tis garlic then? |
3012 | Dicaeopolis, do you want to buy some nice little porkers? |
3012 | Did you hear him? |
3012 | Do you hear? |
3012 | Do you mean those of the beggar Philoctetes? |
3012 | Dost thou hesitate and art thou fully steeped in Euripides? |
3012 | EURIPIDES Is it the filthy dress of the lame fellow, Bellerophon? |
3012 | EURIPIDES Now, what tatters DOES he want? |
3012 | EURIPIDES Of Phoenix, the blind man? |
3012 | EURIPIDES What rags do you prefer? |
3012 | EURIPIDES Whatever do you want such a thing as that for? |
3012 | FIRST SEMI- CHORUS But though it be true, need he say it? |
3012 | For ready- money or in wares from these parts? |
3012 | For what sum will you sell them? |
3012 | Friends, do you hear the sacred formula? |
3012 | HERALD Who asks to speak? |
3012 | HERALD Your name? |
3012 | Has he got one of our children in his house? |
3012 | I may not denounce our enemies? |
3012 | I see another herald running up; what news does he bring me? |
3012 | Is it not Straton? |
3012 | Is it not to convict him from the outset? |
3012 | Is this not a scandal? |
3012 | LAMACHUS But what have you said? |
3012 | LAMACHUS What are you then? |
3012 | LAMACHUS Whence comes this cry of battle? |
3012 | LAMACHUS Why do you embrace me? |
3012 | LAMACHUS You are but a mendicant and you dare to use language of this sort? |
3012 | Listen to your long speeches, after you have treated with the Laconians? |
3012 | MEGARIAN And why not? |
3012 | MEGARIAN Are you not holding back the salt? |
3012 | MEGARIAN Is that a little sow, or not? |
3012 | MEGARIAN What else? |
3012 | NICARCHUS Whose are these goods? |
3012 | Of what country, then? |
3012 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS Where are you running to? |
3012 | SLAVE Who''s there? |
3012 | Shall we wager and submit the matter to Lamachus, which of the two is the best to eat, a locust or a thrush? |
3012 | Speak, Marilades, you have grey hair; well then, have you ever been entrusted with a mission? |
3012 | Suppose that a Lacedaemonian had seized a little Seriphian(4) dog on any pretext and had sold it, would you have endured it quietly? |
3012 | That is what you assuredly would have done, and would not Telephus have done the same? |
3012 | Then our ambassadors are seeking to deceive us? |
3012 | Those in which I rigged out Aeneus(1) on the stage, that unhappy, miserable old man? |
3012 | To be sold or to cry with hunger? |
3012 | What gives him such audacity? |
3012 | What have we here? |
3012 | What is wheat selling at? |
3012 | What think you? |
3012 | What would Marpsias reply to this? |
3012 | Whence has sprung this accursed swarm of Charis(1) fellows which comes assailing my door? |
3012 | Where is Amphitheus? |
3012 | Where is be? |
3012 | Where is the king of the feast? |
3012 | Which would you prefer? |
3012 | Who has mutilated them like this? |
3012 | Will the Great King send us gold? |
3012 | Will they eat them? |
3012 | You really will not, Acharnians? |
3012 | You say no, do you not? |
3012 | You will not hear me? |
3012 | You will say that Sparta was wrong, but what should she have done? |
3012 | a Megarian? |
3012 | a braggart''s? |
3012 | and yet you have not left off white? |
3012 | are such exaggerations to be borne? |
3012 | do you dare to jeer me? |
3012 | do you not at every raid grub up the ground with your pikes to pull out every single head? |
3012 | do you not heed the herald? |
3012 | do you want to make yourself vomit with this feather? |
3012 | fellow, what countryman are you? |
3012 | great baboon, with such a beard do you seek to play the eunuch to us? |
3012 | is it not a sow then? |
3012 | is it not so? |
3012 | of what value to me have been these few pleasures? |
3012 | try not to scoff at my armor? |
3012 | what are you going to say? |
3012 | what are you proposing to do? |
3012 | what bird''s? |
3012 | where must I bring my aid? |
3012 | where must I sow dread? |
3012 | who wants me to uncase my dreadful Gorgon''s head? |
3012 | will you hear them squeal? |
3012 | will you kill this coal- basket, my beloved comrade? |
3012 | you declare war against birds? |
7700 | ... What is that? |
7700 | 1ST MARKET- LOUNGER What''s this? |
7700 | 1ST WOMAN Must I never use my wool then? |
7700 | ATHENIANS Can anyone tell us where Lysistrata is? |
7700 | ATHENIANS Tell us then, Spartans, what has brought you here? |
7700 | ATHENIANS Then what will we do? |
7700 | ATHENIANS Then, ah, we''ll choose this snug thing here, Echinus, Shall we call the nestling spot? |
7700 | ATHENIANS What allies? |
7700 | Ah, Strymodorus, who''d have thought affairs could tangle so? |
7700 | Are new privations springing up in Sparta? |
7700 | But if the affair''s so wonderful, tell us, what is it? |
7700 | But what avail will your scheme be if the men Drag us for all our kicking on to the couch? |
7700 | But what has vexed you so? |
7700 | But what of them as well? |
7700 | 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?" |
7700 | But you''ve not forgotten? |
7700 | CAILONICE But, Lysistrata, What is this oath that we''re to swear? |
7700 | CALONICE And long? |
7700 | CALONICE Anything else? |
7700 | CALONICE But if they should force us? |
7700 | CALONICE But if-- which heaven forbid-- we should refrain As you would have us, how is Peace induced? |
7700 | CALONICE But wo n''t the men March straight against us? |
7700 | CALONICE By Woman? |
7700 | CALONICE How could we do Such a big wise deed? |
7700 | CALONICE Then what will symbolise us? |
7700 | CALONICE Then why are n''t they here? |
7700 | CALONICE What is it all about, dear Lysistrata, That you''ve called the women hither in a troop? |
7700 | CALONICE Yes, but how? |
7700 | CALONICE_ If not, to nauseous water change this wine._ LYSISTRATA Do you all swear to this? |
7700 | CINESIAS I. LYSISTRATA A man? |
7700 | CINESIAS O is that true? |
7700 | CINESIAS There now, do n''t you feel pity for the child? |
7700 | CINESIAS Well, ca n''t your oath perhaps be got around? |
7700 | CINESIAS Who are you that thus eject me? |
7700 | CINESIAS Why some cushions? |
7700 | Come, now from off my back.... Is there no Samos- general to help me to unpack? |
7700 | Did anything new arise? |
7700 | Do n''t you go throb- throb? |
7700 | Do we seem a fearful host? |
7700 | Do ye see our condition? |
7700 | Do you feel a jerking throbbing in the morning? |
7700 | Do you mind that? |
7700 | Does anyone recognise his face? |
7700 | Gorgon- buckler instead the usual platter or dish? |
7700 | HERALD What here gabs the Senate an''the Prytanes? |
7700 | Hail, Spartans how do you fare? |
7700 | I''m coming of my own accord.... Why bars? |
7700 | I''m just drawing off my shoes.... You''re sure you will vote for Peace? |
7700 | In plain sight? |
7700 | Is it from Pan? |
7700 | Is your groin swollen With stress of travelling? |
7700 | LAMPITO But who''s garred this Council o''Women to meet here? |
7700 | LAMPITO Hark, what caterwauling hubbub''s that? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA And what am I to get? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA And what if they do? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA And you? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Are you not sad your children''s fathers Go endlessly off soldiering afar In this plodding war? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA How is it different? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA How sensible? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Now what story is this you tell? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Now, brethren twined with mutual benefactions, Can you still war, can you suffer such disgrace? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Now, tell me, are the women right to lag? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Of course.... Well then Where is our Scythianess? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Then why the helm? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA This girl? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA We must refrain from every depth of love.... Why do you turn your backs? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA What more is lacking? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA What nonsense is this? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA What oath would suit us then? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA What of us then, who ever in vain for our children must weep Borne but to perish afar and in vain? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA What use is Zeus to our anatomy? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Which one? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Who is this youngster? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Why are you blaming us for laying you out? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Will you truly do it then? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA Yes, why not? |
7700 | LYSISTRATA You too, dear turbot, you that said just now You did n''t mind being split right up in the least? |
7700 | Look, there goes one.... Hey, what''s the hurry? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Are you a man Or a monstrosity? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Are you afraid? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE But the old man will often select-- LYSISTRATA O why not finish and die? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Does not a man age? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE How, may I ask, will your rule re- establish order and justice in lands so tormented? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE If we do n''t want to be saved? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Is gold then the cause of the war? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Not for a staff? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Out with it speedily-- what is this plan that you boast you''ve invented? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Then why do you hide that lance That sticks out under your arms? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Then why do you turn aside and hold your cloak So far out from your body? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Tut tut, what''s here? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Well, what is it then? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE What did you do? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE What do you mean? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE What madness is this? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE What then is that you propose? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE What will you do if emergencies arise? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE What_ you_ will? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Whence has this evil come? |
7700 | MAGISTRATE Why do you women come prying and meddling in matters of state touching war- time and peace? |
7700 | MAN Grann''am, do you much mind men? |
7700 | MAN That I fear do you suppose? |
7700 | MEN Ah cursed drab, what have you brought this water for? |
7700 | MEN Cleaner, you dirty slut? |
7700 | MEN Did you hear that insolence? |
7700 | MEN Ho, Phaedrias, shall we put a stop to all these chattering tricks? |
7700 | MEN How may this ferocity be tamed? |
7700 | MEN Is that what''s wrong? |
7700 | MEN What vengeance can you take if with my fists your face I beat? |
7700 | MEN What, sweet? |
7700 | MEN What, you put out my fire? |
7700 | MYRRHINE Are we late, Lysistrata? |
7700 | MYRRHINE But how can I break my oath? |
7700 | MYRRHINE What is the amazing news you have to tell? |
7700 | MYRRHINE What? |
7700 | MYRRHINE Where shall I dress my hair again Before returning to the citadel? |
7700 | MYRRHINE Would you like me to perfume you? |
7700 | Men say we''re slippery rogues-- CALONICE And are n''t they right? |
7700 | Nothing to say? |
7700 | Now what are two legs more or less? |
7700 | O is it something in a blaze? |
7700 | O where''s that girl, Reconciliation? |
7700 | O women, if we would compel the men To bow to Peace, we must refrain-- MYRRHINE From what? |
7700 | Observe my case-- I, a magistrate, come here to draw Money to buy oar- blades, and what happens? |
7700 | See... where are they from? |
7700 | Shall I singe you with my torch? |
7700 | Suppose that now upon their backs we splintered these our sticks? |
7700 | Surely the only enduring moral virtue which can be claimed is for that which moves to more power, beauty and delight in the future? |
7700 | That ruddy glare, that smoky skurry? |
7700 | The plain, hard wood? |
7700 | Then I would say to him,"O my dear husband, why still do they rush on destruction the faster?" |
7700 | WOMAN What is this? |
7700 | WOMAN Where is he, whoever he is? |
7700 | WOMAN Yes, now I see him, but who can he be? |
7700 | WOMEN Dear Mistress of our martial enterprise, Why do you come with sorrow in your eyes? |
7700 | WOMEN So then we scare you, do we? |
7700 | WOMEN So... was it hot? |
7700 | WOMEN Speak; can we help? |
7700 | WOMEN Watered, perhaps you''ll bloom again-- why not? |
7700 | WOMEN What can it be? |
7700 | WOMEN What is your fire for then, you smelly corpse? |
7700 | WOMEN What''s this? |
7700 | WOMEN Yes, yes, what is it? |
7700 | WOMEN You villainous old men, what''s this you do? |
7700 | 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? |
7700 | What are these black looks for? |
7700 | What do you gape at, wretch, with dazzled eyes? |
7700 | What do you mean? |
7700 | What else is like it, dearest Lysistrata? |
7700 | What is there to prevent you? |
7700 | What is this hard lump here? |
7700 | What kind of an object is it? |
7700 | What''s that rising yonder? |
7700 | What''s the good of argument with such a rampageous pack? |
7700 | Where are you going? |
7700 | Where is that archer? |
7700 | Where is the archer now? |
7700 | Where is the other archer gone? |
7700 | Who are you? |
7700 | Who is this that stands within our lines? |
7700 | Who knows what kind of person may perceive you? |
7700 | Why are you calling me? |
7700 | Why are you staring? |
7700 | Why are your faces blanched? |
7700 | Why do you bite your lips and shake your heads? |
7700 | Why do you weep? |
7700 | Why not be friends? |
7700 | Why not we? |
7700 | Why the noise? |
7700 | Why then delay any longer? |
7700 | Will you or wo n''t you, or what do you mean? |
7700 | Would you hear the words? |
7700 | 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? |
7700 | You dotard, because he at no time had lent His intractable ears to absorb from our counsel one temperate word of advice, kindly meant? |
7700 | You''re not deceiving me about the Treaty? |
7700 | Yourself to burn? |
7700 | _ She drinks._ CALONICE Here now, share fair, have n''t we made a pact? |
2571 | ( 4) And wo n''t we laugh? 2571 ( 1) What is he going to tell us? 2571 ( 1) f(1) Before sacrificing, the officiating person asked,Who is here?" |
2571 | ( TO PEACE) What now? |
2571 | A BREASTPLATE- MAKER Good gods, what am I going to do with this fine ten- minae breastplate, which is so splendidly made? |
2571 | A SICKLE- MAKER Trygaeus, where is Trygaeus? |
2571 | A TRUMPET- MAKER What is to be done with this trumpet, for which I gave sixty drachmae the other day? |
2571 | A fatted bull? |
2571 | Again you come back without it? |
2571 | Are there any good men? |
2571 | BREASTPLATE- MAKER But how can you wipe, idiot? |
2571 | BREASTPLATE- MAKER So you would pay ten minae(1) for a night- stool? |
2571 | But I bethink me, shall I give her something to eat? |
2571 | But is it my death you seek then, my death? |
2571 | But what is my master doing? |
2571 | But where was she then, I wonder, all the long time she spent away from us? |
2571 | CHORUS But not to Ares? |
2571 | CHORUS Nor doubtless to Enyalius? |
2571 | CHORUS Why does not the work advance then? |
2571 | CREST- MAKER What do you bid for them? |
2571 | Come then, what must be done? |
2571 | Do n''t you know all that a man should know, who is distinguished for his wisdom and inventive daring? |
2571 | Do you think I have been long? |
2571 | Do you think I would sell my rump for a thousand drachmae? |
2571 | Do you turn your nose towards the cesspools? |
2571 | Dost thou not see this, that our cities will soon be but empty husks? |
2571 | FIRST SEMI- CHORUS What shall we do to her? |
2571 | FIRST SERVANT But perhaps some spectator, some beardless youth, who thinks himself a sage, will say,"What is this? |
2571 | FIRST SERVANT For what purpose? |
2571 | FIRST SERVANT Who was it then? |
2571 | First of all, how is Sophocles? |
2571 | HERMES And how could she speak to the spectators? |
2571 | HERMES And why? |
2571 | HERMES And wise Cratinus,(1) is he still alive? |
2571 | HERMES Do n''t you know that Zeus has decreed death for him who is surprised exhuming Peace? |
2571 | HERMES How then did Cleonymus behave in fights? |
2571 | HERMES How? |
2571 | HERMES Into Simonides? |
2571 | HERMES Is it then a smell like a soldier''s knapsack? |
2571 | HERMES Rash reprobate, what do you propose doing? |
2571 | HERMES She asks, what will be the result of such a choice of the city? |
2571 | HERMES Tell me, my dear, what are your feelings with regard to them? |
2571 | HERMES What for? |
2571 | HERMES What then? |
2571 | HERMES Why do you come? |
2571 | HERMES Your country? |
2571 | HERMES Your father? |
2571 | HIEROCLES And that is? |
2571 | HIEROCLES And what am I to do? |
2571 | HIEROCLES To whom are you sacrificing? |
2571 | HIEROCLES What are you laughing at? |
2571 | HIEROCLES What oracle ordered you to burn these joints of mutton in honour of the gods? |
2571 | HIEROCLES What sacrifice is this? |
2571 | HIEROCLES You will not give me any meat? |
2571 | Has he done eating? |
2571 | Has the lash rained an army of its thongs on you and laid your back waste?" |
2571 | How so? |
2571 | Is he crazy? |
2571 | Is it true? |
2571 | Is that your grievance against them? |
2571 | LITTLE DAUGHTER And if it fell into the watery depths of the sea, could it escape with its wings? |
2571 | LITTLE DAUGHTER And what harbour will you put in at? |
2571 | LITTLE DAUGHTER But how will you make the journey? |
2571 | LITTLE DAUGHTER Why not saddle Pegasus? |
2571 | Master, have you got garlic in your fist, I wonder? |
2571 | No one? |
2571 | 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? |
2571 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS What shall we do to her? |
2571 | SECOND SERVANT And if he does n''t tell you? |
2571 | SECOND SERVANT But what is your purpose? |
2571 | SECOND SERVANT( TO TRYGAEUS) But why start up into the air on chance? |
2571 | SERVANT And those stars like sparks, that plough up the air as they dart across the sky? |
2571 | SERVANT And why not? |
2571 | SERVANT But tell me, who is this woman? |
2571 | SERVANT But where then did you get these pretty chattels? |
2571 | SERVANT Did you see any other man besides yourself strolling about in heaven? |
2571 | SERVANT He has a self- important look; is he some diviner? |
2571 | SERVANT Is it true, what they tell us, that men are turned into stars after death? |
2571 | SERVANT Is that you, master? |
2571 | SERVANT Pots of green- stuff(1) as we do to poor Hermes-- and even he thinks the fare but mean? |
2571 | SERVANT Then who is that star I see over yonder? |
2571 | SERVANT Well then, what must be done now? |
2571 | SERVANT What has happened to you? |
2571 | SERVANT What were they doing up there? |
2571 | SON OF LAMACHUS My father? |
2571 | SON OF LAMACHUS Then what should I sing? |
2571 | SON OF LAMACHUS"The meal over, they girded themselves..."TRYGAEUS With good wine, no doubt? |
2571 | SPEAR- MAKER What will you give? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS A great fat swine then? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS A sheep? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS And do you see with what pleasure this sickle- maker is making long noses at the spear- maker? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS And what is he going to do with his mortar? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS And when I lie beside her and caress her bosoms? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS And why have the gods moved away? |
