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 |
---|---|
2846 | But how should that be? |
2846 | Do not you remember how often I got you under my power, and yet put none of you to death? |
2846 | who was that author afterwards? |
10655 | (?) |
10655 | (?) |
10655 | How is this to be kept if the railway uses one time and every other act of life another? |
10655 | In regard to costume, would it be proper that I should appear in the scarlet gown of that degree? |
10655 | On October 6th we agreed on the subject,"Is natural difference to be ascribed to moral or to physical causes?" |
10655 | application to the solution of(?) |
10655 | or in the ordinary Court Dress? |
48668 | Are you not a''Mormon''elder? |
48668 | Can I obtain lodging here tonight? |
48668 | Did you notice anything when you came in here last night? |
48668 | What was it you noticed? |
48668 | What? |
48668 | Who brought you here last night? |
48668 | Who is there? |
48668 | You have not been here before? |
48668 | Are you not ashamed?" |
48668 | Immediately came a moment of great exaltation, but followed quickly by a voice which spoke to me in a contemptuous tone:"What is wrong with you? |
48668 | Mr. Nordrum was a liberal- minded man and he said to Mrs. Miller,"Have you a comfortable room that we can have, as we have a prisoner along with us?" |
48668 | What do you want? |
48668 | Where was I to go? |
48668 | said the lady,"a nice room for a prisoner?" |
15042 | I ask''d him why? |
15042 | In what Manner will God deal with those benighted Parts of the World where the Gospel of Jesus Christ hath never reach''d? |
15042 | My dear indulgent mother would bear more with me than any of my friends beside.--I often raised my hand to heaven, and asked her who lived there? |
15042 | My dear mother says I, pray tell me who is the great Man of Power that makes the thunder? |
15042 | My mother was greatly alarmed at my tarrying out in such terrible weather; she asked me many questions, such as what I did so for, and if I was well? |
15042 | Shall we in accounting for it refer to nothing higher than mere Chance and accidental Circumstances? |
15042 | She answered me, from one another; and so carried me to many generations back.--Then says I, who made the_ First Man_? |
15042 | She said, there was no power but the sun, moon and stars; that they made all our country.--I then enquired how all our people came? |
15042 | Who told you this replied my lady? |
15042 | and who made the first Cow, and the first Lyon, and where does the fly come from, as no one can make him? |
15042 | if I was not almost starv''d? |
2668 | And what answer have you returned? |
2668 | And where were you before you went to Berlin? |
2668 | But where shall I get the wood? |
2668 | Has he not light hair? |
2668 | Has your excellency actually seen this drawing of Trenck''s? |
2668 | Have you it,continued Hyndford,"at home? |
2668 | Is he not of my height? |
2668 | What has this traitor done? |
2668 | What is his name? |
2668 | What,said he,"would have been the consequence, had not the countess warned you of the impending danger? |
2668 | Whence came you? |
2668 | Where are we, Schell? |
2668 | Where does Bohemia lie? 2668 And who might be blamed but the imprudent Count Puebla? 2668 Goltz? |
2668 | He seated me by his side at table, and asked me,"Why came you here, Trenck?" |
2668 | How could he do otherwise than imprison a subject who thus endeavoured to injure him and aid his foes? |
2668 | How did this worthy man, in a moment so dangerous, act toward his friend? |
2668 | How might a man, imbued with the heroic principles of liberty, hope for advancement and happiness, under the despotic and iron Government of Frederic? |
2668 | How was it possible to suspect me? |
2668 | I asked him,"Where is the Neiss?" |
2668 | I was too proud to discover myself; and, indeed, to whom could I discover myself in a strange land? |
2668 | In the meantime I entered; Hyndford then addressed me, with the openness of an Englishman, and asked,"Are you a traitor, Trenck? |
2668 | Indeed, what other story could be told at Magdeburg, or how could it be known I had been betrayed to the Prussian ministry by the Imperial secretary? |
2668 | She was terrified at seeing a sturdy fellow in a beggar''s dress; which perceiving, I asked,"Molly, do not you know me?" |
2668 | The moment he came in, Hyndford said,"Sir, where is that plan of Cronstadt which Trenck copied?" |
2668 | Thus deceived and strengthened in his suspicion, must he not imagine my desire to forsake my country, and desert to the enemy, was unbounded? |
2668 | Was he not obliged to act with this severity? |