2571 | 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? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS But not the women? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS But where will the poor wretch get his food? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS But why have they left you all alone here? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Come, come, what are you asking for these two crests? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Come, who wishes to take the charge of her? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Do n''t I look like a diviner preparing his mystic fire? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Do you not hear them wheedling you, mighty god? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS How shall we set about removing these stones? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS How, you cursed animal, could the wolf ever unite with the sheep? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS In short, where are they then? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Is it not a shame? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Let us see, who of you is steady enough to be trusted by the Senate with the care of this charming wench? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS My father? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS On what day? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Tell me, what is War preparing against us? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Tell me, you little good- for- nothing, are you singing that for your father? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Then what should be done? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS To what part of the earth? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Very well then, but how am I going to descend? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS What are they? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS What do I bid? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS What other victim do you prefer then? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS What reason have they for treating us so? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS What will you offer them? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Where has he gone to then? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Where? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Where? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Who is it? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Why is there not the harbour of Cantharos at the Piraeus? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Why not? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Why, where am I likely to be going across the sky, if it be not to visit Zeus? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Why, where has she gone to then? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS Will you never stop fooling the Athenians? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS You believe so? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS You have thrown it? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS You? |
2571 | TRYGAEUS( TO THE AUDIENCE) What is going to happen, friends? |
2571 | TUMULT What do you want? |
2571 | TUMULT( WHO HAS RETURNED) Well, what? |
2571 | Tell me, Hermes, my master, do you think it would hurt me to love her a little, after so long an abstinence? |
2571 | WAR How, varlet? |
2571 | WAR Well? |
2571 | WAR What is it? |
2571 | WAR You have brought back nothing? |
2571 | What I to do with them? |
2571 | What are you up to? |
2571 | What does the beetle mean?" |
2571 | What is your next bidding? |
2571 | When his trouble first began to seize him, he said to himself,"By what means could I go straight to Zeus?" |
2571 | Where is the table? |
2571 | Who is here? |
2571 | Who is your father then? |
2571 | Who rules now in the rostrum? |
2571 | Who was her greatest foe here? |
2571 | Why, what plague is this? |
2571 | Will anything that it behooves a wise man to know escape you? |
2571 | Will no one open? |
2571 | 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? |
2571 | Zeus, what art thou going to do for our people? |
2571 | Zeus,"he cries,"what are thy intentions? |
2571 | and furthermore, had she a friend who exerted himself to put an end to the fighting? |
2571 | but what shall I be, when you see me presently dressed for the wedding? |
2571 | do n''t shout, I beg you, dear little Hermes.... And what are you doing, comrades? |
2571 | do n''t you see, little fool, that then twice the food would be wanted? |
2571 | do you see that armourer yonder coming with a wry face? |
2571 | do you wipe with both hands? |
2571 | how did you come here? |
2571 | in the name of the gods, what possesses you? |
2571 | must I really and truly die? |
2571 | my good friend, did you have a good journey? |
2571 | of the earth, did you say? |
2571 | tell me... TRYGAEUS What? |
2571 | to what god are you offering it? |
2571 | venerated goddess, who givest us our grapes, where am I to find the ten- thousand- gallon words(1) wherewith to greet thee? |
2571 | what are you doing? |
2571 | what are you drawing there? |
2571 | what do you reckon to sing? |
2571 | what is this I hear? |
2571 | what is to become of us, wretched mortals that we are? |
2571 | where is the doorkeeper? |
2571 | who is this man, crowned with laurel, who is coming to me? |
2571 | who will buy them? |
2571 | why art thou silent? |
2571 | wo n''t the crests go any more, friend? |
2571 | would you mock me? |
2571 | 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? |
2571 | you down there, what are you after now? |
2571 | you would leave me, you would vanish into the sky, you would go to the crows? |
2571 | your name? |
7998 | ''Twas shameful, was it not? |
7998 | (_ Calling._) Who else for the boat? |
7998 | A boy? |
7998 | A funny sight, I own: but where''s the sense? |
7998 | A man? |
7998 | A slave, a mortal, act Alcmena''s son? |
7998 | A slave? |
7998 | Ah me, whence fall these evils on my head? |
7998 | Air, Zeus''s chamber, or the Foot of Time? |
7998 | Alas, poor witling, and ca n''t you see That for mighty thoughts and heroic aims, the words themselves must appropriate be? |
7998 | An ass, no doubt: what made him do it though? |
7998 | And blabbing them abroad? |
7998 | And do what? |
7998 | And do you dare look in my face, after that shameful deed? |
7998 | And fought? |
7998 | And how am I to cross? |
7998 | And how did you manage to make them so grand, exalted, and brave with your wonderful verse? |
7998 | And how do you make_ your_ prologues? |
7998 | And how has this disturbed our Aeschylus? |
7998 | And how, if I decide? |
7998 | And tell me this: of all the roads you know Which is the quickest way to get to Hades? |
7998 | And then? |
7998 | And this beside his murdered father''s grave Orestes speaks? |
7998 | And this to ME, thou chattery- babble- collector, Thou pauper- creating rags- and- patches- stitcher? |
7998 | And this? |
7998 | And to speak great Lycabettuses, pray, And massive blocks of Parnassian rocks, is_ that_ things honest and pure to say? |
7998 | And what do_ you_ propose? |
7998 | And what does Pluto now propose to do? |
7998 | And what of overhearing Your master''s secrets? |
7998 | And what say_ you?_ AESCH. |
7998 | And what wilt thou reply? |
7998 | And who are they? |
7998 | And who''s to be the judge? |
7998 | Any fault there? |
7998 | Ay, truly, never now a man Comes home, but he begins to scan; And to his household loudly cries,_ Why, where''s my pitcher? |
7998 | Aye, little brother? |
7998 | Before I''ve put them down? |
7998 | Bless the sprat, Who nibbled off the head of that? |
7998 | But Agathon, where is he? |
7998 | But Phaedras and Stheneboeas? |
7998 | But Sophocles, How came not he to claim the tragic chair? |
7998 | But have you not a shoal of little songsters, Tragedians by the myriad, who can chatter A furlong faster than Euripides? |
7998 | But tell me, did you see the parricides And perjured folk he mentioned? |
7998 | But were n''t_ you_ frightened at those dreadful threats And shoutings? |
7998 | But were there none to side with Aeschylus? |
7998 | But what of Xenocles? |
7998 | But where are you going really? |
7998 | But why these tears? |
7998 | CORP. Two drachmas for the job? |
7998 | Can any of you tell Where Pluto here may dwell, For we, sirs, are two strangers who were never here before? |
7998 | Caused by a woman? |
7998 | Claim it? |
7998 | Come now, that comical joke? |
7998 | 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? |
7998 | Creative? |
7998 | Dancing- girls? |
7998 | Did n''t you hear it? |
7998 | Did n''t you? |
7998 | Did you observe? |
7998 | Do you mean below, to Hades? |
7998 | Does not the donkey bear the load you''re bearing? |
7998 | Does she love the bad? |
7998 | Done me? |
7998 | Done? |
7998 | Eh? |
7998 | Eh? |
7998 | For such an outrage was not death your due? |
7998 | From Marathon, or Where picked you up these cable- twister''s strains? |
7998 | Gentleman? |
7998 | Given the victor''s prize To Aeschylus; why not? |
7998 | Go whither? |
7998 | Go, hang yourselves; for what care I? |
7998 | Going to? |
7998 | Gone where? |
7998 | Hang it, what''s that? |
7998 | Has it a copper leg? |
7998 | Have you e''er felt a sudden lust for soup? |
7998 | Have you no heart? |
7998 | Hear him? |
7998 | Hemlock, do you mean? |
7998 | How about grumbling, when you have felt the stick, And scurry out of doors? |
7998 | How about prying? |
7998 | How came they thither? |
7998 | How can one save a city such as this, Whom neither frieze nor woollen tunic suits? |
7998 | How can you bear, when you are borne yourself? |
7998 | How can you test us fairly? |
7998 | How can you when you''re riding? |
7998 | How so? |
7998 | How so? |
7998 | How twice? |
7998 | How? |
7998 | How? |
7998 | I buy of_ him_? |
7998 | I? |
7998 | If I ca n''t find one? |
7998 | If go you must, there''s Sophocles-- he comes Before Euripides-- why not take_ him_? |
7998 | In truth to the Ravens? |
7998 | Is it Xanthias there? |
7998 | Is it bricks they are making? |
7998 | Is the thing clear, or must I speak again? |
7998 | Its name? |
7998 | Like it? |
7998 | Love it? |
7998 | May I not say I''m overburdened so That if none ease me, I must ease myself? |
7998 | Mercy o''me, what''s this? |
7998 | Mind it? |
7998 | Not hurt you, did I? |
7998 | Nothing else smart? |
7998 | Now is n''t it a shame the man should strike And he a thief besides? |
7998 | Now is not this too bad? |
7998 | Now really should a cock be brought into a tragic play? |
7998 | O drop that, ca n''t you? |
7998 | O, what''s it like? |
7998 | O, what''s up now? |
7998 | O, where? |
7998 | O, whither I? |
7998 | O, whither shall I flee? |
7998 | O, ye golden gods, Lies your heart THERE? |
7998 | Of what ills is he NOT the creator and cause? |
7998 | Pythangelus? |
7998 | So why not_ you_ be flogged as well as I? |
7998 | So? |
7998 | So? |
7998 | Struck me? |
7998 | Taenarum? |
7998 | Tell me when? |
7998 | The Muse herself ca n''t be a wanton? |
7998 | The cowardliest? |
7998 | The good and useful? |
7998 | 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? |
7998 | Then why did n''t I sneeze? |
7998 | Then you do n''t mind it? |
7998 | Then you''ll effect nothing for which you came? |
7998 | Theramenes? |
7998 | To what end? |
7998 | Torture him, how? |
7998 | Was it for Cleisthenes? |
7998 | Was n''t he pelted? |
7998 | Was then, I wonder, the tale I told of Phaedra''s passionate love untrue? |
7998 | Well, would you like a steep and swift descent? |
7998 | Well? |
7998 | What am I doing? |
7998 | What are they? |
7998 | What are you dreaming of? |
7998 | What do you say, Euripides, to that? |
7998 | What does it mean? |
7998 | What does she think herself about him? |
7998 | What for? |
7998 | What from? |
7998 | What have you there? |
7998 | What in the act of offering? |
7998 | What is my fault? |
7998 | What makes you stamp and fidget so? |
7998 | What means this hubbub And row? |
7998 | What on earth for? |
7998 | What then? |
7998 | What''s it all about? |
7998 | What''s shameful, if the audience think not so? |
7998 | What''s that you are saying? |
7998 | What''s the matter? |
7998 | What''s the next step? |
7998 | What''s the right way to knock? |
7998 | What, a new coinage of your own? |
7998 | What, do n''t I bear? |
7998 | What,_ I_ get up? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | Whatever''s that? |
7998 | Whence comes that phlattothrat? |
7998 | Where have I got one? |
7998 | Where must I wait? |
7998 | Where were you going? |
7998 | Where''s she that bangs and jangles Her castanets? |
7998 | Where? |
7998 | Where? |
7998 | Where? |
7998 | Which of them will you test? |
7998 | Which shall I tell you first? |
7998 | Which will you try? |
7998 | Who banged the door? |
7998 | Who but they would ever have thought of it? |
7998 | Who does now? |
7998 | Who gnawed these olives? |
7998 | Who is the god to blame for my destruction? |
7998 | Who knows if death be life, and life be death, And breath be mutton broth, and sleep a sheepskin? |
7998 | Who stole it? |
7998 | Who''s for Cerberia? |
7998 | Who''s for the Lethe''s plain? |
7998 | Who''s for the Rest from every pain and ill? |
7998 | Who''s there? |
7998 | Why not? |
7998 | Why"good gracious"? |
7998 | Why, how am_ I_ to pull? |
7998 | Why, how came that about? |
7998 | Why, what''s the matter? |
7998 | Will it come off? |
7998 | Would n''t I like to follow on, and try A little sport and dancing? |
7998 | Would n''t I? |
7998 | Wretch; would you leave me dead? |
7998 | XAN, Frightened? |
7998 | Yet wherefore need a lyre For songs like these? |
7998 | You are really game to go? |
7998 | You enemy of gods and men, what was_ your_ practice, pray? |
7998 | You hear him, Aeschylus: why do n''t you speak? |
7998 | You hear him? |
7998 | You heard him? |
7998 | You like that style? |
7998 | You love it, do you? |
7998 | You mean the rascals? |
7998 | You mine with a bottle of oil? |
7998 | You see this foot? |
7998 | You two? |
7998 | You understand? |
7998 | You''ll prove it? |
7998 | You? |
7998 | [ Is this_ your_ cleverness or Cephisophon''s? |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ DIO. |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ DIO. |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ I will expound( for_ I know it_)_ the omen the chieftains encountered. |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue_? |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue_? |
7998 | 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? |
7998 | does not Iophon live? |
7998 | how do you mean? |
7998 | how? |
7998 | or the Ravens? |
7998 | the Donkey- shearings? |
7998 | weigh out tragedy, like butcher''s meat? |
7998 | what are you doing? |
7998 | what have you done? |
7998 | what now? |
7998 | what? |
7998 | where''s Xanthias? |
7998 | which shall it be? |
7998 | why did n''t I fight at sea? |
7998 | you there, you deadman, are you willing To carry down our little traps to Hades? |
7998 | you''re not in earnest, just because I dressed you up, in fun, as Heracles? |
2562 | ( awakening) Pray, father, why are you peevish, and toss about the whole night? |
2562 | ( discovering a variety of mathematical instruments) Why, what is this, in the name of heaven? |
2562 | ( from within) Who''s there? |
2562 | A horse? |
2562 | A sword? |
2562 | About measures, or rhythms, or verses? |
2562 | About what? |
2562 | According to the dactyle? |
2562 | Ah me, what then, pray will become of me, wretched man? |
2562 | Alektryaina? |
2562 | Am I to feed upon wisdom like a dog? |
2562 | And do you now intend, on this account, to deny the debt? |
2562 | And do you then ask me for your money, being such an ignorant person? |
2562 | And for what did you come? |
2562 | And how then, you wretch does this become no way greater, though the rivers flow into it, while you seek to increase your money? |
2562 | And if he be a blackguard, what harm will he suffer? |
2562 | And so you look down upon the gods from your basket, and not from the earth? |
2562 | And to hold converse with the Clouds, our divinities? |
2562 | And what does it mean? |
2562 | And what this? |
2562 | And what, pray, have you thought? |
2562 | And will you be willing to deny these upon oath of the gods? |
2562 | And will you obey me at all? |
2562 | And yet, how could you, who are a mortal, have greater power than a god? |
2562 | And yet, on what principle do you blame the warm baths? |
2562 | And yet, what is life worth to you if you be deprived of these enjoyments? |
2562 | And yet, who was more valiant than he? |
2562 | And you appear to me, by Hermes, to be going to be summoned, if you will not pay me the money? |
2562 | Are they not males with you? |
2562 | Are they some heroines? |
2562 | Are you asleep? |
2562 | Are you not meditating? |
2562 | Both the same? |
2562 | But come, by the Earth, is not Jupiter, the Olympian, a god? |
2562 | But do you permit him? |
2562 | But from what class do the public orators come? |
2562 | But what debt came upon me after Pasias? |
2562 | But what good will rhythms do me for a living? |
2562 | But what if he should suffer the radish through obeying you, and be depillated with hot ashes? |
2562 | But what if, having the worst Cause, I shall conquer you in arguing, proving that it is right to beat one''s mother? |
2562 | But what is this? |
2562 | But what of that? |
2562 | But where is Lacedaemon? |
2562 | But why in the world do these look upon the ground? |
2562 | But why should I learn these things, that we all know? |
2562 | By doing what clever trick? |
2562 | By iron money, as in Byzantium? |
2562 | By no means; for how would you call Amynias, if you met him? |
2562 | By the gods, do you purpose to besiege me? |
2562 | By what do you swear? |
2562 | By what gods will you swear? |
2562 | Can not it? |
2562 | Come now, which of the two shall speak first? |
2562 | Come now; what do you now wish to learn first of those things in none of which you have ever been instructed? |
2562 | Come, how am I to believe this? |
2562 | Come, let me see: nay, what was the first? |
2562 | Come, let me see; what do I owe? |
2562 | Come, let me see; what do you consider this to be? |
2562 | Come, let me see; what do you do if any one beat you? |
2562 | Come, now, tell me; from what class do the advocates come? |
2562 | 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? |
2562 | Come, where have you ever seen him raining at any time without Clouds? |
2562 | Come, who is this man who is in the basket? |
2562 | Did you hear the voice, and the thunder which bellowed at the same time, feared as a god? |
2562 | Did you learn these clever things by going in just now to the Titans? |
2562 | Did you not, however, know, nor yet consider, these to be goddesses? |
2562 | Do I talk nonsense if I wish to recover my money? |
2562 | Do you abuse your teacher? |
2562 | Do you beat your father? |
2562 | Do you beat your father? |
2562 | Do you fly? |
2562 | Do you know that I take pleasure in being much abused? |
2562 | Do you mean the burning- glass? |
2562 | Do you not hear? |
2562 | Do you perceive that you are soon to obtain the greatest benefits through us alone of the gods? |
2562 | Do you see this little door and little house? |
2562 | Do you see what you are doing? |
2562 | Do you see? |
2562 | Do you see? |
2562 | Do you wish to know clearly celestial matters, what they rightly are? |
2562 | Does meditation attract the moisture to the water- cresses? |
2562 | Even if witnesses were present when I borrowed the money? |
2562 | For come, where is it? |
2562 | For ought you not then immediately to be beaten and trampled on, bidding me sing, just as if you were entertaining cicadae? |
2562 | For what has come into your heads that you acted insolently toward the gods, and pried into the seat of the moon? |
2562 | For what matter do you summon me? |
2562 | For what now was the first thing you were taught? |
2562 | For what purpose a chaplet? |
2562 | For what, pray, is the thunderbolt? |
2562 | For what, pray, shall I weep? |
2562 | For why ought your body to be exempt from blows and mine not? |
2562 | From what class do tragedians come? |
2562 | Have I done any wrong? |
2562 | Have you arrived at such a pitch of frenzy that you believe madmen? |
2562 | Have you ever seen this stone in the chemist''s shops, the beautiful and transparent one, from which they kindle fire? |
2562 | Have you ever, when you; looked up, seen a cloud like to a centaur, or a panther, or a wolf, or a bull? |
2562 | Have you got anything? |
2562 | 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? |
2562 | How can this youth ever learn an acquittal from a trial or a legal summons, or persuasive refutation? |
2562 | How did you get in debt without observing it? |
2562 | How many courses will the war- chariots run? |
2562 | How now ought I to call them? |
2562 | How ought I to call it henceforth? |
2562 | How then can I awake him in the most agreeable manner? |
2562 | How then did he measure this? |
2562 | How then is it just that you should recover your money, if you know nothing of meteorological matters? |
2562 | How would I call? |
2562 | How, pray? |
2562 | How, pray? |
2562 | How, then, being an old man, shall I learn the subtleties of refined disquisitions? |
2562 | How, then, if justice exists, has Jupiter not perished, who bound his own father? |
2562 | How, then, will you be able to learn? |
2562 | How? |
2562 | How? |
2562 | How? |
2562 | How? |
2562 | How? |
2562 | I do not ask you this, but which you account the most beautiful measure; the trimetre or the tetrameter? |
2562 | I will be silent: what else can I do? |
2562 | 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? |
2562 | I''ll lay on you, goading you behind, you outrigger? |
2562 | I? |
2562 | If I be diligent and learn zealously, to which of your disciples shall I become like? |
2562 | In what then, pray, shall I obey you? |
2562 | In what way do I make kardopos masculine? |
2562 | In what way? |
2562 | In what way? |
2562 | Is it for this reason, pray, that you have also lost your cloak? |
2562 | Is it not Jupiter? |
2562 | Is it not just, however, that they should have their reward, on account of these? |
2562 | Is it not then with justice, who does not serve in the army? |
2562 | Is it possible that you consider the sea to be greater now than formerly? |
2562 | Is not this an insult, pray? |
2562 | Is the power of speaking, pray, implanted in your nature? |
2562 | Just Do you deny that it exists? |
2562 | Kardope in the feminine? |
2562 | My good sir, what is the matter with you, O father? |
2562 | Nay, what could he ever suffer still greater than this? |
2562 | Nay, what was the thing in which we knead our flour? |
2562 | Nothing at all? |
2562 | O Hercules, from what country are these wild beasts? |
2562 | Of what description? |
2562 | Of what kind? |
2562 | Of what two Causes? |
2562 | Oh, what shall I call you? |
2562 | Pasias( entering with his summons- witness) Then, ought a man to throw away any part of his own property? |
2562 | Phidippides, my little Phidippides? |
2562 | Pray where? |
2562 | Pray, of what nature are they? |
2562 | Proceed; why do you keep poking about the door? |
2562 | Seest thou, then, how good a thing is learning? |
2562 | Shall I bring him into court and convict him of lunacy, or shall I give information of his madness to the coffin- makers? |