2668 | What could I do? |
2668 | What could be done? |
2668 | What must the King think? |
2668 | What was my business at Dantzic? |
2668 | Whether I was acquainted with M. Goltz, Prussian ambassador to Russia? |
2668 | Who but must be astonished, having read the daring efforts I made at Glatz, at this strange insensibility now in the very crisis of my fate? |
2668 | Who was concerned with me in the conspiracy at Dantzic? |
2668 | Would this be believed by listening nations? |
2668 | on which side is the river Neiss?" |
2669 | For God''s sake, my dear Trenck,said he,"in what have I injured you, that you endeavour to effect my ruin? |
2669 | How do you do? |
2669 | How do you obtain money in this dungeon? |
2669 | Is this the fulfilment of the pledge of the Prince? 2669 What is that you are talking about?" |
2669 | --"Are you promised?" |
2669 | --"Why should you die?" |
2669 | --The rank of major!--From this preamble who would not have expected either the rank of general, or the restoration of my great Sclavonian estates? |
2669 | And wherefore? |
2669 | And who are more capable of commanding a Hungarian army than Tillier and Laudohn? |
2669 | And who are those who have divided his spoils-- who slew him that they might fatten themselves? |
2669 | And why? |
2669 | At the place of execution he called to his colonel:"Father, if I receive a thousand blows, will you pardon me?" |
2669 | But what expectations can I form from Baron Trenck? |
2669 | By what right therefore, could such debts be demanded or paid? |
2669 | Can the virtuous heart conceive affliction more cruel? |
2669 | Compared to you, of what could I complain? |
2669 | Could it be believed that the great Frederic would revenge himself on the children and the children''s children? |
2669 | Day at length returned; but where was its splendour? |
2669 | Does the worth of a man depend upon his actions? |
2669 | Dost thou not blindly follow the opinion of the prince, be he severe, arbitrary, or just? |
2669 | Have you considered how dissimilar our past lives have been; how different, too, are our circumstances? |
2669 | He remained some moments silent, and at last answered in a low voice,"What, have you money, then?" |
2669 | How came you by them?" |
2669 | How describe my despondency, and yet account for that latent impulse that withheld my hand on this fatal, this miserable night? |
2669 | How often have I been asked,"What didst thou see?" |
2669 | How shall I express my extreme joy when, after eleven months of intolerable hunger, I was again indulged with a full feast of coarse ammunition bread? |
2669 | How shall I make the reader feel as I then felt? |
2669 | How then may hope be wholly eradicated from the heart of man? |
2669 | How, indeed, could it be, that lee should work underground, at such a distance from his dungeon?" |
2669 | I listened-- what could it be? |
2669 | In what do these differ from the arbitrary order of a military despot? |
2669 | My answer was,"Who calls?" |
2669 | My answer was--"But will you not load me with heavier irons than before?" |
2669 | Oh, Nature, what are thy operations? |
2669 | Or, omitting these, have you considered to whom you would have me appeal? |
2669 | Sickness itself is sufficient to humble the mightiest mind; what, then, is sickness, with such an addition of torment? |
2669 | The constable desired him to break the door open, which he did; the Jews came running, and asked--"What do you want, gentlemen?" |
2669 | They often had asked me where I concealed all my implements? |
2669 | Was it not sufficient that he should wreak his wrath on my head alone? |
2669 | What have I gained? |
2669 | What shall I say? |
2669 | When he came to examine--"What in the name of God is that?" |
2669 | Where is the country in which the people are all satisfied? |
2669 | Wherefore then do you class him among such wretches?" |
2669 | Who was it sent the honest Gelfhardt, at such a moment, to my prison? |
2669 | Who would have had the temerity to affirm that their evil deeds should bring them to attend on the city scavenger? |
2669 | Who would suppose that a man fettered as I was could find means of exercising himself? |
2669 | Whom can I accuse? |
2669 | Why has the name of Trenck been hateful to him, to the very hour of his death? |
2669 | Will you, if I do, be pleased to grant me my pardon?" |
2669 | are you married, then?" |
2669 | his reward or punishment upon his virtue? |
2669 | was there ever creature of Thine more justified than I in despair? |
2669 | what was I at this moment? |
11962 | Are n''t you feeling well? |
11962 | Did you pick it? |
11962 | Do n''t you want to read it? |
11962 | Safe,did I say? |
11962 | Shall we go to 30 Trumbull Street? |
11962 | Then will you take a message to the assistant physician who stays here? |
11962 | Well, shall we go home? |
11962 | What are you going to do with that? |
11962 | What did you do it for? |
11962 | What''s the use of living in a place like this, to be abused as I''ve been to- day? |
11962 | Where is it? |
11962 | Why do n''t you talk? |
11962 | Why do n''t you talk? |
11962 | Will you ask the doctor whether Mr. Blank can or can not walk about the grounds with my special attendant when I go? |
11962 | Will you promise not to repeat my statements to any one else? |
11962 | Yes, and they are your relatives, are n''t they? |
11962 | ("Then why,"was my recorded comment,"can not the changes I propose to bring about, be brought about?") |
11962 | --Whose heart but mine? |
11962 | Addressing me, the attendant said,"Did you see that?" |
11962 | And had he been humanely, nay, scientifically, treated, who can say that he might not have been restored to health and home? |
11962 | And the things indited-- what were they but the humanitarian projects which had blossomed in my garden of thoughts over night? |
11962 | And what would the patient have received? |
11962 | At what cost had I signed that commitment slip? |
11962 | But what of the strips of felt torn from the druggets? |
11962 | Can not some of the causes be discovered and perhaps done away with, thereby saving the lives of many-- and millions in money? |
11962 | For of what account are Truth and Love when Life itself has ceased to seem desirable? |
11962 | Friends have said to me:"Well, what is to be done when a patient runs amuck?" |
11962 | Had I any of those impracticable delusions which had characterized my former period of elation? |
11962 | How are you feeling?" |
11962 | How could I say,"Yes"? |
11962 | How could they, if still free, even approach me while I was surrounded by detectives? |
11962 | How had this peril overtaken us? |
11962 | I must have given him an incredulous look, for he said,"Do n''t you think we can take you home? |
11962 | If you want to know who I am, just ask his Excellency, and oblige, Yours truly,?" |
11962 | Need I add that the attendant did not take Mr. Blank for a walk that morning? |
11962 | Now, if a brother who had enjoyed perfect health all his life could be stricken with epilepsy, what was to prevent my being similarly afflicted? |
11962 | Other books had spoken even from the grave; why should not my book so speak-- if necessary? |
11962 | Seating himself on the side of the bed, the physician said:"You wo n''t try again to do what you did in New Haven, will you?" |
11962 | Should a man be nearly killed because he swears at attendants who swear like pirates? |
11962 | Suppose my relatives and friends had held aloof during this apparently hopeless period, what to- day would be my feelings toward them? |
11962 | The account of my sufferings naturally distressed my conservator, but, as he said when he next visited me:"What could I have done to help you? |
11962 | To- day I have no such desire, for were they not victims of the same vicious system of treatment to which I was subjected? |
11962 | Was it not I who would defray the cost? |
11962 | Were good manners and sweet submission ever the product of such treatment? |
11962 | What better, thought I, than to begin my book on a plane so high as to be appropriate to this noble summit? |
11962 | What did he learn? |
11962 | What of it? |
11962 | What''s the use when one is caged like a criminal? |
11962 | Who would not resist when meek acceptance would be a confession which would doom his own mother or father to prison, or ignominy, or death? |
11962 | Why absurd? |
11962 | Why? |
12193 | Are you aware,said he, savagely,"that the rules direct that all fruit shall be gathered by the head gardener, and by him alone?" |
12193 | Brothers,said the Governor,"shall we order the troops and police in every city to fire? |
12193 | But how about the stuffing? |
12193 | But, how happens it,said he, in astonishment,"that you speak my language?" |
12193 | Dearest,cried Henry,"when can we meet again?" |
12193 | Did you expect any? |
12193 | Do yer''spect dere may be soon, sah? |
12193 | Do you think,shrieked the irate virago,"that I will allow my daughter who is studying French, Latin, Greek, and German to wash your dirty dishes?" |
12193 | Father,cried the Governor,"will the 9th Regiment kill their own brothers if ordered to shoot?" |
12193 | How did you do it? |
12193 | Just as you please, gentlemen, peace or war? |
12193 | May I know your name? |