2562 | Shall I then ever see this? |
2562 | Tell me now, what do you prescribe? |
2562 | 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? |
2562 | Tell me what is this? |
2562 | Tell me, O Socrates, I beseech you, by Jupiter, who are these that have uttered this grand song? |
2562 | Tell me, by doing what? |
2562 | Tell me, do you love me? |
2562 | Tell me, pray, if they are really clouds, what ails them, that they resemble mortal women? |
2562 | Tell us then boldly, what we must do for you? |
2562 | Tell us what you require? |
2562 | The better, or the worse? |
2562 | The boys weep, and do you not think it is right that a father should weep? |
2562 | Then have you perceived that you say nothing to the purpose? |
2562 | Then what shall I gain, pray? |
2562 | Then wo n''t you pay me? |
2562 | To what do they seem to you to be like? |
2562 | Vortex? |
2562 | Was it not then a man like you and me, who first proposed this law, and by speaking persuaded the ancients? |
2562 | Well, what is it? |
2562 | 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? |
2562 | Were you not therefore justly beaten, who do not praise Euripides, the wisest of poets? |
2562 | What Jupiter? |
2562 | What ails you? |
2562 | What am I doing? |
2562 | What are you about? |
2562 | What are you doing, fellow? |
2562 | What are you doing, pray, you fellow on the roof? |
2562 | What argument will he be able to state, to prove that he is not a blackguard? |
2562 | What belongs to an allotment? |
2562 | What do you say? |
2562 | What do you say? |
2562 | What do you say? |
2562 | What do you say? |
2562 | What do you think he will do? |
2562 | What do you wonder at? |
2562 | What else but this finger? |
2562 | What evil, pray, has Tlepolemus ever done you? |
2562 | What gods? |
2562 | What good could any one learn from them? |
2562 | What good, pray, would this do you? |
2562 | What have you made of your slippers, you foolish man? |
2562 | What is this? |
2562 | What money is this? |
2562 | What must I do? |
2562 | What must I do? |
2562 | What names are masculine? |
2562 | What say you? |
2562 | What shall I do, my father being crazed? |
2562 | What shall I experience? |
2562 | What sort of animal is this interest? |
2562 | What then did he contrive for provisions? |
2562 | What then is the use of this? |
2562 | What then will you say if you be conquered by me in this? |
2562 | What then would you say if you heard another contrivance of Socrates? |
2562 | What then, pray, is this, father? |
2562 | What then? |
2562 | What then? |
2562 | What then? |
2562 | What then? |
2562 | What then? |
2562 | What was it? |
2562 | What was the fist? |
2562 | What''s the matter? |
2562 | What''s the matter? |
2562 | What, father? |
2562 | What, old man? |
2562 | What, pray, do you fear? |
2562 | What, really? |
2562 | What, then, did he say about the gnat? |
2562 | What, then, do you see? |
2562 | What, then, will you say? |
2562 | What? |
2562 | What? |
2562 | What? |
2562 | Where is Strepsiades? |
2562 | Where is it? |
2562 | Where is this man who asks me for his money? |
2562 | Where, pray, did you ever see cold Herculean baths? |
2562 | Who are they? |
2562 | Who are you? |
2562 | Who is it that compels them to borne along? |
2562 | Who it is that knocked at the door? |
2562 | Who rains then? |
2562 | Who says this? |
2562 | Who then? |
2562 | Who''s"Himself"? |
2562 | Who, O shameless fellow, reared you, understanding all your wishes, when you lisped what you meant? |
2562 | Whoever is this, who is lamenting? |
2562 | Why are you distressed? |
2562 | Why callest thou me, thou creature of a day? |
2562 | Why did I borrow them? |
2562 | Why did you light the thirsty lamp? |
2562 | Why do you delay? |
2562 | Why do you talk foolishly? |
2562 | Why do you talk nonsense? |
2562 | Why so, pray? |
2562 | Why so? |
2562 | Why then do we admire Thales? |
2562 | Why then does their rump look toward heaven? |
2562 | 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? |
2562 | Why then, since you imitate the cocks in all things, do you not both eat dung and sleep on a perch? |
2562 | Why thus do I loiter and not knock at the door? |
2562 | Why twelve minae to Pasias? |
2562 | Why, how can it be just to beat a father? |
2562 | Why, how with justice? |
2562 | Why, how, when my money is gone, my complexion gone, my life gone, and my slipper gone? |
2562 | Why, how? |
2562 | Why, is any day old and new? |
2562 | Why, is there any Jove? |
2562 | Why, pray, did he add the old day? |
2562 | Why, pray, did you laugh at this? |
2562 | Why, pray, did you not tell me this, then, but excited with hopes a rustic and aged man? |
2562 | Why, pray, do you talk nonsense, as if you had fallen from an ass? |
2562 | Why, pray? |
2562 | Why, then, do the magistrates not receive the deposits on the new moon, but on the Old and New? |
2562 | Why, what are these doing, who are bent down so much? |
2562 | Why, what else, than chopping logic with the beams of your house? |
2562 | Why, what good should I get else from his instruction? |
2562 | Why, what shall I learn? |
2562 | Why, what, if they should see Simon, a plunderer of the public property, what do they do? |
2562 | Why, where are my fellow- tribesmen of Cicynna? |
2562 | Will it never be day? |
2562 | Will you move quickly? |
2562 | Will you not pack off to the devil, you most forgetful and most stupid old man? |
2562 | Will you not quickly cover yourself up and think of something? |
2562 | Will you not take yourself off from my house? |
2562 | Will you not then pack off as fast as possible from my door? |
2562 | Will you not, pray, now believe in no god, except what we believe in-- this Chaos, and the Clouds, and the Tongue-- these three? |
2562 | Will you overcome me in this? |
2562 | Wo n''t you march, Mr. Blood- horse? |
2562 | Yes, by Jupiter, with justice? |
2562 | You destroy me? |
2562 | whether do you wish to take and lead away this your son, or shall I teach him to speak? |
3013 | ( 1) But what is the meaning of all these crests? |
3013 | ( 1) How do you like them? |
3013 | ( 1) Why have you come here a- twisting your game leg in circles? |
3013 | ( 1) f(1) As much as to say,''Then you have such things as anti- dicasts?'' |
3013 | ( 1) f(1) Pisthetaerus modifies the Greek proverbial saying,"To what use can not hands be put?" |
3013 | ( 14) Are you Phrygian like Spintharus? |
3013 | ( 16) Are you a slave and a Carian like Execestides? |
3013 | ( 9) Is it not clear that we are a prophetic Apollo to you? |
3013 | --Are you a peacock? |
3013 | A DEALER IN DECREES"If the Nephelococcygian does wrong to the Athenian..."PISTHETAERUS Now whatever are these cursed parchments? |
3013 | AN INFORMER What are these birds with downy feathers, who look so pitiable to me? |
3013 | AN INSPECTOR Where are the Proxeni? |
3013 | Among us, when we see a thoughtless man, we ask,"What sort of bird is this?" |
3013 | And over yonder? |
3013 | And what say you? |
3013 | And who built such a wall? |
3013 | And why, pray, does it draggle in this fashion? |
3013 | Are they hoping with our help to triumph over their foes or to be useful to their friends? |
3013 | Are they not our most mortal foes? |
3013 | Are we going to war about a woman? |
3013 | Are you not astonished at the wall being completed so quickly? |
3013 | Besides, is not Athene recognized as Zeus''sole heiress? |
3013 | But come, what is it like to live with the birds? |
3013 | But tell me, has your father had you entered on the registers of his phratria? |
3013 | But tell me, where are you flying to? |
3013 | But tell me, who are you? |
3013 | But tell me, who did the woodwork? |
3013 | But tell me, why do the people admire me? |
3013 | But what are all these birds doing in heaven? |
3013 | But what do all these insults mean? |
3013 | But what god shall be its patron? |
3013 | But what object can have induced you to come among us? |
3013 | But what sort of city should we build? |
3013 | But where shall we be buried, if we die? |
3013 | But who are you, pray? |
3013 | But why, if he is Cleonymus, has he not thrown away his crest? |
3013 | But, by Heracles, how, if a Mede, has he flown here without a camel? |
3013 | But, poet, what ill wind drove you here? |
3013 | CHORUS And what fate has led them hither to the land of the birds? |
3013 | CHORUS Are they mad? |
3013 | CHORUS Are wolves to be spared? |
3013 | CHORUS Clever men? |
3013 | CHORUS Indeed, and what are their plans? |
3013 | CHORUS What have you done then? |
3013 | CHORUS Where are they? |
3013 | CHORUS Where? |
3013 | CHORUS Who are they? |
3013 | CHORUS Why, do they think to see some advantage that determines them to settle here? |
3013 | CHORUS Will not man find here everything that can please him-- wisdom, love, the divine Graces, the sweet face of gentle peace? |
3013 | Can they be bearing us ill- will? |
3013 | D''you know what you look like? |
3013 | Did you present yourself to the officers in command of the jays? |
3013 | Do n''t you know the cawing crow lives five times as long as a man? |
3013 | Do n''t you see that a single kite could easily carry off the lot at once? |
3013 | Do you conceive my bent? |
3013 | Do you take me for a Lydian or a Phrygian(1) and think to frighten me with your big words? |
3013 | Do you understand? |
3013 | Do you want to dethrone your own father? |
3013 | Do you want to fight it? |
3013 | Do you want us to fling ourselves headlong down these rocks? |
3013 | Does he not say she must be given to the swallows? |
3013 | Does the son of Pisias want to betray the gates of the city to the foe? |
3013 | EPOPS And are you looking for a greater city than Athens? |
3013 | EPOPS And his? |
3013 | EPOPS And how are we to give them health, which belongs to the gods? |
3013 | EPOPS And how shall we give wealth to mankind? |
3013 | EPOPS And they are? |
3013 | EPOPS Are you calling me? |
3013 | EPOPS Are you chaffing me about my feathers? |
3013 | EPOPS Are you dicasts? |
3013 | EPOPS At what, then? |
3013 | EPOPS But how will mankind recognize us as gods and not as jays? |
3013 | EPOPS But, after all, what sort of city would please you best? |
3013 | EPOPS Come now, what must be done? |
3013 | EPOPS From what country? |
3013 | EPOPS From whom will they take them? |
3013 | EPOPS How so? |
3013 | EPOPS How their pole? |
3013 | EPOPS Is that kind of seed sown among you? |
3013 | EPOPS No more shall perish? |
3013 | EPOPS Oh, most cruel of all animals, why tear these two men to pieces, why kill them? |
3013 | EPOPS Take your advice? |
3013 | EPOPS The Greeks? |
3013 | EPOPS This one? |
3013 | EPOPS We birds? |
3013 | EPOPS What brings you here? |
3013 | EPOPS What for? |
3013 | EPOPS What''s the matter? |
3013 | EPOPS Who wants me? |
3013 | EPOPS Why not choose Lepreum in Elis for your settlement? |
3013 | EUELPIDES And did you not lose your crow, when you fell sprawling on the ground? |
3013 | EUELPIDES And how about my eyes? |
3013 | EUELPIDES And what does the crow say about the road to follow? |
3013 | EUELPIDES And which way does it tell us to go now? |
3013 | EUELPIDES And who is it brings an owl to Athens? |
3013 | EUELPIDES But do you see all those hooked claws? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Do you know how dearly I should like to splint her legs for her? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Does a bird need a servant, then? |
3013 | EUELPIDES How so? |
3013 | EUELPIDES I''faith, yes,''tis a bird, but of what kind? |
3013 | EUELPIDES I? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Is it a question of feasting? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Is it in Nephelococcygia that all the wealth of Theovenes(1) and most of Aeschines''(2) is? |
3013 | EUELPIDES That they may tear me to pieces? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Then where are your feathers? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Then you did not let it go? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Through illness? |
3013 | EUELPIDES We? |
3013 | EUELPIDES What makes you laugh? |
3013 | EUELPIDES What''s the matter? |
3013 | EUELPIDES What? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Where is it, then? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Why with the stew- pots? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Why, have you been conquered by a cock? |
3013 | EUELPIDES Will you keep silence? |
3013 | EUELPIDES You were Tereus, and what are you now? |
3013 | EUELPIDES( TO HIS JAY)(1) Do you think I should walk straight for yon tree? |
3013 | From what country? |
3013 | HERACLES And I get nothing whatever of the paternal property? |
3013 | HERACLES And you are seasoning them before answering us? |
3013 | HERACLES But what if my father wished to give me his property on his death- bed, even though I be a bastard? |
3013 | HERACLES Hi Triballian, do you want a thrashing? |
3013 | HERACLES What are these meats? |
3013 | HERACLES What else? |
3013 | HERACLES You say that you give her? |
3013 | Have these birds come to contend for the double stadium prize? |
3013 | Have you a permit, bearing the seal of the storks? |
3013 | Have you no Greek town you can propose to us? |
3013 | Have you ulcers to hide like Laespodias? |
3013 | 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? |
3013 | How is that? |
3013 | How long since? |
3013 | How will they get at it? |
3013 | I say, Epops, you are not the only one of your kind then? |
3013 | INFORMER All? |
3013 | INFORMER And how can you give a man wings with your words? |
3013 | INFORMER I? |
3013 | INFORMER So that words give wings? |
3013 | INFORMER Well, and why not? |
3013 | INFORMER Where is he who gives out wings to all comers? |
3013 | INSPECTOR Do you recall that evening when you stooled against the column where the decrees are posted? |
3013 | INSPECTOR What does this mean? |
3013 | IRIS Am I awake? |
3013 | IRIS And what other roads can the gods travel? |
3013 | IRIS Are there others then? |
3013 | IRIS Are you mad? |
3013 | IRIS By which gate? |
3013 | IRIS I? |
3013 | IRIS Of which? |
3013 | IRIS What do you mean? |
3013 | In what way? |
3013 | Is he dispersing the clouds or gathering them? |
3013 | Is it no later than that? |
3013 | Is it not the most priceless gift of all, to be winged? |
3013 | Is it possible that the gods have chosen such an envoy? |
3013 | Is n''t it a peacock? |
3013 | Is the swallow in sight? |
3013 | MESSENGER Where, where is he? |
3013 | METON Is there sedition in your city? |
3013 | METON What d''you want with me? |
3013 | METON What''s wrong then? |
3013 | METON Who am I? |
3013 | METON Why, what have I to fear? |
3013 | Must I knock again? |
3013 | Must they die in early youth? |
3013 | Over whom? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS And how do you think to escape them? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS And what is the name of these gods? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS And when did you compose them? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS And who carried the mortar? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Are the sandals there? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Are you not going to clear out with your urns? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS But how can they be gathered together? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS But how could they put the mortar into hods? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS By Posidon, do you see that many- coloured bird? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS By which gate did you pass through the wall, wretched woman? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Can you see any bird? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS D''you see? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Did you get one? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Do you know what to do? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Do you like Nephelococcygia? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Do you want to fly straight to Pellene? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Far better, are they not? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS From whom? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Gather songs in the clouds? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS How will you be able to cry when once your eyes are pecked out? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS I? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS If only I knew where we were.... EUELPIDES Could you find your country again from here? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS If they are happy, is not that the chief thing towards health? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS In the name of the gods, who are you? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS In what way? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Is all that there? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Is there another glutton besides Cleonymus? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS No head- bird gave you a safe- conduct? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Now will you be off with your decrees? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Of the entrails-- is it so written? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Of which gods are you speaking? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Paralus or Salaminia? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS So it seems, despite all your youthful vigour, you make it your trade to denounce strangers? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS The time? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Well then, what name can you suggest? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What ails you, that you should shake your fist at heaven? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What are these things? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What are you chanting us about frosts? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What are you shouting for? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What do you reckon on doing then? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What for? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What have we here? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What have you seen? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What''s the matter? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What''s the matter? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS What''s your name, ship or cap? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Which laws? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Which? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Who are you? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Who is this Basileia? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Who is this Sardanapalus? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Who then shall guard the Pelargicon? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Who will explain the matter to them? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Who would want paid servants after this? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Why did you not reveal it to me before I founded my city? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Why not choose Athene Polias? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Why were not guards sent against him at once? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Why, certainly; are you not born of a stranger woman? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Why, what''s the matter, Prometheus? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Will you have a high- sounding Laconian name? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Will you just pocket your salary, do nothing, and be off? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Will you stay with us and form a chorus of winged birds as slender as Leotrophides(1) for the Cecropid tribe? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Wo n''t you be off quickly? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS Would you do this better if you had wings? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS You, gods? |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS( TO HIS CROW) Cursed beast, what are you croaking to me?... |
3013 | PISTHETAERUS( TO THE TRIBALLIAN) And you, what''s your opinion? |
3013 | POSIDON What else is there to do? |
3013 | PRIEST I begin, but where is he with the basket? |
3013 | PROMETHEUS Can you see any god behind me? |
3013 | PROMETHEUS If there were no barbarian gods, who would be the patron of Execestides? |
3013 | PROMETHEUS Is it the fall of day? |
3013 | PROMETHEUS Their name? |
3013 | PROMETHEUS What is Zeus doing? |
3013 | PROMETHEUS What''s the time, please? |
3013 | PROPHET Is all that there? |
3013 | PROPHET Who am I? |
3013 | PROPHET"But when the wolves and the white crows shall dwell together between Corinth and Sicyon..."PISTHETAERUS But how do the Corinthians concern me? |
3013 | Shall we call it Sparta? |
3013 | TROCHILUS And this other one, what bird is it? |
3013 | TROCHILUS What are you, then? |
3013 | TROCHILUS Who''s there? |
3013 | Us, who have wings and fly? |
3013 | What are you saying? |
3013 | What are you saying? |
3013 | What do you say? |
3013 | What do you want of me? |
3013 | What does it all mean? |
3013 | What god was it? |
3013 | What good thing have you to tell me? |
3013 | What have they done to you? |
3013 | What have you come to do? |
3013 | What is his name? |
3013 | What is this bird from beyond the mountains with a look as solemn as it is stupid? |
3013 | What is this bird? |
3013 | What means this triple crest? |
3013 | What shall our city be called? |
3013 | What then is to be done? |
3013 | What''s that you tell me? |
3013 | What''s the matter? |