12193 | Passing out of the shadow Into eternal day-- Why do we call it dying, This sweet going away? |
12193 | Sherman,said I, to my stroke oarsman, as we landed on our island,"why did n''t you throw me overboard?" |
12193 | Well,said the little imp,"how do ye know but what that feller lied?" |
12193 | What for you dune dar? |
12193 | What for you here? |
12193 | What you laughing at? |
12193 | What, you be a minister? |
12193 | Who you be? |
12193 | Yes,said the dunce,"are we not commanded in the holy book to preach the gospel to every critter?" |
12193 | You''ll hold your employers out in the cold, will you? 12193 ''The shoo- fly-- the shoo- fly,''said he;''why did n''t we think of that? 12193 ''What on airth, father, you doin''?'' 12193 ''What you laughing at?'' 12193 ''Where? 12193 --Boys,"I said, turning to the darkies,"what''s the matter?" |
12193 | Are we craven crows to be scared by such windy effigies?" |
12193 | At last, the Judge, in despair, said:"Foss, will you go?" |
12193 | But what is that? |
12193 | Do you want any more such times?" |
12193 | Do you want that kind of provender again? |
12193 | Had our spirits been wandering through the universe millions of years seeking each the other, nor finding rest until we met? |
12193 | Had we lived and loved on some fairer shore? |
12193 | His pastoral calls were appalling; arm extended like a pump handle to shake hands, one up and down motion, a"how do you do?" |
12193 | Is it strange that I and many others lost all faith in a religion that brought forth such bitter fruit? |
12193 | Little Blue Bell, one of the medium''s cabinet spirits, them came, pointing to the door, saying:"See that little fat snoozer?" |
12193 | My life seemed a failure; I reflected long upon the question of the Psalmist,"What is man?" |
12193 | One would step to the window and in an exasperatingly in- no- hurry way, say:"Anything for Andrew Jackson, sah?" |
12193 | Shall they be satisfied, the spirit''s yearning, For sweet communion with kindred minds? |
12193 | Shall we ever forget the feeding of the pigs? |
12193 | Sunbeam, at this my first glance, I love you; can you sometime love me?" |
12193 | The millions of dollars, now worse than wasted by our selfish millionaires? |
12193 | The owners who have plenty of money, or you who are dependent upon the work they give you for every cent you get? |
12193 | The silent love that here meets no returning, The inspiration, which no language finds? |
12193 | Well, who''ll freeze to death first if you stop the factories? |
12193 | What de hell you do on de doo''?" |
12193 | What is death but a journey home? |
12193 | What wonder that our country now has in Washington over five hundred millions of gold dollars; the richest treasury ever known on earth? |
12193 | Whence came that vital spark blending our souls in one? |
12193 | Where are the Injuns?" |
12193 | Who can tell? |
12193 | no corn juice pison nor nuthin''? |
12193 | where?'' |
25941 | And who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God? |
25941 | Is life worth living? |
25941 | The Jews therefore marveled, saying, How knoweth this man letters, having never learned? |
25941 | Well,said I,"why do you want to correct your life in some things according to the divine authority, and not in others?" |
25941 | Who do men say that the Son of man is? |
25941 | Who is this King of glory? |
25941 | And if thus superior in wisdom, righteousness and purity, how belie Himself in claiming to be infinitely more than a man? |
25941 | And will it not be a very prominent factor of that which constitutes heaven? |
25941 | Behooved it not the Christ to suffer these things, and to enter into his glory? |
25941 | But how long till we shall have a new chemistry that will render the old a bundle of laughable folly? |
25941 | But how many hours is it till nature cries aloud for the replenishing of his strength? |
25941 | But if ye believe not his writings how shall ye believe my words?" |
25941 | But what are now the prospects for the year to come? |
25941 | But where could a perfect mediator be found to stand between an offended God and rebellious man? |
25941 | But who is to blame? |
25941 | Creel''s house and mine, would n''t you have to baptize infants?" |
25941 | Finally I said,"Mary, do you really think the world will come to an end before morning?" |
25941 | He compromises his high sense of honor, deadens his conscience, and sells out his manhood to secure an honorable(?) |
25941 | He spoke up very much excited, saying,"May I ask you a question?" |
25941 | Hence He says,"Why do you call me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?" |
25941 | How are we to determine the Messianic prophecies? |
25941 | How can this be accounted for on the hypothesis that Jesus was only a man? |
25941 | How is Christ our righteousness? |
25941 | How long can he live on the boastful supply of his physical manhood? |
25941 | How often do we see the scintillations of genius within college walls, of which we see or hear nothing after the day of graduation? |
25941 | How shall we account for such teaching-- teaching of such accumulating power over ages and generations of men-- when He Himself was untaught? |
25941 | How, then, is this great problem, that on which the world''s salvation turns, to be solved? |
25941 | How, then, shall we account for this? |
25941 | If Jesus were only a man, how came it that He was so infinitely superior to all other men? |
25941 | Is it argued that the poor have not time for self- culture? |
25941 | It was Cain that asked,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
25941 | On one occasion He said to the Pharisees,"Why do you call me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?" |
25941 | Our age prides itself on being an age of culture; but do we know in what true culture really consists? |
25941 | Should not this turning- point in life an epoch make? |
25941 | So in this case He would say,"Why do you call on me as a physician, and do not as I direct you?" |
25941 | The issue, then, as it appeared to me, was finally forced upon me: Shall I give up politics or Christianity? |
25941 | Then the chief priests and Pharisees said,"Why did you not bring him?" |
25941 | Then they said,"What more need have we of evidence?" |
25941 | To what source, then, shall we go? |
25941 | Was it the stream or the rock which followed the Israelites? |
25941 | We, therefore, repeat the question, If the river followed the people, what became of it when they came into the wilderness of Zin? |
25941 | Well do I remember on this asking,"Shall I another birthday live to see?" |
25941 | What are we to think of such as that? |
25941 | What can preserve my life? |
25941 | What did he mean by faith in my physician? |
25941 | What does Paul mean by the affirmation? |
25941 | What had become of the river that had followed them from the first year, if it was the river, and not the rock, that followed them? |
25941 | What had that to do with it? |
25941 | What have they done for the world to bring it into their debt? |
25941 | What is culture? |
25941 | What is there to satisfy the languishing soul in a prayer to the"Great Unknown and Unknowable"? |
25941 | What would they have done without it? |
25941 | Where in all the universe could one be found the friend and equal of both parties? |
25941 | Where was one who could poise with one hand the scales of God''s justice and gather fallen humanity to his bosom with the other? |
25941 | Why is this? |
25941 | Why was this? |
25941 | Why would he send down the Holy Spirit and convert one on my right, another on my left, till the"bench"was vacant, and not convert me? |
25941 | Would it not be strange, if once again in providence divine I should mingle with my fellow men, and tell them, as of yore, the story of the cross? |
25941 | or what destroy? |
5733 | Mademoiselle,replied he, somewhat embarrassed,"I know not"--"How?" |
5733 | We will not speak of it,I replied:"what is the use of it? |
5733 | What do you desire? |
5733 | What do you want? |
5733 | What hinders me,he exclaimed,"from taking one of the green cords, and fitting it, if not to your neck, to your back?" |
5733 | What would he say, then? |
5733 | Who allowed you to open that box? |
5733 | Who has revealed that to you? |
5733 | Why not? |
5733 | Why not? |
5733 | Young gentleman, how came you here, and what are you doing? |
5733 | --"And do you, Emilia, give me this advice, to avoid your house?" |
5733 | --"And what reward do you require?" |
5733 | --"But what shall I do?" |
5733 | --"Do you know me, then?" |
5733 | --"For example,"I continued,"if any one who knew, prized, honored, and adored you, laid such a paper before you, what would you do?" |
5733 | --"How so, master?" |
5733 | --"In what company?" |
5733 | --"In what do they consist?" |
5733 | --"What do you want to know?" |
5733 | --"What is known, then?" |
5733 | --"Where did you become acquainted with him?" |
5733 | --"Who, then, are you,"he asked in defiance,"who dare speak thus?" |
5733 | --"Why not?" |
5733 | And what is Homer in the/Ilias/? |
5733 | And what more could we desire? |
5733 | And what then was Religion, what was Poetry, what was all high and heroic feeling? |
5733 | But should not this redound to his credit, that he showed his art just where an object for it presented itself? |