3013 | What''s the purpose of your journey? |
3013 | What''s this? |
3013 | What''s your plan? |
3013 | What? |
3013 | Where am I to find him? |
3013 | Where are you off to? |
3013 | Where did you come from, tell me? |
3013 | Where is Pisthetaerus, our leader? |
3013 | Where is Pisthetaerus? |
3013 | Where is he who called me? |
3013 | Where is the chief of the cohort? |
3013 | Where shall I fly to, unfortunate wretch that I am? |
3013 | Where, where, where is he? |
3013 | Where, where, where is he? |
3013 | Who are you? |
3013 | Who are you? |
3013 | Who calls my master? |
3013 | Why did you bring me from down yonder? |
3013 | Why these splendid buskins? |
3013 | Why, nothing whatever but bite and scratch!--What''s the matter with you then, that you keep opening your beak? |
3013 | Why, wretch, to what sacred feast are you inviting the vultures and the sea- eagles? |
3013 | Would anyone call you an old friend of mine?" |
3013 | a bird a barber? |
3013 | a bird or a peacock? |
3013 | and how? |
3013 | and since when, pray? |
3013 | and who sends you here, you rascal? |
3013 | and yet you wear your hair long? |
3013 | are you not delighted to be cleaving the air? |
3013 | are you still there? |
3013 | call my town Sparta? |
3013 | do n''t you want to stop any longer? |
3013 | do you always want to be fooled? |
3013 | do you hear me? |
3013 | do you see what swarms of birds are gathering here? |
3013 | for whom shall we weave the peplus? |
3013 | is not this the pole of the birds then? |
3013 | not a beat of your wing!--Who are you and from what country? |
3013 | there are other gods besides you, barbarian gods who dwell above Olympus? |
3013 | to retrace my steps? |
3013 | to what use can not feet be put? |
3013 | were you so frightened that you let go your jay? |
3013 | what animal are you? |
3013 | what are you doing? |
3013 | what are you up to? |
3013 | what do you say to it? |
3013 | what is this? |
3013 | what is this? |
3013 | where are you flying to? |
3013 | whither are you leading us? |
3013 | wo n''t you hurry yourself? |
3013 | you are by far the most barbarous of all the gods.--Tell me, Heracles, what are we going to do? |
3013 | you are there too? |
8688 | [ 364] And wo n''t we laugh? 8688 ''Tis garlic then? 8688 ''Tis not about that I ask you, but which, according to you, is the best measure, the trimeter or the tetrameter? 8688 (_ Addressing the Athenian._) Do n''t you feel of mornings a strong nervous tension? 8688 (_ He perceives Trygaeus astride his beetle._) Why, what plague is this? 8688 (_ Hearing money mentioned Clean turns his head, and Agoracritus seizes the opportunity to snatch away the stewed hare._) Where, where, I say? 8688 (_ Peace whispers into Hermes''ear._) Is that your grievance against them? 8688 (_ Pseudartabas makes a negative sign._) Then our ambassadors are seeking to deceive us? 8688 (_ To Peace._) What now? 8688 (_ To Strepsiades._) Did you hear their voices mingling with the awful growling of the thunder? 8688 (_ addressing one of his attendant officers_) what are you gaping at the crows about? 8688 --while that infamous_ Mad Ox_[423] was bellowing away on his side.--Do ye not blush, ye women, for your wild and uproarious doings? 8688 ... Why did I borrow these? 8688 ... and to converse with the clouds, who are our genii? 8688 A fatted bull? 8688 A great fat swine then? 8688 A purse? 8688 A sheep? 8688 Acharnians, what means this threat? 8688 Again you come back without it? 8688 All these? 8688 Am I a beggar? 8688 Am I compelled to hear myself thus abused, and merely because I love you? 8688 Am I drivelling because I demand my money? 8688 An you pity me, tell me, how did you get the idea to filch it from him? 8688 Anchovies, pottery? 8688 And Aphrodite, whose mysteries you have not celebrated for so long? 8688 And Attic figs? 8688 And actually you would claim the right to demand your money, when you know not a syllable of these celestial phenomena? 8688 And after him, who? 8688 And as to the rest, what do you wish to sell me? 8688 And do we give you two drachmae, that you should treat us to all this humbug? 8688 And do you see with what pleasure this sickle- maker is making long noses at the spear- maker? 8688 And first, answer me, did you beat me in my childhood? 8688 And for what lessons? 8688 And how could she speak to the spectators? 8688 And how ever did he set about measuring it? 8688 And how long was he replacing his dress? 8688 And how was it you did not see that you were getting so much into debt? 8688 And how, pray, would you propose to restore peace and order in all the countries of Greece? 8688 And how? 8688 And if I batter you to pieces with my fists, what will you do? 8688 And if he does n''t tell you? 8688 And if it fell into the watery depths of the sea, could it escape with its wings? 8688 And is it not right and meet? 8688 And is it not rightly done, since he refuses military service? 8688 And is it thick too? 8688 And not to Ares? 8688 And of what do they speak? 8688 And our demagogues? 8688 And our tragic poets? 8688 And pray, who are you? 8688 And should we still be dwelling in this city without this protecting stew- pan? 8688 And that is? 8688 And that? 8688 And the dragon? 8688 And the leather- seller must destroy the sheep- seller? 8688 And the spectators, what are they for the most part? 8688 And this female? 8688 And this other one? 8688 And this young woman, what countrywoman is she? 8688 And those stars like sparks, that plough up the air as they dart across the sky? 8688 And what am I to do? 8688 And what are masculine names? 8688 And what did he say about the gnat? 8688 And what did you learn from the master of exercises? 8688 And what do you drink yourself then, to be able all alone by yourself to dumbfound and stupefy the city so with your clamour? 8688 And what good can be learnt of them? 8688 And what harbour will you put in at? 8688 And what have you done with your sandals, you poor fool? 8688 And what if I prove to you by our school reasoning, that one ought to beat one''s mother? 8688 And what is he going to do with his mortar? 8688 And what is it I am to gain? 8688 And what is it I should learn? 8688 And what is life worth without these? 8688 And what is their rump looking at in the heavens? 8688 And what is this one''s fate? 8688 And what punishment will you inflict upon this Paphlagonian, the cause of all my troubles? 8688 And what shall I do with this tripe? 8688 And what will you give me for my trouble? 8688 And what will you give me in return? 8688 And when I lie beside her and caress her bosoms? 8688 And when they see Simon, that thiever of public money, what do they do then? 8688 And when you had become a man, what trade did you follow? 8688 And where are my neighbours of Cicynna? 8688 And wherein lies the harm of being so? 8688 And who is this Lamachus, who demands an eel? 8688 And who is this man suspended up in a basket? 8688 And who is this? 8688 And who says so? 8688 And who, pray, has been maltreating you? 8688 And whose are yours? 8688 And why bolts and bars? 8688 And why did he also name the last day of the old? 8688 And why do you always receive your pay, when none of these others ever get any? 8688 And why do you bite me? 8688 And why have the gods moved away? 8688 And why not? 8688 And why not? 8688 And why? 8688 And why? 8688 And why_ do_ you summon us, dear Lysistrata? 8688 And wise Cratinus, is he still alive? 8688 And you dare to demand money of me, when you are so ignorant? 8688 And you did not know, you never suspected, that they were goddesses? 8688 And you do n''t make him obey you? 8688 And you, Dracyllus, Euphorides or Prinides, have you knowledge of Ecbatana or Chaonia? 8688 And you, my pretty flat- fish, who declared just now they might split you in two? 8688 And you, old death- in- life, with your fire? 8688 And you, who are you? 8688 And you? 8688 And yours? 8688 And''tis with your yarn, and your skeins, and your spools, you think to appease so many bitter enmities, you silly women? 8688 And''twas with justice too; did they not break down my black fig tree, which I had planted and dunged with my own hands? 8688 Any statue? 8688 Are there any good men? 8688 Are we late, Lysistrata? 8688 Are you mad? 8688 Are you not going to cover your head immediately and ponder? 8688 Are you not holding back the salt? 8688 Are you surprised in adultery? 8688 Art thou sensible of the dangerous battle we are about to engage upon in defending the Lacedaemonians? 8688 Because you have put in too thick a wick.... Later, when we had this boy, what was to be his name? 8688 Being but a mortal, can you be stronger than a god? 8688 Believe you? 8688 Bound by such ties of mutual kindness, how can you bear to be at war? 8688 But I bethink me, shall I give her something to eat? 8688 But are they not going to show themselves? 8688 But are you a man or a Priapus, pray? 8688 But as you are so strong, why did you not circumcise me? 8688 But come( there are only friends who hear me), why accuse the Laconians of all our woes? 8688 But come, tell me what I_ should_ say? 8688 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? 8688 But do n''t you think the men will march up against us? 8688 But do n''t you think they want you just as badly? 8688 But do you believe there is more water in the sea now than there was formerly? 8688 But have you brought me a treaty? 8688 But how can that be? 8688 But how can you wipe, idiot? 8688 But how did the fight begin? 8688 But how to purify myself, before going back into the citadel? 8688 But how will you make the journey? 8688 But how, great gods? 8688 But if I do n''t want to be saved? 8688 But if our husbands drag us by main force into the bedchamber? 8688 But if they beat us? 8688 But if you imitate the cocks in all things, why do n''t you scratch up the dunghill, why do n''t you sleep on a perch? 8688 But if-- which the gods forbid-- we do refrain altogether from what you say, should we get peace any sooner? 8688 But is it my death you seek then, my death? 8688 But is it not Zeus who forces them to move? 8688 But my oath? 8688 But not the women? 8688 But perhaps some spectator, some beardless youth, who thinks himself a sage, will say,What is this? |
8688 | But presently we heard you asking out loud in the open street:"Is there never a man left in Athens?" |
8688 | But serious faith, ardent devotion, dogmatic discussion, is there a trace of these things? |
8688 | But tell me, what was the idea that miscarried? |
8688 | But tell me, who is it makes the thunder, which I so much dread? |
8688 | But tell me, who is this woman? |
8688 | But then what city shall we be able to stir up trouble in? |
8688 | But though it be true, need he say it? |
8688 | But what are those fellows doing, who are bent all double? |
8688 | But what are you driving at? |
8688 | But what did I? |
8688 | But what do you swear by then? |
8688 | But what does the oracle say? |
8688 | But what else is doing at Megara, eh? |
8688 | But what have you said? |
8688 | But what is in it? |
8688 | But what is my master doing? |
8688 | But what is this? |
8688 | But what is your name then? |
8688 | But what is your purpose? |
8688 | But what use is there in learning what we all know? |
8688 | But what will be done with him? |
8688 | But whatever do you do? |
8688 | But where can this man be found? |
8688 | But where get a white horse from? |
8688 | But where then did you get these pretty chattels? |
8688 | But where was she then, I wonder, all the long time she spent away from us? |
8688 | But where will the poor wretch get his food? |
8688 | But where, where? |
8688 | But who are you that thus repulses me? |
8688 | But who has called together this council of women, pray? |
8688 | But who would make so sorry a deal as to buy you? |
8688 | But why have they left you all alone here? |
8688 | But why start up into the air on chance? |
8688 | But will you buy anything of me, some chickens or some locusts? |
8688 | But will you do it? |
8688 | But you have not yet told me what makes the roll of the thunder? |
8688 | But you, why do n''t you get done with it and die? |
8688 | But your web that''s all being pecked to pieces by the cocks and hens, do n''t you care for that? |
8688 | But, come, will you repay me my money, yes or no? |
8688 | But, great gods, can it be I come too late? |
8688 | But, miserable man, where, where are we to do it? |
8688 | By the iron money of Byzantium? |
8688 | By what cunning shifts, pray? |
8688 | By which gods will you swear? |
8688 | By which gods? |
8688 | Call Myrrhiné hither, quotha? |
8688 | Can I do with them as I wish? |
8688 | Can a man strike out a brilliant thought when drunk? |
8688 | Can a wretched pair of slippers make you forget all that you owe me? |
8688 | Can any good thing come out of_ Lemnos_? |
8688 | Can anybody tell us where Lysistrata is? |
8688 | Can it be one of the gods of Carcinus? |
8688 | Can they eat alone? |
8688 | Can you be of the race of Harmodius? |
8688 | Can you eat chick- pease? |
8688 | Can you match me with a rival? |
8688 | Can you suggest anything? |
8688 | Come now? |
8688 | Come then, what must be done? |
8688 | Come, are you of honest parentage? |
8688 | Come, come, what are you asking for these two crests? |
8688 | Come, how is that, eh? |
8688 | Come, let us see, whose are these oracles? |
8688 | Come, outfence him with some wheelwright slang? |
8688 | Come, what are the male quadrupeds? |
8688 | Come, what are you waiting for? |
8688 | Come, what do you wish to say? |
8688 | Come, what is it? |
8688 | Come, what was the thing I taught you first? |
8688 | Come, what''s the best to give you to eat? |
8688 | Come, who wishes to take the charge of her? |
8688 | Come, will you do it-- yes or no? |
8688 | Could any man''s back and loins stand such a strain? |
8688 | Crates,[73] again, have you done hounding him with your rage and your hisses? |
8688 | Dear boy, will you vote for peace? |
8688 | Demos, do you see this stewed hare which I bring you? |
8688 | Dicaeopolis, will you buy some nice little porkers? |
8688 | Did you hear him? |
8688 | Did you mutter over the thing sufficiently through the night, spout it along the street, recite it to all you met? |
8688 | Did you not put enough strain on your breeches at Salamis? |
8688 | Did you see any other man besides yourself strolling about in heaven? |
8688 | Do n''t I look like a diviner preparing his mystic fire? |
8688 | Do n''t the men grow old too? |
8688 | Do n''t you feel sad and sorry because the fathers of your children are far away from you with the army? |
8688 | Do n''t you know all that a man should know, who is distinguished for his wisdom and inventive daring? |
8688 | Do n''t you know that Zeus has decreed death for him who is surprised exhuming Peace? |
8688 | Do n''t you pity the poor child? |
8688 | Do we not administer the budget of household expenses? |
8688 | Do you beat your own father? |
8688 | Do you consent to my telling the spectators of our troubles? |
8688 | Do you forget who you are? |
8688 | Do you hear that? |
8688 | Do you hear? |
8688 | Do you hesitate? |
8688 | Do you know what the oracle intends to say? |
8688 | Do you know what you had best do? |
8688 | Do you mean those of the beggar Philoctetes? |
8688 | Do you not hear them wheedling you, mighty god? |
8688 | Do you really wish to know the truth of celestial matters? |
8688 | Do you remember the time when silphium[100] was so cheap? |
8688 | Do you see how good it is to learn? |
8688 | Do you see that little door and that little house? |
8688 | Do you see these tiers of people? |
8688 | Do you see this, poor fellow? |
8688 | Do you see what you are doing; is not the female pigeon called the same as the male? |
8688 | Do you see? |
8688 | Do you take me for a fool then? |
8688 | Do you then believe there are gods? |
8688 | Do you think I have been long? |
8688 | Do you think I would sell my rump for a thousand drachmae? |
8688 | Do you turn your nose towards the cesspools? |
8688 | Do you understand that? |
8688 | Do you understand what he says? |
8688 | Do you understand, that, thanks to us, you will be loaded with benefits? |
8688 | Do you want me to perjure myself? |
8688 | Do you want to fight this four- winged Geryon? |
8688 | Do you want to know who I am? |
8688 | Do you wish that this election should even now be a success for you? |
8688 | Does any such being as Zeus exist? |
8688 | Does not the sum borrowed go on growing, growing every month, each day as the time slips by? |
8688 | Does that astonish you? |
8688 | Does the mind attract the sap of the water- cress? |
8688 | Dost thou hesitate and art thou fully steeped in Euripides? |
8688 | Dost thou not see this, that our cities will soon be but empty husks? |
8688 | Even if I have borrowed before witnesses? |
8688 | Exists there a mortal more blest than you? |
8688 | First of all, how is Sophocles? |
8688 | First, what are you doing up there? |
8688 | Firstly, what school did you attend when a child? |
8688 | For ready- money or in wares from these parts? |
8688 | For what purpose? |
8688 | For what sum will you sell them? |
8688 | Friends, do you hear the sacred formula? |
8688 | Go, ninny, blow yourself out with water; do you dare to accuse wine of clouding the reason? |
8688 | Good day, Lysistrata; but pray, why this dark, forbidding face, my dear? |
8688 | Good gods, what am I going to do with this fine ten- minae breast- plate, which is so splendidly made? |
8688 | Has anyone spoken yet? |
8688 | Has he done eating? |
8688 | Has he got one of our children in his house? |
8688 | Has no existence? |
8688 | Has the lash rained an army of its thongs on you and laid your back waste?" |
8688 | Have I robbed you of anything? |
8688 | Have we got back to the days of the festivals of Zeus Polieus,[552] to the Buphonia, to the time of the poet Cecydes[553] and the golden cicadas? |
8688 | Have you a natural gift for speaking? |
8688 | Have you any memory? |
8688 | Have you bored your friends enough with it? |
8688 | Have you decreed some mad expedition? |
8688 | Have you ever seen a beautiful, transparent stone at the druggists, with which you may kindle fire? |
8688 | Have you ever seen chastity of any use to anyone? |
8688 | Have you ever seen it raining without clouds? |
8688 | Have you forgotten how Periclides,[463] your own countryman, sat a suppliant before our altars? |
8688 | Have you got hold of anything? |
8688 | Have you gotten swellings in the groin with your journey? |
8688 | Have you not always shown that blatant impudence, which is the sole strength of our orators? |
8688 | Have you not routed him totally in this duel of abuse? |
8688 | Have you not sometimes seen clouds in the sky like a centaur, a leopard, a wolf or a bull? |
8688 | Have you not understood me then? |
8688 | Have you one word to say for yourselves? |
8688 | Have you reached such a pitch of madness that you believe those bilious fellows? |
8688 | Have you then such a good opinion of yourself? |
8688 | He has a self- important look; is he some diviner? |
8688 | Him? |
8688 | How are things going at Sparta now? |
8688 | How can I obey? |
8688 | How can all these fine distinctions, these subtleties be learned? |
8688 | How can one ever get out of an accusation with such a tone, summon witnesses or touch or convince? |
8688 | How can you make me credit that? |
8688 | How could I express my thoughts with the pomp of Euripides? |
8688 | How else? |
8688 | How else? |
8688 | How hold sway over a body of spectators, who were at the same time judges? |
8688 | How many times round the track is the race for the chariots of war? |
8688 | How now, are you afraid? |
8688 | How now, wretched man? |
8688 | How pray? |
8688 | How satisfy a public made up of so many and such diverse elements, so sharply contrasted by birth, fortune, education, opinion, interest? |
8688 | How shall I act here so that the spectators shall approve my judgment? |
8688 | How shall I manage it? |
8688 | How shall we set about removing these stones? |
8688 | How so, pray? |
8688 | How so? |
8688 | How so? |
8688 | How then did Cleonymus behave in fights? |
8688 | How then, if justice exists, was Zeus not put to death for having put his father in chains? |
8688 | How will that be, pray? |
8688 | How will you be able to learn then? |
8688 | How would you gain by that? |
8688 | How your lips quiver with the famous,"What have you to say now?" |
8688 | How"in front of Pylos"? |
8688 | How, varlet? |
8688 | How, you cursed animal, could the wolf ever unite with the sheep? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | I admire your inventive genius; but, where is he? |
8688 | I call you, Myrrhiné, Myrrhiné; will you not come? |
8688 | I may not denounce our enemies? |
8688 | I see another herald running up; what news does he bring me? |
8688 | I shall then be but half alive? |
8688 | I used to linger around the cooks and say to them,"Look, friends, do n''t you see a swallow? |
8688 | I wonder what then would you say, if you knew another of Socrates''contrivances? |
8688 | I? |
8688 | If Zeus strikes at the perjurers, why has he not blasted Simon, Cleonymus and Theorus? |
8688 | If anchovies are so cheap, what need have we of peace? |
8688 | If not, what use is his science to me? |
8688 | If you do not devour me? |
8688 | If you met Amynias, how would you hail him? |
8688 | If you were condemned to pay five talents, how would you manage to quash that verdict? |
8688 | If, when summoned to court, you were in danger of losing your case for want of witnesses, how would you make the conviction fall upon your opponent? |
8688 | In short, where are they then? |
8688 | In the name of all the gods, what is that? |
8688 | In what way does this concern me? |
8688 | In what way, an it please you? |
8688 | In what way, an it please you? |
8688 | In what way? |
8688 | Into Simonides? |
8688 | Is Euripides at home? |
8688 | Is he crazy? |
8688 | Is it a feather? |