5733 | But where should these images be got except from nature? |
5733 | Can I serve you?" |
5733 | Do I not always say, that ingratitude is the greatest of vices, and no man would be ungrateful if he were not forgetful?" |
5733 | Do you see these three apples?" |
5733 | For what good is it to''whine, put finger i''the eye, and sob,''in such a case? |
5733 | How could I comfort her without at least assuring her of some sort of affection? |
5733 | How has such a temper been attained in this so lofty and impetuous mind, once too, dark, desolate and full of doubt, more than any other? |
5733 | How is he who is encompassed with a double terror to be emancipated from fear? |
5733 | How may we, each of us in his several sphere, attain it, or strengthen it, for ourselves? |
5733 | I had my sword by my side too; and could I not soon have finished with the old man, in case of hostile demonstrations? |
5733 | I had often pressed my friend Behrisch, too, that he would make plain to me what was meant by experience? |
5733 | I might have looked worse than I myself knew, since for a long time I had not consulted a looking- glass; and who does not become used to himself? |
5733 | Might I not look more closely at that golden railing, which appears to enclose in a very wide circle the interior of the garden?" |
5733 | Spangenberg, what is your business with Thorane? |
5733 | Still more, to snarl and snap in malignant wise,''like dog distract, or monkey sick?'' |
5733 | Suppose we had lost the battle: what would have been their fate at this moment? |
5733 | The painter professedly imitated nature: why not the poet also? |
5733 | The reply of a pious master- tinman was especially noted, who, when one of his craft attempted to shame him by asking,"Who is really your confessor?" |
5733 | These depressing reflections, as I was soon convinced, were only to be banished by activity; but of what was I to take hold? |
5733 | These men-- are they, then, completely blinded? |
5733 | These towns will be imperial towns, will they? |
5733 | Think you the enemy would have stood with his hands before him? |
5733 | This house- holder-- what would he have? |
5733 | This one, too, you have now taken away from me, without letting the other go; and how many do you not manage to keep at once? |
5733 | Thus I also was then a Prussian in my views, or, to speak more correctly, a Fritzian; since what cared we for Prussia? |
5733 | Was it not just so with him who is absent, and who at last betrothed himself to you under my very eyes? |
5733 | What has she confessed, then? |
5733 | What has she signed?" |
5733 | What was I to do? |
5733 | What will people say? |
5733 | What will you say if I entreat you not to continue your lessons? |
5733 | Who could ever see it? |
5733 | Who knows, or can figure what the Man Shakespeare was, by the first, by the twentieth perusal of his works? |
5733 | Who was I, she would like to know, that had a right to doubt the family and respectability of this young man? |
5733 | Why do we wish to assemble in such numbers, except to take a mutual interest in each other? |
5733 | With respect to both, but especially the latter, the cause lies close at hand; but who dares to speak it out? |
5733 | With such youthful impressions, which nothing had as yet rubbed off, how could I have resolved to set foot in an inn in a strange city? |
5733 | Yet who had ever seen it? |
5733 | You remember that small- ware woman at the corner, who is neither young nor pretty? |
5733 | and could I do that at such a moment in a cool, moderate manner? |
5733 | and how can that be done when so many little secessions are to be seen in our circle? |
5733 | one must select that which is important: but what is important? |
5733 | place?" |
5733 | said she, with graceful astonishment,"do you forget your friends so soon?" |
5733 | street?" |
5733 | you serve?" |
8160 | And where? |
8160 | Are there soldiers as well? |
8160 | Are you afraid of the water? |
8160 | But what is this, Filomena? 8160 Can it be possible?" |
8160 | Can you see Kjöge now? |
8160 | Could I see a Jew? |
8160 | Did you ask him whom_ he_ eats with? 8160 Did you go to church last Sunday?" |
8160 | Do n''t you know any of the letters, Filomena? |
8160 | Do you hear the cannon, sir? 8160 Do you mean it?" |
8160 | Do you think I believe that Eve ate an apple and that the serpent could speak? 8160 Do you think me so poor an observer?" |
8160 | Do you think that the Pope will win? |
8160 | Do you want the watch or not? |
8160 | Does she understand Danish? |
8160 | Has Madame heard? 8160 Have you read Taine''s History of English Literature?" |
8160 | How can he be so ill,said the boy suspiciously,"when he eats and drinks?" |
8160 | How do you know such things, when you have no experience? |
8160 | How? |
8160 | How? |
8160 | I sing because I am well; that is perfectly natural, but how can I be content? |
8160 | Indeed,said Bröchner,"are you speaking seriously? |
8160 | Is it possible that you can be so afraid? 8160 Is not a reconciliation between the two possible?" |
8160 | Nasty people? |
8160 | Was that the King? 8160 Well, what of that?" |
8160 | What are they shouting for? |
8160 | What do you call a man like that? 8160 What do you think a sign of it?" |
8160 | What do you wish for then? |
8160 | What has that to do with our friend Peppe? |
8160 | What is that, Filomena? 8160 What man?" |
8160 | What used you to confess? |
8160 | What was his name? |
8160 | What? 8160 Who are you for, the Pope or Vittorio?" |
8160 | Why? |
8160 | Wo n''t you sit down? 8160 ( why? 8160 ), instead of_ Chi lo sa_? |
8160 | A Junker?" |
8160 | A crime? |
8160 | An Englishwoman stopped her in one of the rooms to ask:"Was it you who gave up a check parasol downstairs?" |
8160 | An expression almost symbolical of the ignorance and credulity of the Romans is their constant axiom,_ Chi lo sa?_( Who knows?) |
8160 | An expression almost symbolical of the ignorance and credulity of the Romans is their constant axiom,_ Chi lo sa?_( Who knows?) |
8160 | And how could God find it in His heart to give him the hair disease when he was so ill already? |
8160 | And if not, was it my duty to become a Christian? |
8160 | And when he impressively called out:"Darest thou, with thy limited human intelligence, say,''This can not happen naturally?''" |
8160 | Are we robbers, are we scoundrels? |
8160 | As she had spoken about getting a husband, I asked:"Are your sisters married?" |
8160 | At last I said:"Have you noticed, Filomena, that when we argue it is always you who silence me? |
8160 | But at the other question:"Do you see the fowls?" |
8160 | But do you think I am afraid of anyone? |
8160 | But if self- sacrifice were the criterion, then Jesus, according to the teachings of tradition, was the Ideal, for who as self- sacrificing as He? |
8160 | But might it not be that Jens only said so? |
8160 | But one day, when I had heard the shout again, I made up my mind that I would know, and when I came home asked my mother:"What does it mean?" |
8160 | But what was I fitted for? |
8160 | Could I move my arms? |
8160 | Did I think stones beautiful, perhaps? |
8160 | Did he say I was ugly? |
8160 | Did n''t you see the girl? |
8160 | Did she not receive the help that was sent from Copenhagen every month to uncle''s best friend, M. Fontane, in the Rue Vivienne? |
8160 | Did you ask him whether his_ ragazza_ was prettier?" |
8160 | Did you not see the old hag? |
8160 | Do the young men of Denmark to- day, I wonder, admire creative intellects as they were admired by some few of us then? |
8160 | Do you know what one of them did to an Italian lady? |
8160 | Do you know what the mandarin did, sir, when he came home and found that his wife was gone? |
8160 | Do you know, signore, how it originally came about that I did not believe, and despised the priests? |
8160 | Do you know, sir, what he replied? |
8160 | Do you think I am so stupid as not to see that you others are far better Christians than we? |
8160 | Does not he want to see him again?" |
8160 | Filomena, is life so bad? |
8160 | Has Denmark any future? |
8160 | Have you learnt to read from someone else?" |
8160 | He broke out:"And do you think, sir, that_ I_ have murdered my mother? |
8160 | Her glance is not exactly pure, but free-- how shall I describe it? |
8160 | How could he believe that I would allow myself to be terrified by rough treatment or won by tactless reprimands? |
8160 | How could he think that I regarded the task he wished to allot me as such an honour that for that reason I had not refused it? |
8160 | How exist? |
8160 | How was it possible that she should be so badly off? |
8160 | I had waited for it so long that I said to myself almost superstitiously:"I wonder whether anything will prevent again?" |
8160 | I laughed and replied that that was his affair, not mine; what had it got to do with me? |
8160 | I mean, that would be less of a temptation to you, and would_ build_ up on your personality, at the same time as you yourself were building? |
8160 | I never forgot the words with which Bluhme rose to go:"May I borrow the English blue- books for a few days? |
8160 | I never say to her:"Will you do me a favour?" |
8160 | I said:"Shall we read?" |