8688 | Is it not I who curbed Gryttus,[96] the filthiest of the lewd, by depriving him of his citizen rights? |
8688 | Is it not Straton? |
8688 | Is it not a shame? |
8688 | Is it not a sin and a shame to see them carding and winding the State, these women who have neither art nor part in the burdens of the War? |
8688 | Is it not plain, that''tis Zeus hurling it at the perjurers? |
8688 | Is it not to convict him from the outset? |
8688 | Is it possible, Demos, to love you more than I do? |
8688 | Is it salt that you are bringing? |
8688 | Is it the filthy dress of the lame fellow, Bellerophon? |
8688 | Is it the god Pan''s doing? |
8688 | Is it then a smell like a soldier''s knapsack? |
8688 | Is it to cremate yourself? |
8688 | Is it true, what they tell us, that men are turned into stars after death? |
8688 | Is it true? |
8688 | Is that a little sow, or not? |
8688 | Is that not enough? |
8688 | Is that you, master? |
8688 | Is the moralist to despair and throw away his pen, because in so many cases his voice finds no echo? |
8688 | Is there anything worse than to have such a character? |
8688 | Is there then a day of the old and the new? |
8688 | Is this not a scandal? |
8688 | Is this not sufficient to drive one to hang oneself? |
8688 | Is"pour again"in the oracle? |
8688 | Knights, are you helping them? |
8688 | LYSISTRATA How so-- not the same thing? |
8688 | Lacedaemon? |
8688 | Let me bethink me, what is the most heroic? |
8688 | Let me see of what value to me have been these few pleasures? |
8688 | Let us see then, what is there in yours? |
8688 | Let us see, who of you is steady enough to be trusted by the Senate with the care of this charming wench? |
8688 | Listen to you? |
8688 | Lysistrata, say, what oath are we to swear? |
8688 | MAGISTRATE You? |
8688 | Master, have you got garlic in your fist, I wonder? |
8688 | Mortal, what do you want with me? |
8688 | Must I have him certificated for lunacy, or must I order his coffin? |
8688 | Must I leave my wool to spoil then? |
8688 | Must you have recourse to such jackanapes''tricks to supplant me? |
8688 | My father? |
8688 | My father? |
8688 | Myrrhiné, my little darling Myrrhiné, what are you saying? |
8688 | No one? |
8688 | Nor doubtless to Enyalius? |
8688 | 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? |
8688 | Now tell me, would not the women have done best to come? |
8688 | Now what will you say, if I beat you even on this point? |
8688 | Now, I am bound to start for Salamis; will you make it convenient to go up to- night to make her fastening secure?" |
8688 | Now, what tatters_ does_ he want? |
8688 | Now, where is the gentle goddess Peace? |
8688 | Now, why not first put down our loads here, then take a vine- branch, light it at the brazier and hurl it at the gate by way of battering- ram? |
8688 | Now, why should he do that? |
8688 | Of Phoenix, the blind man? |
8688 | Of the Odomanti? |
8688 | Of the dactyl? |
8688 | Of what King? |
8688 | Of what greedy fist? |
8688 | Of which reasonings? |
8688 | Of which statue? |
8688 | Officer, where are you got to? |
8688 | Oh, Triptolemus and Ceres, do ye thus forsake your own blood? |
8688 | Oh, indeed, a''skytalé,''is it? |
8688 | Oh, too credulous son of Cecrops,[116] do you accept that as a glorious exploit? |
8688 | On what day? |
8688 | On what terms? |
8688 | Once more, will you not let me speak? |
8688 | Our advocates, what are they? |
8688 | Over what? |
8688 | Own myself vanquished on a point like this? |
8688 | Phaleric anchovies, pottery? |
8688 | Poor little lad(_ addressing his penis_), how am I to give you what you want so badly? |
8688 | Pots of green- stuff[354] as we do to poor Hermes-- and even he thinks the fare but mean? |
8688 | Pray, what for? |
8688 | Prithee, tell me, what is it? |
8688 | Prytanes, will you let me be treated in this manner, in my own country and by barbarians? |
8688 | Rash reprobate, what do you propose doing? |
8688 | Really and truly? |
8688 | Refrain from what? |
8688 | Say on, what are your orders? |
8688 | Say, where shall I find the Senate and the Prytanes? |
8688 | Shall I pursue them at law or shall I...? |
8688 | Shall I really ever see such happiness? |
8688 | Shall I repeat the words? |
8688 | Shall I tell you what has happened to you? |
8688 | Shall not the air, which is boundless, produce these mighty claps of thunder? |
8688 | Shall we wager and submit the matter to Lamachus, which of the two is the best to eat, a locust or a thrush? |
8688 | Shameless as you may be, will you dare to show your face to the spectators? |
8688 | She asks, what will be the result of such a choice of the city? |
8688 | So Zeus, it seems, has no existence, and''tis the Whirlwind that reigns in his stead? |
8688 | So this is why you have lost your cloak? |
8688 | So you would pay ten minae[382] for a night- stool? |
8688 | So, you bite your lips, and shake your heads, eh? |
8688 | Socrates asked Chaerephon,"How many times the length of its legs does a flea jump?" |
8688 | Socrates, would you sacrifice me, like Athamas? |
8688 | Speak out, Laconians, what is it brings you here? |
8688 | Speak, Marilades, you have grey hair; well then, have you ever been entrusted with a mission? |
8688 | Stop, stay the hateful strife, be reconciled; what hinders you? |
8688 | Strymodorus, who would ever have thought it? |
8688 | Suppose I let fly a good kick at you? |
8688 | Suppose one of us were to break a stick across their backs, eh? |
8688 | Suppose that a Lacedaemonian had seized a little Seriphian[216] dog on any pretext and had sold it, would you have endured it quietly? |
8688 | Take back, take back your viands; for a thousand drachmae I would not give a drop of peace; but who are you, pray? |
8688 | Tell me, Hermes, my master, do you think it would hurt me to fuck her a little, after so long an abstinence? |
8688 | Tell me, Socrates, I pray you, who are these women, whose language is so solemn; can they be demigoddesses? |
8688 | Tell me, if I prove thoroughly attentive and learn with zeal, which of your disciples shall I resemble, do you think? |
8688 | Tell me, is it not right, that in turn I should beat you for your good? |
8688 | Tell me, my dear, what are your feelings with regard to them? |
8688 | Tell me, of all the sons of Zeus, who had the stoutest heart, who performed the most doughty deeds? |
8688 | Tell me, pray, what is that? |
8688 | Tell me, was it on the market- place or near the gates that you sold your sausages? |
8688 | Tell me, what is War preparing against us? |
8688 | Tell me, what is the Paphlagonian doing now? |
8688 | Tell me, what is this? |
8688 | Tell me, you little good- for- nothing, are you singing that for your father? |
8688 | Tell us, pray; what, not a word? |
8688 | Tell us, tell us, what is it? |
8688 | That dearest darling? |
8688 | That is what you assuredly would have done, and would not Telephus have done the same? |
8688 | The measures, the rhythms or the verses? |
8688 | The same for both? |
8688 | Then I am to snap up wisdom much as a dog snaps up a morsel? |
8688 | Then are we actually to believe that the necessity of his profession as a comic poet alone drove him into the faction of the malcontents? |
8688 | Then money is the cause of the War? |
8688 | Then trough is of the same gender as Cleonymus? |
8688 | Then what should I sing? |
8688 | Then what should be done? |
8688 | Then what_ do_ you want to know? |
8688 | Then who is that star I see over yonder? |
8688 | Then why do you turn away like that, and hold your cloak out from your body? |
8688 | Then why this helmet, pray? |
8688 | These women, have they made din enough, I wonder, with their tambourines? |
8688 | These women, these enemies of Euripides and all the gods, shall I do nothing to hinder their inordinate insolence? |
8688 | Those in which I rigged out Aeneus[209] on the stage, that unhappy, miserable old man? |
8688 | Thus, poor fool, the sea, that receives the rivers, never grows, and yet you would have your money grow? |
8688 | Thus, when I throw forth some philosophical thought anent things celestial, you will seize it in its very flight? |
8688 | To what part of the earth? |
8688 | To whom are you sacrificing? |
8688 | To whom? |
8688 | Trygaeus, where is Trygaeus? |
8688 | Two dealers, eh? |
8688 | Very well then, but how am I going to descend? |
8688 | Was I then so stupid and such a dotard? |
8688 | Was it hot? |
8688 | Was not the legislator who carried this law a man like you and me? |
8688 | We must refrain from the male organ altogether.... Nay, why do you turn your backs on me? |
8688 | Well then, Demos, say now, who has treated you best, you and your stomach? |
8688 | Well then, what must we do now? |
8688 | Well, how are things at Megara? |
8688 | Well, what is it you have there then? |
8688 | Well, what oath shall we take then? |
8688 | Well, what then? |
8688 | Well, what? |
8688 | Well? |
8688 | Well? |
8688 | Well? |
8688 | Were you not yourself in those days quite red in the gills with farting? |
8688 | What about? |
8688 | What ails you? |
8688 | What allies, I should like to know? |
8688 | What am I to do with them? |
8688 | What am I up to? |
8688 | What are these? |
8688 | What are they like then? |
8688 | What are they? |
8688 | What are you laughing at? |
8688 | What are you saying now? |
8688 | What are you then? |
8688 | What are you up to? |
8688 | What are you up to? |
8688 | What can I do in the matter? |
8688 | What can your drinking do to help us? |
8688 | What connection is there between Erectheus, the jays and the dog? |
8688 | What connection is there between a galley and a dog- fox? |
8688 | What connection? |
8688 | What could be better? |
8688 | What did he contrive, to secure you some supper? |
8688 | What do I bid? |
8688 | What do the hooked claws mean? |
8688 | What do they call themselves? |
8688 | What do they like most? |
8688 | What do want crying this gait? |
8688 | What do you bid for them? |
8688 | What do you lack more? |
8688 | What do you mean? |
8688 | What do you prefer? |
8688 | What do you propose to do then, pray? |
8688 | What do you purport doing? |
8688 | What do you say? |
8688 | What do you see? |
8688 | What do you think he will do? |
8688 | What do you think they resemble? |
8688 | What do you want of me? |
8688 | What do you want? |
8688 | What does he mean by that? |
8688 | What does he say? |
8688 | What does it mean? |
8688 | What does it say? |
8688 | What does the beetle mean?" |
8688 | What does the god mean, then? |
8688 | What else? |
8688 | What fate befell Magnes,[67] when his hair went white? |
8688 | What fitter theme for our Muse, at the close as at the beginning of his work, than this, to sing the hero who drives his swift steeds down the arena? |
8688 | What for? |
8688 | What for? |
8688 | What for? |
8688 | What for? |
8688 | What gives him such audacity? |
8688 | What good indeed? |
8688 | What grounds have you for condemning hot baths? |
8688 | What harm have I done you? |
8688 | What has happened to you? |
8688 | What has happened to you? |
8688 | What has that to do with the old day and the new? |
8688 | What have we here? |
8688 | What have you to say, then? |
8688 | What ill has Tlepolemus done you? |
8688 | What is Phidippides going to say? |
8688 | What is going to happen, friends? |
8688 | What is his dress like, what his manner? |
8688 | What is it I owe? |
8688 | What is it all about? |
8688 | What is it then? |
8688 | What is it then? |
8688 | What is it you fear then? |
8688 | What is it, old greybeard? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is that used for? |
8688 | What is that? |
8688 | What is the matter with you, father, that you groan and turn about the whole night through? |
8688 | What is the matter? |
8688 | What is the matter? |
8688 | What is the matter? |
8688 | What is the most important business you wish to inform us about? |
8688 | What is the reason of it all? |
8688 | What is the thunder then? |
8688 | What is there in that to make you laugh? |
8688 | What is there in that to surprise you? |
8688 | What is there then? |
8688 | What is this I see, ye wretched old men? |
8688 | What is this fable you are telling me? |
8688 | What is this? |
8688 | What is to be done with this trumpet, for which I gave sixty drachmae the other day? |
8688 | What is wheat selling at? |
8688 | What is your next bidding? |
8688 | What kind of animal is interest? |
8688 | What makes you so bold as to dare to speak to my face? |
8688 | What matters that I was born a woman, if I can cure your misfortunes? |
8688 | What mean you by these silly tales? |
8688 | What means this Chalcidian cup? |
8688 | What medimni? |
8688 | What money? |
8688 | What oath? |
8688 | What oracle ordered you to burn these joints of mutton in honour of the gods? |
8688 | What other news of Megara? |
8688 | What other oath do you prefer? |
8688 | What other victim do you prefer then? |
8688 | What plague have we here? |
8688 | What price then is paid for forage by Boeotians? |
8688 | What proof have you? |
8688 | What rags do you prefer? |
8688 | What rampart, my dear man? |
8688 | What reason have they for treating us so? |
8688 | What reason have you for thus dallying at the door? |
8688 | What sacrifice is this? |
8688 | What say you, all here present? |
8688 | What shall we do to her? |
8688 | What shall we do to her? |
8688 | What then will become of Clisthenes and of Strato? |
8688 | What then will you say when you see the thrushes roasting? |
8688 | What then? |
8688 | What then? |
8688 | What think you? |
8688 | What use calling upon Zeus? |
8688 | What was it then? |
8688 | What was the first thing? |
8688 | What was your device? |
8688 | What we all want, is to be abed with our wives; how should our allies fail to second our project? |
8688 | What were they doing up there? |
8688 | What will become of me? |
8688 | What will you give? |
8688 | What will you offer then? |
8688 | What words strike my ear? |
8688 | What would Marpsias reply to this? |
8688 | What would you have? |
8688 | What''s it all about? |
8688 | What''s that to you? |
8688 | What''s that you say? |
8688 | What, I? |
8688 | What, a man? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What_ do_ you bring then? |
8688 | Whatever do you want such a thing as that for? |
8688 | When his trouble first began to seize him, he said to himself,"By what means could I go straight to Zeus?" |
8688 | Whence comes this cry of battle? |
8688 | Whence has sprung this accursed swarm of Cheris[246] fellows which comes assailing my door? |
8688 | Where are you going? |
8688 | Where are you running to? |
8688 | Where are you, Strepsiades? |
8688 | Where can another seller be found, is there ever a one left? |
8688 | Where has he gone to then? |
8688 | Where have you ever seen cold baths called''Baths of Heracles''? |
8688 | Where is Amphitheus? |
8688 | Where is Cynalopex? |
8688 | Where is he, this unknown foe? |
8688 | Where is he? |
8688 | Where is my officer? |
8688 | Where is my other officer? |
8688 | Where is our Usheress? |
8688 | Where is the king of the feast? |
8688 | Where is the man who demands money? |
8688 | Where is the table? |
8688 | Where? |
8688 | Where? |
8688 | Wherein will that profit me? |
8688 | Which science of all those you have never been taught, do you wish to learn first? |
8688 | Which would you prefer? |
8688 | Which? |
8688 | Who am I? |
8688 | Who are all my creditors? |
8688 | Who are they? |
8688 | Who are you then? |
8688 | Who are you? |
8688 | Who are you? |
8688 | Who are you? |
8688 | Who asks to speak? |
8688 | Who causes the rain to fall? |
8688 | Who dares do this thing? |
8688 | Who ever saw an oxen baked in an oven? |
8688 | Who has mutilated their tools like this? |
8688 | Who himself? |
8688 | Who is here? |
8688 | Who is it? |
8688 | Who is this that dares to pass our lines? |
8688 | Who is this? |
8688 | Who is to speak first? |
8688 | Who is your father then? |
8688 | Who rules now in the rostrum? |
8688 | Who was her greatest foe here? |
8688 | Who was it then? |
8688 | Who will be my ally? |
8688 | Who will get us out of this mess? |
8688 | Who''s there? |
8688 | Whose are these goods? |
8688 | Why a chaplet? |
8688 | Why afflict Lysistratus with our satires on his poverty,[134] and Thumantis,[135] who has not so much as a lodging? |
8688 | Why did you not say so then, instead of egging on a poor ignorant old man? |
8688 | Why do you call me? |
8688 | Why do you come? |
8688 | Why do you embrace me? |
8688 | Why do you not hold yourself worthy? |
8688 | Why does not the work advance then? |
8688 | Why give me such pain and suffering, and yourself into the bargain? |
8688 | Why not leave me to wash my tripe and to sell my sausages instead of making game of me? |
8688 | Why not saddle Pegasus? |
8688 | Why not? |
8688 | Why not? |
8688 | Why should you call me? |
8688 | Why so? |
8688 | Why then did you light such a guzzling lamp? |
8688 | Why then do the magistrates have the deposits paid on the last of the month and not the next day? |
8688 | Why then drivel as if you had fallen from an ass? |
8688 | Why these cries? |
8688 | Why these pale, sad looks? |
8688 | Why, certainly I have, but what then? |
8688 | Why, is there not the harbour of Cantharos at the Piraeus? |
8688 | Why, then, does the oracle not say dog instead of dog- fox? |
8688 | Why, what are you astonished at? |
8688 | Why, what has happened? |
8688 | Why, where am I likely to be going across the sky, if it be not to visit Zeus? |
8688 | Why, where are they? |
8688 | Why, where has she gone to then? |
8688 | Why? |
8688 | Will anything that it behoves a wise man to know escape you? |
8688 | Will no one open? |
8688 | Will the Great King send us gold? |
8688 | Will the rhythms supply me with food? |
8688 | Will they eat them? |
8688 | Will ye all take this oath? |
8688 | Will you dare to swear by the gods that you owe me nothing? |
8688 | Will you never stop fooling the Athenians? |
8688 | 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? |
8688 | Will you not even now let the strangers alone? |
8688 | Will you not let me speak? |
8688 | Will you obey me ever so little? |
8688 | With good wine, no doubt? |
8688 | With what end in view have they seized the citadel of Cranaus,[425] the sacred shrine that is raised upon the inaccessible rock of the Acropolis? |
8688 | Women, children, have you not heard? |
8688 | Would you deny the debt on that account? |
8688 | Would you like me to scent you? |
8688 | Yes, indeed, I see him; but who is it? |
8688 | You are but a mendicant and you dare to use language of this sort? |
8688 | You believe so? |
8688 | You do not reckon them masculine? |
8688 | You have become a lion and I never knew a thing about it? |
8688 | You have brought back nothing? |
8688 | You have thrown it? |
8688 | You love me? |
8688 | You really want to know? |
8688 | You really will not, Acharnians? |
8688 | You say no, do you not? |
8688 | You will not give me any meat? |
8688 | You will not hear me? |
8688 | You will not repay? |
8688 | You will say that Sparta was wrong, but what should she have done? |
8688 | You, Lysistrata, you who are leader of our glorious enterprise, why do I see you coming towards me with so gloomy an air? |
8688 | You? |
8688 | Your country? |
8688 | Your father? |
8688 | Your mind is on drink intent? |
8688 | Your name? |
8688 | Zeus, what art thou going to do for our people? |
8688 | Zeus,"he cries,"what are thy intentions? |
8688 | [ 177] Will you give me back my garlic? |
8688 | [ 208] And why dress in these miserable tragic rags? |
8688 | [ 248] What do you bring? |
8688 | [ 367] What is he going to tell us? |
8688 | [ 409] Now, what are you staring at, pray? |
8688 | [ 424] But why do we stand here with arms crossed? |
8688 | [ 42] Did you drink enough water to inspire you? |
8688 | [ 490] But why do they look so fixedly on the ground? |
8688 | [ 494] And where is Lacedaemon? |
8688 | [ 558] And yet who was braver than he? |
8688 | [ 80] Are you not rowing?" |
8688 | _ Her_? |
8688 | _ You_ do? |
8688 | a Megarian? |
8688 | a braggart''s? |
8688 | about what? |
8688 | accursed harlot, what do you mean to do here with your water? |
8688 | am I not free- born too? |
8688 | and furthermore, had she a friend who exerted himself to put an end to the fighting? |
8688 | and how was I then? |
8688 | and the safety of the city? |
8688 | and yet you have not left off white? |
8688 | are such exaggerations to be borne? |
8688 | are we to let ourselves be bested by a mob of women? |
8688 | are you asleep? |
8688 | are you blaming us for not having exposed you according to custom? |
8688 | are you for running away? |
8688 | are you reflecting? |
8688 | bewept Adonis enough upon their terraces? |
8688 | but what names do you want me to give them? |
8688 | but what other measures do you wish to take? |
8688 | but what shall I be, when you see me presently dressed for the wedding? |
8688 | can it be right to beat a father? |
8688 | citizens of Argos, do you hear what he says? |
8688 | do n''t shout, I beg you, dear little Hermes.... And what are you doing, comrades? |
8688 | do n''t you see, little fool, that then twice the food would be wanted? |
8688 | do you dare to jeer me? |
8688 | do you hear him? |
8688 | do you love me? |
8688 | do you not at every raid grub up the ground with your pikes to pull out every single head? |
8688 | do you not heed the herald? |
8688 | do you see that armourer yonder coming with a wry face? |
8688 | do you take away your son or do you wish me to teach him how to speak? |
8688 | do you want to make yourself vomit with this feather? |
8688 | do you wipe with both hands? |
8688 | does any of you recognize him? |
8688 | does that not please you? |
8688 | fellow, what countryman are you? |
8688 | great baboon, with such a beard do you seek to play the eunuch to us? |
8688 | has it not done me ills enough? |
8688 | how am I to pay the wages of my young foxes? |
8688 | how did you come here? |
8688 | how get the better of these ferocious creatures? |
8688 | how shall I give tongue to my joy and sufficiently praise you? |
8688 | how? |
8688 | if I say_ him_, do I make the_ trough_ masculine? |
8688 | in the name of the gods, are you purposing to assault me then? |
8688 | in the name of the gods, what possesses you? |
8688 | is it not so? |
8688 | is our Father, Zeus, the Olympian, not a god? |
8688 | is that not a sow then? |
8688 | looking for a tavern, I suppose, eh? |
8688 | must I really and truly die? |
8688 | must your body be free of blows, and not mine? |
8688 | my dears, methinks I see fire and smoke; can it be a conflagration? |
8688 | my good friend, did you have a good journey? |
8688 | my poor fellow, what is your condition? |
8688 | now what countrywomen may they be? |
8688 | of the earth, did you say? |
8688 | of what country, then? |
8688 | shall the men be underneath? |
8688 | shall we stop their cackle? |
8688 | the children are to weep and the fathers go free? |
8688 | to what god are you offering it? |
8688 | 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 market- places? |
8688 | twelve minae to Pasias? |
8688 | venerated goddess, who givest us our grapes, where am I to find the ten- thousand- gallon words[306] wherewith to greet thee? |
8688 | was this the way you robbed me? |
8688 | what Zeus? |
8688 | what are you doing? |
8688 | what are you doing? |
8688 | what are you drawing there? |
8688 | what are you going to say? |
8688 | what are you proposing to do? |
8688 | what bird''s? |
8688 | what can be done? |
8688 | what country are those animals from? |
8688 | what debt comes next, after that of Pasias? |
8688 | what do those cries mean? |
8688 | what do you call it? |
8688 | what do you reckon to sing? |
8688 | what does that matter to merry companions in their cups? |
8688 | what has happened to you? |
8688 | what have you got there so hard? |
8688 | what is this I hear? |
8688 | what is to be done? |
8688 | what is to become of us, wretched mortals that we are? |
8688 | what kind of bird is this? |
8688 | what matter of that? |
8688 | what says the oracle? |
8688 | what use of words? |
8688 | what will become of me? |
8688 | what would you do? |
8688 | what''s that you say? |
8688 | where did you discover them, pray? |
8688 | where is the doorkeeper? |
8688 | where must I bring my aid? |
8688 | where must I sow dread? |
8688 | where shall I find it? |
8688 | whither away so fast? |
8688 | who is burning down our house? |
8688 | who is this man, crowned with laurel, who is coming to me? |
8688 | who is this whining fellow? |
8688 | who wants me to uncase my dreadful Gorgon''s head? |
8688 | who will buy them? |
8688 | why art thou silent? |
8688 | why do you cry so? |
8688 | why should I dally thus instead of rapping at the door? |
8688 | why these tears? |
8688 | will daylight never come? |
8688 | will these nights never end? |
8688 | will you hear them squeal? |
8688 | will you kill this coal- basket, my beloved comrade? |
8688 | wo n''t the crests go any more, friend? |
8688 | wo n''t you come back home? |
8688 | would you mock me? |
8688 | would you not say him for Cleonymus? |
8688 | you declare war against birds? |
8688 | you down there, what are you after now? |
8688 | you fellow on the roof, what are you doing up there? |
8688 | you have the nature of a dog and you dare to fight a cynecephalus? |
8688 | you start, do you? |
8688 | you turn away your face? |
8688 | you would leave me, you would vanish into the sky, you would go to the crows? |
8688 | your name? |
8689 | And why remain sitting on this tomb, wrapped in this long veil, oh, stranger lady? 8689 And you, what is your name? |
8689 | Are you Grecian or born in this country? |
8689 | But what do I behold? 8689 Do you propose to prevent me from taking my wife, the daughter of Tyndareus, to Sparta?" |
8689 | Is Proteus in these parts? |
8689 | Of what Proteus? |
8689 | To what master does this splendid palace belong? 8689 What are you saying? |
8689 | What is this shore whither the wind has driven our boat? |
8689 | Where are you going? |
8689 | Who is the old woman who reviles you, stranger lady? |
8689 | Who knows if living be not dying,[536] if breathing be not feasting, if sleep be not a fleece? 8689 Who loiters at the door of the vestibule? |
8689 | Why is it necessary that Andromeda should have all the woes for her share? |
8689 | Why shameful, if the spectators do not think so? 8689 [ 518] Do you note the harmonious rhythm? |
8689 | [ 581] Is a maiden unwell? 8689 ''Tis not merely for the present that I am frightened; but when I have eaten, where is it to find an outlet now? 8689 ''[ 554] Whence comes this effeminate? 8689 ''tis a bird, but of what kind? 8689 (_ To Cario._) But tell me, where is Plutus now? 8689 (_ To Philocleon._) But you have not finished? 8689 (_ To the Triballian._) What do you say? 8689 --Are you a peacock? 8689 ... Have I mentioned the woman who killed her husband with a hatchet? 8689 ... to be pedicated? 8689 ... who buried her father beneath the bath? 8689 A blunder? 8689 A just man then? 8689 A long time? 8689 A man? 8689 A merchant? 8689 A rat? 8689 A shrimp or a spider? 8689 A torch? 8689 A young boy, then? 8689 A young maiden, beautiful as the immortals, chained to this rock like a vessel in port? |
8689 | About the door? |
8689 | Accuses me of what? |
8689 | Aeschylus, why do you keep silent? |
8689 | All? |
8689 | Am I awake? |
8689 | Am I bound to dispute with this fellow? |
8689 | Am I mad? |
8689 | Am I not truly unfortunate? |
8689 | Am I to buy it of him? |
8689 | Among us, when we see a thoughtless man, we ask,"What sort of bird is this?" |
8689 | Amynon? |
8689 | And Agathon? |
8689 | And I get nothing whatever of the paternal property? |
8689 | And I, what am I to do? |
8689 | And I? |
8689 | And Pythangelus? |
8689 | And Xenocles? |
8689 | And a short mantle? |
8689 | And are you looking for a greater city than Athens? |
8689 | And because I have uttered what I thought right in favour of Euripides, do you want to depilate me for my trouble? |
8689 | And by what means will these slaves be got? |
8689 | And by what right, pray? |
8689 | And ca n''t you see Gusistraté, the tavern- keeper''s wife, with a lamp in her hand, and the wives of Philodoretus and Chaeretades? |
8689 | And did he not do this every night? |
8689 | And did he not get stoned? |
8689 | And did not the god come? |
8689 | And did you not lose your crow, when you fell sprawling on the ground? |
8689 | And do n''t you know the decrees that have been voted? |
8689 | And do you remember that about the copper coinage? |
8689 | And does not divine Homer owe his immortal glory to his noble teachings? |
8689 | And does the author of such rubbish dare to criticize my songs? |
8689 | And everything that used to be the men''s concern has been given over to the women? |
8689 | And had Aeschylus not his friends too? |
8689 | And have you not done me the most deadly injury by seeking to banish me from every country? |
8689 | And have you not heard what a dandy Phrynichus was[558] and how careful in his dress? |
8689 | And his? |
8689 | And how about my eyes? |
8689 | And how about the man who has no land, but only gold and silver coins, that can not be seen? |
8689 | And how are we to give them health, which belongs to the gods? |
8689 | And how can you give a man wings with your words? |
8689 | And how did you teach them this bravery? |
8689 | And how do you think to escape them? |
8689 | And how has this law disturbed Aeschylus? |
8689 | And how is he going to manage that? |
8689 | And how is that to be crossed? |
8689 | And how shall we give wealth to mankind? |
8689 | And how should you be able to do that, you, who are but a mortal? |
8689 | And how so, pray? |
8689 | And how so? |
8689 | And how? |
8689 | And if I do decide? |
8689 | And if it does? |
8689 | And if the blear- eyed Neoclides[672] comes to insult you? |
8689 | And if the women have you beaten? |
8689 | And if they fly at you? |
8689 | And if they laugh you in the face? |
8689 | And if we are not able? |
8689 | And if you have failed in this duty, if out of honest and pure- minded men you have made rogues, what punishment do you think is your meet? |
8689 | And in truth am I not really bound? |
8689 | And is he not doing this now by leaving you to grope your wandering way? |
8689 | And is it not harder for me to wear myself out with rowing? |
8689 | And it has a brazen leg? |
8689 | And it was voted? |
8689 | And my shoes and staff, those too went off with you? |
8689 | And now recall to me what are the advantages you enjoy, you, who pretend to rule over Greece? |
8689 | And of the needle- seller''s[749] with Pamphilus? |
8689 | And over yonder? |
8689 | And perhaps Callimachus[709] is going to take in more money than Callias owns? |
8689 | And she who carries the child? |
8689 | And tell me, is it not you who equip the triremes? |
8689 | And that Laïs is kept by Philonides? |
8689 | And that Philepsius[751] rolls off his fables? |
8689 | And that is? |
8689 | And the belt? |
8689 | And the citizen whom the lot has not given a letter showing where he is to dine will be driven off by everyone? |
8689 | And the old man, where is he? |
8689 | And then? |
8689 | And then? |
8689 | And then? |
8689 | And then? |
8689 | And there, on the other side, surely that is a girl''s bottom? |
8689 | And they are? |
8689 | And this footwear? |
8689 | And this other one, what bird is it? |
8689 | And was not such daring deserving of death? |
8689 | And what about the object of my coming? |
8689 | And what am I to do? |
8689 | And what can I do for you in the matter? |
8689 | And what desire is it, little brother? |
8689 | And what did he say to that? |
8689 | And what did he say? |
8689 | And what did the god do? |
8689 | And what do you propose to do, Aeschylus? |
8689 | And what do you think will ensure their happiness? |
8689 | And what do you want with him? |
8689 | And what does it think about it? |
8689 | And what does the crow say about the road to follow? |
8689 | And what fate has led them hither to the land of the birds? |
8689 | And what for? |
8689 | And what for? |
8689 | And what good is that, if he eats the cheese? |
8689 | And what if they prove the stronger? |
8689 | And what if they sell them for you? |
8689 | And what immortal would protect you for your crime? |
8689 | And what impels you to make these overtures? |
8689 | And what is he to do there? |
8689 | And what is that black part in the middle? |
8689 | And what is the cause of that, pray? |
8689 | And what is the name of these gods? |
8689 | And what is to become of me, poor unfortunate man? |
8689 | And what of the Corinthian courtesans? |
8689 | And what other road can the gods travel? |
8689 | And what say you? |
8689 | And what then shall be done with these shoes? |
8689 | And what was decided? |
8689 | And what will the speaker''s platform be used for? |
8689 | And what will the suit be about? |
8689 | And what will you do with the urns? |
8689 | And what''s it all about? |
8689 | And when Theorus, prone at Cleon''s feet, takes his hand and sings,"Like Admetus, love those who are brave,"[142] what reply will you make him? |
8689 | And when did you compose them? |
8689 | And when we bestow our favours on slaves and muleteers for want of better, does he mention this? |
8689 | And when you are listening to what your masters are saying? |
8689 | And when you go off grumbling, after having been well thrashed? |
8689 | And when you make yourself important? |
8689 | And when you repeat it to strangers? |
8689 | And when you talk to us of towering mountains-- Lycabettus and of the frowning Parnes[493]--is that teaching us what is good? |
8689 | And where are you going to, since you have not deposited your belongings? |
8689 | And where does the rest go then? |
8689 | And where is he? |
8689 | And where is your cloak? |
8689 | And where will the meals be served? |
8689 | And where would your offering be better bestowed than on the shoulders of a rascal and a thief? |
8689 | And which prologue are you going to examine? |
8689 | And which way does it tell us to go now? |
8689 | And whither has the poor fellow gone? |
8689 | And who are you whom my misfortunes have moved to pity? |
8689 | And who are you? |
8689 | And who avers the contrary? |
8689 | And who built such a wall? |
8689 | And who carried the mortar? |
8689 | And who feed our mercenaries at Corinth? |
8689 | And who gives it to him? |
8689 | And who has it now? |
8689 | And who is it brings an owl to Athens? |
8689 | And who is the prosecutor before the dicasts? |
8689 | And who was the first one you met? |
8689 | And who was the thief? |
8689 | And who will be the judge? |
8689 | And why change it, you great fool? |
8689 | And why did you not ask your wife for it? |
8689 | And why did you not take your mantle? |
8689 | And why do you place yourself at the window? |
8689 | And why libations, why so many ceremonies, if wine plays no part in them? |
8689 | And why, pray, does it draggle this fashion? |
8689 | And why? |
8689 | And with what intent? |
8689 | And with what responding tones did the sacred tripod resound? |
8689 | And yet can anyone style himself your benefactor, when he does not cast a morsel to your poor dog? |
8689 | And yet we listen to such things? |
8689 | And yet what is the use of being rich, if you are to be deprived of all these enjoyments? |
8689 | And you are seasoning them before answering us? |
8689 | And you are stupid enough not to understand the meaning of such an answer? |
8689 | And you dare to look me in the face after such a shameful deed? |
8689 | And you did not tremble at the sound of his threatening words? |
8689 | And you do n''t send him to us, to your friends? |
8689 | And you were quickly ruined? |
8689 | And you will repeat them? |
8689 | And you wish to dedicate them too? |
8689 | And you yourself, who are you? |
8689 | And you, how do you form your prologues? |
8689 | And you, what have you to say? |
8689 | And you, what is your opinion? |
8689 | And you, what''s your opinion? |
8689 | And you? |
8689 | And you? |
8689 | Aphrodité, why dost thou fire me with such delight in her? |
8689 | Are not you the cause of Pamphilus''sufferings? |
8689 | Are the sandals there? |
8689 | Are there others then? |
8689 | Are these not our everyday tricks? |
8689 | Are these the mighty benefits with which you pretend to load mankind? |
8689 | Are they hoping with our help to triumph over their foes or to be useful to their friends? |
8689 | Are they mad? |
8689 | Are they not our most mortal foes? |
8689 | Are they the just? |
8689 | Are two men to fly from a woman? |
8689 | Are we going to banquet? |
8689 | Are we going to war about a woman? |
8689 | Are we in a condition to show fight? |
8689 | Are wolves to be spared? |
8689 | Are you a husbandman? |
8689 | Are you a woman? |
8689 | Are you an ape plastered with white lead, or the ghost of some old hag returned from the dark borderlands of death? |
8689 | Are you asking for the old woman who carried the lyre? |
8689 | Are you asleep? |
8689 | Are you calling me? |
8689 | Are you chaffing me about my feathers? |
8689 | Are you dicasts? |
8689 | Are you distraught, as if you had just returned from Pluto? |
8689 | Are you going to talk of cats and rats among high- class people? |
8689 | Are you knocking? |
8689 | Are you mad, I ask you? |
8689 | Are you mad? |
8689 | Are you mad? |
8689 | Are you mad? |
8689 | Are you mad? |
8689 | Are you mocking me? |
8689 | Are you mocking me? |
8689 | Are you moving or are you going to pawn your stuff? |
8689 | Are you never going to be done? |
8689 | Are you not astonished at the wall being completed so quickly? |
8689 | Are you really going to carry them in? |
8689 | Are you so stupid, such a fool? |
8689 | Are you telling me the truth? |
8689 | As to power, am I not equal to the king of the gods? |
8689 | Assuredly, my child, but tell me what nice thing do you want me to buy you? |
8689 | At what, then? |
8689 | Aye, which? |
8689 | Because I obey the law? |
8689 | Because he has known and shown up two or three of our faults, when we have a thousand? |
8689 | Before I lose my spleen entirely, Euripides, can you at least tell me whither you are leading me? |
8689 | Before drinking? |
8689 | Before having laid it down? |
8689 | Besides, friend, why should there be lawsuits? |
8689 | But am I not carrying it? |
8689 | But am I not the most unfortunate of men? |
8689 | But answer me; are you the mother of this brat? |
8689 | But come, what is it like to live with the birds? |
8689 | But could I judge as well with my mouth full? |
8689 | But do you deem it fitting to make us run like this before ever telling us why your master has called us? |
8689 | But do you see all those hooked claws? |
8689 | But first say, who will sell them, if everyone is rich? |
8689 | But has the Assembly taken place then? |
8689 | But how am I to work two oars at once? |
8689 | But how are we going to lift up our arm[675] in the Assembly, we, who only know how to lift our legs in the act of love? |
8689 | But how are you going to get out of the mess? |
8689 | But how can they be gathered together? |
8689 | But how could they put the mortar into hods? |
8689 | But how could we employ you here? |
8689 | But how could you see all this, you arch- rascal, when you say you were hiding all the time? |
8689 | But how do the Corinthians concern me? |
8689 | But how do you mean for all? |
8689 | But how shall we obtain clothing? |
8689 | But how will mankind recognize us as gods and not as jays? |
8689 | But how would a man fail to be recognized amongst women? |
8689 | But how? |
8689 | But however has it got as far as that? |
8689 | But if Cephalus[670] belches forth insults against you, what answer will you give him in the Assembly? |
8689 | But if a fellow- citizen, a friend, came to pay my ransom? |
8689 | But if admission is forbidden you? |
8689 | But if these notice it and want to fish me up and drag me back into the house, what will you do? |
8689 | But if we are truly such a pest, why marry us? |
8689 | But if we live in this fashion, how will each one know his children? |
8689 | But if you kill me at the outset, how shall I afterwards go to find this beautiful girl of mine? |
8689 | But if you lose your case, what punishment will you submit to? |
8689 | But is it not the folk who rob most that have all these things? |
8689 | But just look at this tool; is that like a woman? |
8689 | But may I not enter an excuse? |
8689 | But might she not stop with me? |
8689 | But now your name, what is it?" |
8689 | But tell me, friends, where is my mistress''s husband? |
8689 | But tell me, has your father had you entered on the registers of his phratria? |
8689 | But tell me, whence come you to be so squalid? |
8689 | But tell me, where are you flying to? |
8689 | But tell me, who are you? |
8689 | But tell me, why do the people admire me? |
8689 | But we are rich; why should we keep a haggling Hermes? |
8689 | But we old men, shall we have penis enough if we have to satisfy the ugly first? |
8689 | But what are all these birds doing in heaven? |
8689 | But what can have attracted such a crowd at that early hour? |
8689 | But what did you want with a cock in tragedy? |
8689 | But what do all these insults betoken? |
8689 | But what do you want to do with me? |
8689 | But what does this mean? |
8689 | But what god shall be its patron? |
8689 | But what if my father wished to give me his property on his death- bed, even though I be a bastard? |
8689 | But what if they do n''t? |
8689 | But what is he driving at? |
8689 | But what is there to judge? |
8689 | But what is your name? |
8689 | But what kind of life is it you propose to set up? |
8689 | But what matter brings you here? |
8689 | But what need of a lyre in his case? |
8689 | But what object can have induced you to come among us? |
8689 | But what prevents your going there? |
8689 | But what sort of city should we build? |
8689 | But what sweet hope is this that sets my heart a- throb? |
8689 | But what was your dream? |
8689 | But what weapons have we? |
8689 | But what will you say of it, if he should triumph in the debate? |
8689 | But what would you? |
8689 | But what? |
8689 | But where am I to find one-- where? |
8689 | But where can a place be found for hearing well? |
8689 | But where do you hail from? |
8689 | But where shall I go? |
8689 | But where shall we be buried, if we die? |
8689 | But where shall we find orators in an Assembly of women? |
8689 | But where will the lender get the money to lend, if all is in common? |
8689 | But where, pray, did you learn all these pretty things? |
8689 | But where? |
8689 | But which one then? |
8689 | But who are you, pray? |
8689 | But who are you? |
8689 | But who could listen to such words without exclaiming? |
8689 | But who will do the work? |
8689 | But whom has he thus ill- used? |
8689 | But why do you tarry, Blepyrus? |
8689 | But why does he want to treat us in that scurvy fashion? |
8689 | But why is that? |
8689 | But why not go and defend yourself? |
8689 | But why this cock? |
8689 | But why, if he is Cleonymus, has he not thrown away his crest? |
8689 | But why, pray, since you also claim to be a god, should you not be beaten like myself? |
8689 | But will you pay the debt? |
8689 | But with what object now do you bring this old cloak, which your slave is carrying? |
8689 | But would you not prefer to live quietly and free from all care and anxiety? |
8689 | But you, you foe of the gods, what have you done that is so good? |
8689 | But your infirmity; how did that happen? |
8689 | But, after all, what sort of city would please you best? |
8689 | But, cursed man, what harm have my Sthenoboeas done to Athens? |
8689 | But, father, if the Archon[47] should not form a court to- day, how are we to buy our dinner? |
8689 | But, great gods, what am I to think? |
8689 | But, great gods, what is the matter then? |
8689 | But, poet, what ill wind drove you here? |
8689 | But, poor fellow, what is his aim? |
8689 | But, tell me, who did the woodwork? |
8689 | But_ anyhow_, what if they do n''t? |
8689 | By Posidon, do you see that many- coloured bird? |
8689 | By which gate did you pass through the wall, wretched woman? |
8689 | By which gate? |
8689 | By which of his pieces does he set most store? |
8689 | Can I be the son of Alcmena, I, a slave and a mortal? |
8689 | Can anyone direct me where Chremylus is? |
8689 | Can anyone keep such a dog? |
8689 | Can anything better be conceived for the public weal? |
8689 | Can it be Cinesias[680] who has befouled you so? |
8689 | Can it be I am treated thus? |
8689 | Can not you keep still then, fellow, once you get a whiff of a bit of tripe? |
8689 | Can some friend have invited her to a feast? |
8689 | Can they be bearing us ill- will? |
8689 | Can you be a female informer? |
8689 | Can you have any other lover than that old fop Geres? |
8689 | Can you remember that name? |
8689 | Can you see any bird? |
8689 | Can you see any god behind me? |
8689 | Can you smell anything, rascal? |
8689 | Clever men? |
8689 | Come now, what must be done? |
8689 | Concerning what? |
8689 | Could I not sell it just as well? |
8689 | 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? |
8689 | Could you do mankind a greater harm? |
8689 | Could you find your country again from here? |
8689 | Could you not have told me? |
8689 | Could you tell us where Pluto dwells? |
8689 | Cruel wretch, will you leave me pitilessly among the dead? |
8689 | Cursed beast, what are you croaking to me?... |
8689 | D''ye see? |
8689 | D''ye take me for a fool? |
8689 | D''you hear him? |
8689 | D''you know what you look like? |
8689 | D''you know you have made us lose a_ sextary_ of wheat, which I should have bought with the_ triobolus_ of the Assembly? |
8689 | D''you see? |
8689 | Dancing wenches? |
8689 | Dare you reply, you scoundrels, you who are caught red- handed at the most horrible crime? |
8689 | Dear old men, am I near the house where the new god lives, or have I missed the road? |
8689 | Did I not tell you of it yesterday? |
8689 | Did I not tell you, you were going to plague me? |
8689 | Did it hurt you? |
8689 | Did you fight? |
8689 | Did you get one? |
8689 | Did you get the triobolus? |
8689 | Did you notice? |
8689 | Did you present yourself to the officers in command of the jays? |
8689 | Did you see the parricides and the perjured he told us of? |
8689 | Did you? |
8689 | Do I look like a coward of your kidney? |
8689 | Do n''t you hear? |
8689 | Do n''t you know the cawing crow lives five times as long as a man? |
8689 | Do n''t you know what sort of an animal we are guarding here? |
8689 | Do n''t you know? |
8689 | Do n''t you propose taking what belongs to you to the common stock? |
8689 | Do n''t you remember the one reducing the price of salt, eh? |
8689 | Do n''t you see Melisticé, the wife of Smicythion, hurrying hither in her great shoes? |
8689 | Do n''t you see that a single kite could easily carry off the lot at once? |
8689 | Do n''t you take your share of those offerings? |
8689 | Do what? |
8689 | Do you conceive my bent? |
8689 | Do you deem me so brazen as all that, and my words mere lies? |
8689 | Do you forget, then, how I used to take care he knew nothing about it when you were stealing something from your master? |
8689 | Do you hear? |
8689 | Do you insult me thus before this crowd? |
8689 | Do you know a certain individual at Cothocidae[599]...? |
8689 | Do you know how dearly I should like to split her legs for her? |
8689 | Do you know this woman? |
8689 | Do you know what to do? |
8689 | Do you like Nephelococcygia? |
8689 | Do you not see it is of several different colours? |
8689 | Do you note it? |
8689 | Do you ply any trade? |
8689 | Do you pretend to be a man? |
8689 | Do you recall that evening when you stooled against the column where the decrees are posted? |
8689 | Do you refuse these gifts? |
8689 | Do you see how opportunely I got you away from the solicitations of those fellows, who wanted to make you work their tools in your mouth? |
8689 | Do you see that little door? |
8689 | Do you see the stupid thing? |
8689 | Do you see them, master? |
8689 | Do you see what lawsuits you are drawing upon yourself with your drunkenness? |
8689 | Do you see yourself? |
8689 | Do you take me for a Lydian or a Phrygian[322] and think to frighten me with your big words? |
8689 | Do you take me or shall I explain myself in some other way? |
8689 | Do you think it is doing me no harm to restore Plutus to the use of his eyes? |
8689 | Do you think that is honest? |
8689 | Do you think twenty deaths a sufficiently large stake? |
8689 | Do you understand? |
8689 | Do you understand? |
8689 | Do you want any more? |
8689 | Do you want me to die of hunger? |
8689 | Do you want me to tell you a very steep road, one that descends very quickly? |
8689 | Do you want some other drollery? |
8689 | Do you want to beat in the door? |
8689 | Do you want to dethrone your own father? |
8689 | Do you want to fight it? |
8689 | Do you want to fly straight to Pellené? |
8689 | Do you want to see yourself? |
8689 | Do you want us to fling ourselves headlong down these rocks? |
8689 | Does a bird need a servant, then? |
8689 | Does he mean to say that Hermes had watched, only that Agamemnon should perish at the hands of a woman and be the victim of a criminal intrigue? |
8689 | Does he not repeat that we are all vice, that we are the curse of our husbands? |
8689 | Does he not resemble a she- ass to the life? |
8689 | Does he not say she must be given to the swallows? |
8689 | Does he not style us gay, lecherous, drunken, traitorous, boastful? |
8689 | Does it come from Marathon or have you picked it out of some labourer''s chanty? |
8689 | Does it not seem that everything is extravagance in the world, or rather madness, when you watch the way things go? |
8689 | Does it suit me? |
8689 | Does not everything depend on wealth? |
8689 | Does the son of Pisias want to betray the gates of the city to the foe? |
8689 | Doubtless the god pulled a wry face? |
8689 | Dressed in a long robe? |
8689 | Drive me out? |
8689 | During the Assembly, wretched woman? |
8689 | During the sacrifice? |
8689 | Eh, what''s the matter, child? |
8689 | Euripides said,"Why is is shameful, if the spectators, who enjoy it, do not think so?" |
8689 | Far better, are they not? |
8689 | Father, would you give me something if I asked for it? |
8689 | Firstly, who is this? |
8689 | For instance, what is the origin of the power that Zeus wields over the other gods? |
8689 | For outrage? |
8689 | From what country? |
8689 | From what country? |
8689 | From whom will they take them? |
8689 | From whom? |
8689 | Gather songs in the clouds? |
8689 | Go down to hell? |
8689 | Good gods, where_ is_ your heart? |
8689 | Had any other folk come to beseech the deity? |
8689 | Had we not better confer together and come to some understanding? |
8689 | Has he lost his shoes? |
8689 | Has he not hit us enough, calumniated us sufficiently, wherever there are spectators, tragedians, and a chorus? |
8689 | Has it seen the feast of cups thrice or four times? |
8689 | Have I told how you attributed to yourself the male child your slave had just borne and gave her your little daughter? |
8689 | Have these birds come to contend for the double stadium prize? |
8689 | Have we not the right to speak frankly at this gathering? |
8689 | Have you a permit, bearing the seal of the storks? |
8689 | Have you ever been suddenly seized with a desire for pea- soup? |
8689 | Have you no Greek town you can propose to us? |
8689 | Have you not drunk up your money then? |
8689 | 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? |
8689 | Have you really grown rich as they say? |
8689 | Have you some good hope to offer us or merely"Hellé''s sacred waves"? |
8689 | Have you the beards that we had all to get ourselves for the Assembly? |
8689 | Have you then stolen so much as all that? |
8689 | Have you ulcers to hide like Laespodias? |
8689 | He has a big beard? |
8689 | He has indeed sold us this jay, a true son of Tharelides,[178] for an obolus, and this crow for three, but what can they do? |
8689 | He must then be a pretty coarse kind of god? |
8689 | 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? |
8689 | He, however, shouted louder than they all, and looking at them asked,"Why, what ought I to have done?" |
8689 | How I frightened him? |
8689 | How can one and the same animal have cast away his buckler both on land, in the sky and at sea? |
8689 | How can one say he was fortunate at first? |
8689 | How can tragedy be weighed? |
8689 | How can we fail then to be mistaken for men? |
8689 | How can you claim to be carrying it, when you are carried? |
8689 | How can you, a slave and a mortal, be the son of Alcmena? |
8689 | How could I use this power, which you say I have? |
8689 | How creative? |
8689 | How dare you talk like this, you impudent hussy? |
8689 | How do the dwellers in these parts knock? |
8689 | How do you mean? |
8689 | How does that concern you, friend? |
8689 | How is that? |
8689 | How is that? |
8689 | How is that? |
8689 | How is this? |
8689 | How laughable? |
8689 | How long since? |
8689 | How much does it hold? |
8689 | How must I recline? |
8689 | How old is it? |
8689 | How so? |
8689 | How so? |
8689 | How so? |
8689 | How their pole? |
8689 | How then? |
8689 | How twice over? |
8689 | How will they get at it? |
8689 | How will you be able to cry when once your eyes are pecked out? |
8689 | How, in the gods''name? |
8689 | How, pray? |
8689 | How? |
8689 | I alone? |
8689 | I alone? |
8689 | 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? |
8689 | I begin, but where is he with the basket? |
8689 | I can do so many things by myself and unaided? |
8689 | I cowardly? |
8689 | I have not the right to dedicate myself entirely to my country''s service? |
8689 | I mightier than he? |
8689 | I remember that well enough, but what connection is there with present circumstances? |
8689 | I say, Epops, you are not the only one of your kind then? |
8689 | I shall no longer have to tire myself out with work from daybreak onwards? |
8689 | I, who have never set foot on a ship? |
8689 | I? |
8689 | I? |
8689 | I? |
8689 | I? |
8689 | I? |
8689 | If sacrifices are offered to him, is not Plutus their cause? |
8689 | If the archers drag you away, what will you do? |
8689 | If there were no barbarian gods, who would be the patron of Execestides? |
8689 | If they are happy, is not that the chief thing towards health? |
8689 | In the name of the gods, who are you? |
8689 | In what manner shall I put him to the question? |
8689 | In what way distinct? |
8689 | In what way? |
8689 | In what way? |
8689 | In what way? |
8689 | Indeed, and what are their plans? |
8689 | Indeed? |
8689 | Indeed? |
8689 | Indoors? |
8689 | Is Iophon[396] dead then? |
8689 | Is a woman weaving a garland for herself? |
8689 | Is all that there? |
8689 | Is all that there? |
8689 | Is beggary not Poverty''s sister? |
8689 | Is he dispersing the clouds or gathering them? |
8689 | Is he really acquitted? |
8689 | Is he then really blind? |
8689 | Is it I you seek? |
8689 | Is it a procession that you are starting off to the public crier, Hiero? |
8689 | Is it a question of feasting? |
8689 | Is it absolutely necessary? |
8689 | Is it actual, downright madness? |
8689 | Is it already over then? |
8689 | Is it in Nephelococcygia that all the wealth of Theogenes[271] and most of Aeschines''[272] is? |
8689 | Is it no later than that? |
8689 | Is it not because of you that Agyrrhius[750] lets wind so loudly? |
8689 | Is it not evident to the blind, that nowadays to do nothing that is right is the best way to get on? |
8689 | Is it not he who draws the citizens to the Assembly? |
8689 | Is it not he who lends the Great King all his pride? |
8689 | Is it not he who taught the warlike virtues, the art of fighting and of carrying arms? |
8689 | Is it not laughable? |
8689 | Is it not said, that the cleverest speakers are those who submit themselves oftenest to men? |
8689 | Is it not said, that the dicasts, when deceived by lying witnesses, have need to ruminate well in order to arrive at the truth? |
8689 | Is it not the most priceless gift of all, to be winged? |
8689 | 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? |
8689 | Is it possible that the gods have chosen such an envoy? |
8689 | Is it the fall of day? |
8689 | Is it the one which Thrasybulus spoke about to the Lacedaemonians? |
8689 | Is n''t it a peacock? |
8689 | Is not Orestes speaking in this fashion before his father''s tomb? |
8689 | Is not old age filled with cruel ills? |
8689 | Is not this great power indeed, which allows even wealth to be disdained? |
8689 | Is that cursed rascal putting on airs? |
8689 | Is that enough? |
8689 | Is that kind of seed sown among you? |
8689 | Is that not my neighbour Blepyrus? |
8689 | Is that not the first duty of an honest man? |
8689 | Is that the kind of thing that pleases you? |
8689 | Is the country served by vile intrigue? |
8689 | Is the old man at it again, escaping through some loophole? |
8689 | Is the swallow in sight? |
8689 | Is there a being who lives more in the midst of delights, who is more feared, aged though he be? |
8689 | Is there a man of sense who will do such a thing? |
8689 | Is there a pleasure, a blessing comparable with that of a juryman? |
8689 | Is there a single word to condemn in that? |
8689 | Is there a slave who has done something wrong? |
8689 | Is there another glutton besides Cleonymus? |
8689 | Is there no chance of sharing? |
8689 | Is there no one has any spirit at all? |
8689 | Is there not a crowd of other little lads, who produce tragedies by the thousand and are a thousand times more loquacious than Euripides? |
8689 | Is there one? |
8689 | Is there sedition in your city? |
8689 | Is there some man following us? |
8689 | Is there_ not_ one? |
8689 | Is this a torch? |
8689 | Is this doing you harm, that we shower blessings on all men? |
8689 | Is this not a fine one? |
8689 | Is this not opposed to all good sense? |
8689 | Is this the first urn? |
8689 | Is this the rascal of whom Clisthenes told us? |
8689 | Is''t very heavy? |
8689 | Is_ he_ in the plot then? |
8689 | It is a long time, then, since he saw you? |
8689 | Keep my courage, when I''m being burnt up? |
8689 | Keep silent before this fellow? |
8689 | Let a doctor be fetched; but which is the cleverest in this branch of the science? |
8689 | Let me see, what is the best road to show you? |
8689 | Let me see, whom could I best send to him? |
8689 | Let''s see, have you ever been here before? |
8689 | Like this? |
8689 | May I not at least say, that unless I am relieved of this cursed load I shall let wind? |
8689 | Might it be the tavern- keeper in my neighbourhood, who is always cheating me in measure? |
8689 | Might it be"the Aether, the dwelling of Zeus,"or"the wing of Time"? |
8689 | Might you then have had dealings with Clisthenes? |
8689 | Must I knock again? |
8689 | Must the laws not be obeyed then? |
8689 | Must they die in early youth? |
8689 | Must we not go and seek a physician? |
8689 | My best feat? |
8689 | My good fellow, what has happened to your friends? |
8689 | My husband? |
8689 | My share of what, pray? |
8689 | No head- bird gave you a safe- conduct? |
8689 | No more shall perish? |
8689 | Nobody? |
8689 | Not even the happiness that has come to you? |
8689 | Now am I to make one of those jokes that have the knack of always making the spectators laugh? |
8689 | Now another point: if the magistrates condemn a citizen to the payment of a fine, how is he going to do it? |
8689 | Now whatever are these cursed parchments? |
8689 | Now who asks to speak? |
8689 | Now why this lamentation? |
8689 | Now will you be off with your decrees? |
8689 | Now, who wishes to speak? |
8689 | Now, will you know how to talk gravely with well- informed men of good class? |
8689 | Of another, who caused hers to lose his reason with her potions? |
8689 | Of stone? |
8689 | Of the entrails-- is it so written? |
8689 | Of what country? |
8689 | Of what crimes is he not the author? |
8689 | Of which gods are you speaking? |
8689 | Of which one must I rid myself first? |
8689 | Of which? |
8689 | Of whom? |
8689 | Oh Nymphs, ye virgins who are dear to me, how am I to approach him? |
8689 | Oh, most cruel of all animals, why tear these two men to pieces, why kill them? |
8689 | Oh, my dear, would you have me caring nothing for a poor woman in that plight? |
8689 | Only what? |
8689 | Or is it merely said ironically? |
8689 | Ought you not rather to rejoice and give thanks to the gods? |
8689 | Out of the public funds? |
8689 | Over whom? |
8689 | Paralus or Salaminia? |
8689 | Pay attention and be silent about the door? |
8689 | People will not be robbed any more at night? |
8689 | Plutus in your house? |
8689 | Plutus''very own self? |
8689 | Possibly; but what was his object? |
8689 | Pray, how should you know such garments? |
8689 | Pray, is this obeying or being a slave, as you pretended to be able to prove? |
8689 | Resistance to what? |
8689 | Restore whom his sight? |
8689 | Say, cock, is not that your opinion too? |
8689 | Seek physicians at Athens? |
8689 | Seest thou how these barbarians ill- use me-- me, who have many a time made them weep a full bushel of tears? |
8689 | Shall we call it Sparta? |
8689 | Shall you know exactly how to take up the songs that are started? |
8689 | Should we not, friends, make a halt here and sign to call him out? |
8689 | Silence about what? |
8689 | Since then you have been living in misery? |
8689 | Smoke? |
8689 | So first of all, what think you of Alcibiades? |
8689 | So it seems, despite all your youthful vigour, you make it your trade to denounce strangers? |
8689 | So small? |
8689 | So that words give wings? |
8689 | So you want to earn trouble for your ribs,[1] eh? |
8689 | So''tis because of me that sacrifices are offered to him? |
8689 | Strymodorus of Conthylé, you best of mates, where is Euergides and where is Chales of Phyla? |
8689 | Swarthy, robust of build? |
8689 | Take your advice? |
8689 | Tell me, father, what do you get out of the tribute paid by so many Greek towns? |
8689 | Tell me, what''s all that yellow about you? |
8689 | Tell me, who is your husband? |
8689 | Thanks to me, they understand everything, discern all things, conduct their households better and ask themselves,"What is to be thought of this? |
8689 | That they may tear me to pieces? |
8689 | That troops are sent to succour the Egyptians? |
8689 | That wo n''t worry him much, for has he not gained them by perjury? |
8689 | The Alcibiades said to me in his lisping way,"Do you thee? |
8689 | The Greeks? |
8689 | The god of the sea? |
8689 | The time? |
8689 | Their name? |
8689 | Then he has not shared? |
8689 | Then he is acquitted? |
8689 | Then how do you live, if you do nothing? |
8689 | Then tell me this, why does all mankind flee from you? |
8689 | Then there''s Sophocles, who is greater than Euripides; if you must absolutely bring someone back from Hades, why not make him live again? |
8689 | Then what deliverance can there be for a city that will neither have cape nor cloak? |
8689 | Then what should I talk about? |
8689 | Then what witty thing shall I say? |
8689 | Then where are your breasts? |
8689 | Then where are your feathers? |
8689 | Theramenes? |
8689 | There will be no more playing at dice? |
8689 | There will be no more thieves then, eh? |
8689 | Therefore, if ever you recovered your sight, you would shun the wicked? |
8689 | This one? |
8689 | Three cotylae? |
8689 | Thus ugly Lysicrates''nose will be as proud as the handsomest face? |
8689 | Thus you will not change your mode of life? |
8689 | To begin with you; who are you? |
8689 | To cram[702] himself there like a capon? |
8689 | To do the thing fairly, how do you propose to act? |
8689 | To do what-- to spin? |
8689 | To do what? |
8689 | To do what? |
8689 | To private gods of your own, which you have made after your own image? |
8689 | To see if you were being buried? |
8689 | To the bottom of Hades? |
8689 | To what divinity is your homage addressed? |
8689 | To what? |
8689 | To- day things are better than yesterday; let us share, for are you not my friend? |
8689 | Triballian, do you want a thrashing? |
8689 | Us, who have wings and fly? |
8689 | We birds? |
8689 | We? |
8689 | Well then, do you agree? |
8689 | Well then, what name can you suggest? |
8689 | Well, Aeschylus, why are you so restless? |
8689 | Well, and then what? |
8689 | Well, and why not? |
8689 | Well, tell me, does that picture suit you? |
8689 | Well, what must he do? |
8689 | Well? |
8689 | Well? |
8689 | Well? |
8689 | Well? |
8689 | Were what? |
8689 | Were you initiated into the Great Mysteries in that cloak? |
8689 | What I love is down there,''tis down there I want to be, there, where the herald cries,"Who has not yet voted? |
8689 | What ails you, that you should shake your fist at heaven? |
8689 | What am I doing? |
8689 | What are these birds with downy feathers, who look so pitiable to me? |
8689 | What are these meats? |
8689 | What are these things? |
8689 | What are you asking? |
8689 | What are you chanting us about frosts? |
8689 | What are you chattering about cress? |
8689 | What are you daring to do, you pitiful, wretched mortals? |
8689 | What are you dong, you wretches? |
8689 | What are you grumbling and groaning for? |
8689 | What are you jabbering about? |
8689 | What are you ruminating over now again? |
8689 | What are you running away for? |
8689 | What are you saying? |
8689 | What are you saying? |
8689 | What are you saying? |
8689 | What are you saying? |
8689 | What are you shouting for? |
8689 | What are you shouting for? |
8689 | What are you, then? |
8689 | What belongs to the priestess? |
8689 | What brings you here? |
8689 | What can be done? |
8689 | What case shall we bring up first? |
8689 | What connection have they? |
8689 | What country gave birth to such an audacious woman? |
8689 | What d''you want with me? |
8689 | What do the allies do? |
8689 | What do you gain thereby? |
8689 | What do you mean, that''s little good? |
8689 | What do you mean? |
8689 | What do you mean? |
8689 | What do you mean? |
8689 | What do you mean? |
8689 | What do you reckon on doing then? |
8689 | What do you say to that, Euripides? |
8689 | What do you say? |
8689 | What do you say? |
8689 | What do you think of it? |
8689 | What do you want of me? |
8689 | What do you want to do? |
8689 | What does Pluto reckon to do? |
8689 | What does all this mean? |
8689 | What does he say? |
8689 | What does it all mean? |
8689 | What does it mean? |
8689 | What does it think? |
8689 | What does this mean? |
8689 | What does this mean? |
8689 | What does this mean? |
8689 | What does this mean? |
8689 | What else is there to do? |
8689 | What else should I do? |
8689 | What else? |
8689 | What favour? |
8689 | What flute- girl? |
8689 | What folk? |
8689 | What for? |
8689 | What for? |
8689 | What for? |
8689 | What for? |
8689 | What game is this? |
8689 | What god shall I accuse of having sought my death? |
8689 | What god was it? |
8689 | What gods? |
8689 | What good thing have you to tell me? |
8689 | What has happened then? |
8689 | What has he done now, friends, what has he done? |
8689 | What have they done to you? |
8689 | What have we here? |
8689 | What have you come to do? |
8689 | What have you done then? |
8689 | What have you done, you wretch? |
8689 | What have you seen? |
8689 | What is Zeus doing? |
8689 | What is his country? |
8689 | What is his name? |
8689 | What is his purpose? |
8689 | What is it, my child? |
8689 | What is it? |
8689 | What is it? |
8689 | What is that? |
8689 | What is the matter? |
8689 | What is the result? |
8689 | What is there that way? |
8689 | What is this bird from beyond the mountains with a look as solemn as it is stupid? |
8689 | What is this bird? |
8689 | What is this music that makes me so blithe? |
8689 | What is this wiseacre stuff you are telling me? |
8689 | What is this''phlattothrat''? |
8689 | What is this? |
8689 | What is to be done then? |
8689 | What is your most brilliant feat? |
8689 | What is''t comes here? |
8689 | What laws, you poor fellow? |
8689 | What little bottle? |
8689 | What makes you laugh? |
8689 | What makes you think that? |
8689 | What man is fool enough to let himself be depilated? |
8689 | What mean these shouts? |
8689 | What means this silence? |
8689 | What means this triple crest? |
8689 | What must be taken? |
8689 | What must be taken? |
8689 | What need for buying hooks? |
8689 | What need for you to hear what you are going to see? |
8689 | What need then had I to take this luggage, if I must not copy the porters that Phrynichus, Lycis and Amipsias[382] never fail to put on the stage? |
8689 | What object will there be in playing? |
8689 | What relation has a mirror to a sword? |
8689 | What rich man would risk his life to devote himself to this traffic? |
8689 | What risk? |
8689 | What risk? |
8689 | What say you? |
8689 | What shall our city be called? |
8689 | What shall we do there? |
8689 | What shall we do? |
8689 | What subtle trill, I wonder, is he going to warble to us? |
8689 | What then is to be done? |
8689 | What then? |
8689 | What then? |
8689 | What then? |
8689 | What was done first? |
8689 | What was done first? |
8689 | What will become of me? |
8689 | What will you say to them? |
8689 | What would you with him, friend? |
8689 | What''s he going to say now? |
8689 | What''s his name? |
8689 | What''s it all about? |
8689 | What''s it like? |
8689 | What''s that you say? |
8689 | What''s that you tell me? |
8689 | What''s that? |
8689 | What''s that? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the matter? |
8689 | What''s the purpose of your journey? |
8689 | What''s the time, please? |
8689 | What''s this? |
8689 | What''s this? |
8689 | What''s wrong then? |
8689 | What''s wrong? |
8689 | What''s your name, ship or cap? |
8689 | What''s your plan? |
8689 | What, are then the wicked those she loves? |
8689 | What, are you talking about the head of Gorgos,[644] the scribe? |
8689 | What, the club that makes him puff and pant with its weight? |
8689 | What, you fool? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | What? |
8689 | Whatever am I to do? |
8689 | Whatever are you talking about? |
8689 | When is the contest to begin? |
8689 | When they are afraid, they promise to divide Euboea[79] among you and to give each fifty bushels of wheat, but what have they given you? |
8689 | When? |
8689 | Whence comes this voice? |
8689 | Whence, how has Chremylus suddenly grown rich? |
8689 | Where am I to find him? |
8689 | Where are his puppies? |
8689 | Where are the Proxeni? |
8689 | Where are they? |
8689 | Where are they? |
8689 | Where are you dragging this unfortunate man to? |
8689 | Where are you going to land me? |
8689 | Where are you off to in this rig? |
8689 | Where are you off to? |
8689 | Where are you off to? |
8689 | Where are you running to now? |
8689 | Where can this man have hidden himself escape our notice? |
8689 | Where did you steal that new cloak from? |
8689 | Where do you come from, tell me? |
8689 | Where does_ this_ hag come from? |
8689 | Where has it gone to now? |
8689 | Where is Pisthetaerus, our leader? |
8689 | Where is Pisthetaerus? |
8689 | Where is he flying to? |
8689 | Where is he who called me? |
8689 | Where is he who gives out wings to all comers? |
8689 | Where is he? |
8689 | Where is it running to then? |
8689 | Where is it, then? |
8689 | Where is my strap? |
8689 | Where is she that I may run toward her? |
8689 | Where is that? |
8689 | Where is the breastplate, the buckler, that this wretch has not pledged? |
8689 | Where is the chief of the cohort? |
8689 | Where is the chimney cover? |
8689 | Where is the cloak, the footgear that belong to that sex? |
8689 | Where is the clove of garlic that was left over from yesterday? |
8689 | Where is the girl with the castanets? |
8689 | Where is the hussy? |
8689 | Where is the net? |
8689 | Where is the old woman then? |
8689 | Where is the plaintiff, the dog of Cydathenea? |
8689 | Where is the sign of your manhood, your penis, pray? |
8689 | Where is the sunshade carrier? |
8689 | Where might I find some? |
8689 | Where shall I come to a halt? |
8689 | Where shall I fly to, unfortunate wretch that I am? |
8689 | Where shall I fly to? |
8689 | Where then, where? |
8689 | Where will you ferry me to? |
8689 | Where''s the harm? |
8689 | Where, naughty boy? |
8689 | Where, where is he? |
8689 | Where, where, where is he? |
8689 | Where, where, where is he? |
8689 | Where, where? |
8689 | Where? |
8689 | Where? |
8689 | Where? |
8689 | Where? |
8689 | Wherever am I to stow myself? |
8689 | Which laws? |
8689 | Which one? |
8689 | Which one? |
8689 | Which way has she fled? |
8689 | Which? |
8689 | Whither are you flying? |
8689 | Whither, whither are you escaping? |
8689 | Whither, whither are you escaping? |
8689 | Who am I? |
8689 | Who am I? |
8689 | Who are these happy folk? |
8689 | Who are they? |
8689 | Who are they? |
8689 | Who are you? |
8689 | Who are you? |
8689 | Who are you? |
8689 | Who are you? |
8689 | Who are you?" |
8689 | Who calls my master? |
8689 | Who comes here? |
8689 | Who comes hither from the home of cares and misfortunes to rest on the banks of Lethé? |
8689 | Who comes to the ass''s fleece, who is for the land of the Cerberians, or the crows, or Taenarus? |
8689 | Who do you think I am? |
8689 | Who else wishes to speak? |
8689 | Who ever contested at the pancratium with a breast- plate on? |
8689 | Who has been nibbling at my olives?" |
8689 | Who has eaten off the sprat''s head? |
8689 | Who has taken the other thing?" |
8689 | Who is it detains you and shuts you in? |
8689 | Who is keeping him? |
8689 | Who is the defendant? |
8689 | Who is the rustic who approaches this sacred enclosure? |
8689 | Who is the wretch? |
8689 | Who is this Agathon? |
8689 | Who is this Basileia? |
8689 | Who is this Sardanapalus? |
8689 | Who is your tent companion? |
8689 | Who knocks at the door? |
8689 | Who then shall guard the Pelargicon? |
8689 | Who wants me? |
8689 | Who will explain the matter to them? |
8689 | Who would want paid servants after this? |
8689 | Who''s there? |
8689 | Who''s there? |
8689 | Who''s there? |
8689 | Who, who? |
8689 | Who? |
8689 | Whom do you mean? |
8689 | Whose voice is that? |
8689 | Why are they against you? |
8689 | Why are you rolling up your eyes? |
8689 | Why are you trying to make yourself so small? |
8689 | Why are you weeping? |
8689 | Why be so bent on his ruin? |
8689 | Why did you bring me from down yonder? |
8689 | Why did you go off at early dawn with my cloak? |
8689 | Why did you not reveal it to me before I founded my city? |
8689 | Why do n''t you go there? |
8689 | Why do we delay to let loose that fury, that is so terrible, when our nests are attacked? |
8689 | Why do you come with that torch in your hand? |
8689 | Why do you pull out the wick, you little dolt? |
8689 | Why do you speak to me at all? |
8689 | Why do you want to fidget about like this? |
8689 | Why does he not come to join our party? |
8689 | Why does the old man not show himself before the door? |
8689 | Why forbid us to go out or show ourselves at the window? |
8689 | Why have I no relation, no ally to speak to me like this? |
8689 | Why have you not done the same? |
8689 | Why not choose Athené Polias? |
8689 | Why not choose Lepreum in Elis for your settlement? |
8689 | Why not fair? |
8689 | Why not rather swear it by the disciples of Hippocrates? |
8689 | Why not use human language? |
8689 | Why not? |
8689 | Why not? |
8689 | Why not? |
8689 | Why should I delay, since the Republic commands me? |
8689 | Why should I hide the truth from you? |
8689 | Why so? |
8689 | Why steal, if you have a share of everything? |
8689 | Why such wrath and these shouts, before you hear my arguments? |
8689 | Why then are you setting all these things out in line? |
8689 | Why these splendid buskins? |
8689 | Why this impatience, eh? |
8689 | Why were not guards sent against him at once? |
8689 | Why with the stew- pots? |
8689 | Why, certainly; are you not born of a stranger woman? |
8689 | Why, did I invent the story of Phaedra? |
8689 | Why, do n''t you see we are speeding as fast as men can, who are already enfeebled by age? |
8689 | Why, do they think to see some advantage that determines them to settle here? |
8689 | Why, have they not been able then to procure the false beards that they must wear, or to steal their husbands cloaks? |
8689 | Why, have you been conquered by a cock? |
8689 | Why, have you not got the Barathrum[771] left? |
8689 | Why, nothing whatever but bite and scratch!--What''s the matter with you then, that you keep opening your beak? |
8689 | Why, what are you moaning and groaning for? |
8689 | Why, what else is the meaning of this chaplet? |
8689 | Why, what have I to fear? |
8689 | Why, what''s the matter, Prometheus? |
8689 | Why, whatever for? |
8689 | Why, whom do you mean to speak of? |
8689 | Why, why must fortune deal me such rough blows? |
8689 | Why, wretch, to what sacred feast are you inviting the vultures and the sea- eagles? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Why? |
8689 | Will he welcome strangers who have been tried on the billows of the sea by storm and shipwreck? |
8689 | Will neither of you come here? |
8689 | Will not man find here everything that can please him-- wisdom, love, the divine Graces, the sweet face of gentle peace? |
8689 | Will they fit me? |
8689 | Will you be ready to dare that, you madman? |
8689 | Will you buy a chaplet for me too? |
8689 | Will you carry a package to Pluto for me? |
8689 | Will you give a drachma? |
8689 | Will you have a high- sounding Laconian name? |
8689 | Will you have done with this fooling? |
8689 | Will you just pocket your salary, do nothing, and be off? |
8689 | Will you keep silence? |
8689 | Will you kindly stop here? |
8689 | 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? |
8689 | Will you let me go, you accursed animal? |
8689 | Will you never cease showing yourself hard and intractable, and especially to the accused? |
8689 | Will you not clear off? |
8689 | Will you please have the goodness to place yourself there, pot- belly? |
8689 | Will you say that Zeus can not discern what is best? |
8689 | Will you speak then? |
8689 | Will you stay with us and form a chorus of winged birds as slender as Leotrophides[336] for the Cecropid tribe? |
8689 | With what object? |
8689 | Wo n''t you be off quickly? |
8689 | Wo n''t you begone? |
8689 | Would anyone call you an old friend of mine?" |
8689 | Would he be openly present or secretly? |
8689 | Would you do a friend a service? |
8689 | Would you do this better if you had wings? |
8689 | Would you like us to mock together at Archidemus? |
8689 | Yes, certainly, and now every Athenian who returns home, bawls to his slaves,"Where is the stew- pot? |
8689 | Yes, yes; have you seen her? |
8689 | You are bent on contributing then? |
8689 | You are chattering still? |
8689 | You are chattering still? |
8689 | You are hated by all and you claim to be an honest man? |
8689 | You are not thinking of taking back what you gave me yourself? |
8689 | You ask me who I am? |
8689 | You carried it? |
8689 | You deny it? |
8689 | You do n''t think I have come from a lover''s? |
8689 | You have Plutus? |
8689 | You have done no man an injury? |
8689 | You have never seen him? |
8689 | You hear him, illustrious Achilles,[485] and what are you going to reply? |
8689 | You say that you give her? |
8689 | You were Tereus, and what are you now? |
8689 | You will bring her back? |
8689 | 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? |
8689 | You will not go? |
8689 | You will prove it? |
8689 | You will wither my prologues with a little bottle? |
8689 | You wished for a woman? |
8689 | You wo n''t escape, for is there indeed a single valid argument to oppose me with? |
8689 | You would leave the gods to stop here? |
8689 | You would visit the good? |
8689 | You, gods? |
8689 | You? |
8689 | Your tablets? |
8689 | [ 102] where are you? |
8689 | [ 175] Do you think I should walk straight for yon tree? |
8689 | [ 191] As much as to say,_ Then you have such things as anti- dicasts?_ And Euelpides practically replies,_ Very few_. |
8689 | [ 208] But what is the meaning of all these crests? |
8689 | [ 256] Is it not clear that we are a prophetic Apollo to you? |
8689 | [ 261] Are you Phrygian like Spintharus? |
8689 | [ 263] Are you a slave and a Carian like Execestides? |
8689 | [ 314] Pisthetaerus modifies the Greek proverbial saying,"To what use can not hands be put?" |
8689 | [ 332] Why have you come here a- twisting your game leg in circles? |
8689 | [ 341] How do you like them? |
8689 | [ 370] Besides, is not Athené recognized as Zeus''sole heiress? |
8689 | [ 386] Why, what''s the matter? |
8689 | [ 387] What does this mean? |
8689 | [ 417] Well, what are we going to do? |
8689 | [ 48] Meaning,"Will it only remain for us to throw ourselves into the water?" |
8689 | [ 530] Is this fine idea your own or is it Cephisophon''s? |
8689 | [ 555] What could be more contradictory? |
8689 | [ 580] Does she let some vase drop while going or returning to the house? |
8689 | [ 610] Where indeed? |
8689 | [ 615] Among the last year''s Senators, who have just yielded their office to other citizens, is there one who equals Eubulé? |
8689 | [ 622] What will attract him? |
8689 | [ 661] Wretched woman, where are your senses? |
8689 | [ 665] Is there talk of equipping a fleet? |
8689 | [ 78] What has become of my strength? |
8689 | _ I_ deceive myself, when I am judging? |
8689 | a bird a barber? |
8689 | a bird or a peacock? |
8689 | after you have given us this delightful son?" |
8689 | am I not deserving of pity? |
8689 | and had you no fear of the god? |
8689 | and how can I? |
8689 | and how? |
8689 | and since when, pray? |
8689 | and this? |
8689 | and who sends you here, you rascal? |
8689 | and yet you wear your hair long? |
8689 | are there woollen ox- guts[133] then at Ecbatana? |
8689 | are you going to strip a mother of nine children naked? |
8689 | are you not delighted to be cleaving the air? |
8689 | are you seeking to tyrannize, or do you think that Athens must pay you your seasonings as a tribute?" |
8689 | are you still afraid of the Scythian? |
8689 | are you still there? |
8689 | but what means are there to buy anything if you are not there to give the money? |
8689 | call my town Sparta? |
8689 | d''you think so? |
8689 | do n''t the men drink then in the Assembly? |
8689 | do n''t you want to stop any longer? |
8689 | do you always want to be fooled? |
8689 | do you hear me? |
8689 | do you hear what he says? |
8689 | do you see what swarms of birds are gathering here? |
8689 | father, what''s the matter, what is it? |
8689 | for whom shall we weave the peplus? |
8689 | friend, was it you who knocked so loudly? |
8689 | friend, what are you after there? |
8689 | friend, what means this display of goods? |
8689 | friend, where are you off to with that woman? |
8689 | friend, where are you running to? |
8689 | has he stubbed his toe in the dark and thus got a swollen ankle? |
8689 | has not Sophocles also claimed the chair then? |
8689 | have I fallen ill? |
8689 | he, who imitates the twelve postures of Cyrené in his poetry? |
8689 | his dress? |
8689 | how can I escape the sight of this Scythian? |
8689 | how can I secure safety? |
8689 | how should we knock at this door? |
8689 | how, if a Mede, has he flown here without a camel? |
8689 | if Athens only acted thus, if it did not take delight in ceaseless innovations, would not its happiness be assured? |
8689 | is it really and truly as you say? |
8689 | is it thus he tells us his name? |
8689 | is it you then, beloved Heracles? |
8689 | is not this the pole of the birds then? |
8689 | is there ever a one among us can not use her tongue? |
8689 | keep still, ca n''t you? |
8689 | mean? |
8689 | no men are coming? |
8689 | not a beat of your wing!--Who are you and from what country? |
8689 | of what nature? |
8689 | our pay is not even a tithe of the State revenue? |
8689 | shall I hear any less well if I am doing a bit of carding? |
8689 | smoke of what wood? |
8689 | so you do n''t care a fig for the blows? |
8689 | tell me then what you have to be proud of? |
8689 | the Assembly? |
8689 | the wretch, where has be crept to? |
8689 | there are other gods besides you, barbarian gods who dwell above Olympus? |
8689 | this mob of rascals? |
8689 | to retrace my steps? |
8689 | to what barbarian land has my swift flight taken me? |
8689 | to what use can not feet be put? |
8689 | to whom do I owe this terrible meeting? |
8689 | unhappy wretch that I am, surely, surely I must have met something of evil omen as I came out of the house? |
8689 | unless he steals it out of the treasury? |
8689 | venerable Parcae, what fresh attack is this? |
8689 | we jostle each other at the Assembly for three obols, and am I going to let Plutus in person be stolen from me? |
8689 | were you so frightened that you let go your jay? |
8689 | what am I saying? |
8689 | what animal are you? |
8689 | what are you doing there? |
8689 | what are you doing there? |
8689 | what are you doing, wretched man? |
8689 | what are you doing? |
8689 | what are you doing? |
8689 | what are you doing? |
8689 | what are you jabbering about? |
8689 | what are you saying there? |
8689 | what are you up to? |
8689 | what arguments can I use? |
8689 | what bit? |
8689 | what can I think of? |
8689 | what can be done? |
8689 | what can you object to in that? |
8689 | what device can I hit on? |
8689 | what do I see there? |
8689 | what do I see? |
8689 | what do you say to it? |
8689 | what do you say? |
8689 | what do you want? |
8689 | what has overtaken this man? |
8689 | what hast thou in store for me to- day? |
8689 | what have you done? |
8689 | what ill does such a dream portend for me? |
8689 | what is his object? |
8689 | what is it if not a clepsydra? |
8689 | what is it in a poet one admires? |
8689 | what is it you are saying? |
8689 | what is that noise in the chimney? |
8689 | what is this? |
8689 | what is this? |
8689 | what is to be done? |
8689 | what is to become of me? |
8689 | what is to become of me? |
8689 | what must I do? |
8689 | what sort of a cursed garment is this? |
8689 | what''s the matter? |
8689 | what''s to be done? |
8689 | what? |
8689 | what?... |
8689 | whence did this brick fall on me? |
8689 | where are you flying to? |
8689 | where are you off to? |
8689 | where are you off to? |
8689 | where are you running to now? |
8689 | where are you taking that young man to, in spite of the law? |
8689 | where art thou? |
8689 | where do you come from? |
8689 | where has she unearthed all that? |
8689 | where is Xanthias? |
8689 | where is the old woman? |
8689 | where lie his ashes?" |
8689 | where? |
8689 | whither are you leading us? |
8689 | whither shall I fly? |
8689 | who are you? |
8689 | who has robbed you of your daughter, your beloved child? |
8689 | who would not be moved at the sight of the appalling tortures under which I succumb? |
8689 | why did you let me see this day? |
8689 | why does he not answer? |
8689 | why, mu, mu? |
8689 | will the swallow never appear to end the winter of my discontent? |
8689 | wo n''t you hurry yourself? |
8689 | wretch, why tell such shameful lies? |
8689 | you are by far the most barbarous of all the gods.--Tell me, Heracles, what are we going to do? |
8689 | you are there too? |
8689 | you dare to speak so? |
8689 | you rascal, how can I kill you? |
8689 | you rotten wretch, can anything be new to an old hag like you? |