8160 | I was not in it? |
8160 | I will leave alone the question as to whether it is possible to live without, in one way or another, growing, and ask: What do we want? |
8160 | I wonder if she is out? |
8160 | In what manner may the philosophical ideas of Spinoza and Fichte lead to a want of appreciation of the idea of beauty? |
8160 | In what relation does the comic stand to its limitations and its various contrasts? |
8160 | Indeed, the other day, Maria exclaimed, quite indignantly:"Sir, do not say''_ when_ you go into the town, will you buy me this or that?'' |
8160 | It was just as great fun, though, when the big people said to him:"Would you like to be a fat lamb? |
8160 | Might not Herbart''s Aesthetics be wrong, in their theory of form? |
8160 | Might there not be other tasks that you were more fitted for than that of criticism? |
8160 | My French acquaintances all said the same thing, when I told them I wanted to go over to England:"What on earth do you want there?" |
8160 | My reply was:"Did he say that himself?" |
8160 | One day Victorine surprised me at a meal of this sort, and exclaimed horrified:_"Comment? |
8160 | One day that I went to Fredensborg, in response to an invitation from Frederik Paludan- Müller, the poet said to me:"Have you been ill lately? |
8160 | Or perhaps you would rather visit her? |
8160 | Shall I be damned for that? |
8160 | Shall I cry myself to death for a man? |
8160 | Shall we try?" |
8160 | She came in while I was eating my supper, and remarked:"You always read at your meals; how can you eat and read at the same time? |
8160 | She manages all right, except that she always jumps E and L. Lesson closed:"Were you at church to- day, Filomena?" |
8160 | She puts her question like this:"Probably my idea of what a university is, may not be quite correct?" |
8160 | She said to me to- day:"What do you really think, sir, do you not believe that the Holy Ghost is_ una virtù_ and can not be father of the child?" |
8160 | She( in English):"You are Italian?" |
8160 | Surprised at the youthful appearance of the person who walked in, he merely burst out:"How old are you?" |
8160 | The beginning of wisdom is not to fear God, but to say_ Perche_? |
8160 | The following entry is dated March 8, 1871: What do we mean by_ our national future_, which we talk so much about? |
8160 | The general fundamental question was: Given a literature, a philosophy, an art, or a branch of art, what is the attitude of mind that produces it? |
8160 | Then mother said to me:''What did the priest say to you, and what did he do to you? |
8160 | Then they came forward as far as about the middle of the hall, looked up and about a little, said to the custodian:"Will you open the door for us?" |
8160 | They had suffered a defeat? |
8160 | To what extent can poetry be called the ideal History? |
8160 | Was I, at this stage of my development, a Christian or not? |
8160 | Was she a large, showy flower? |
8160 | We have enough of our own, is it not so? |
8160 | What am I to do with that?" |
8160 | What are its sufficing and necessary conditions? |
8160 | What are the merits and defects of Schiller''s tragedies? |
8160 | What could Kjöge be? |
8160 | What could the reason be? |
8160 | What did he say? |
8160 | What do you think it is?" |
8160 | What do you think your grandfather will say?" |
8160 | What has become of Filomena? |
8160 | What is it Byron says? |
8160 | What is there in all the world that we have not in common? |
8160 | What satisfaction was it to Alexander that his dust should stop a bung- hole? |
8160 | What was the difference between the beauty of the real, the artificial and the painted flower? |
8160 | What would become of me, not only during the interval, but afterwards? |
8160 | What wrong do I do? |
8160 | What? |
8160 | When I informed my instructor that I could no longer allow myself the pleasure of his lessons, and in reply to his"Why?" |
8160 | When Maria came home later on, she asked the others at once:"Has the_ signore_ seen him? |
8160 | When did God become Man? |
8160 | When he asked his sister next day:"What has become of my case of pistols?" |
8160 | When shall I spend a Winter in Rome again? |
8160 | When she had finished, to my astonishment, she said to me,_ exactly this_:"It is Nature that is God, is it not so?" |
8160 | When the door opened, he walked in, and said, still standing:"You are Brandes? |
8160 | When they said:"Can you stand like the Emperor Napoleon?" |
8160 | Where does your brother live?" |
8160 | Who could say whether Lange would ever come back, or whether he would not come back changed? |
8160 | Who could tell whether death were not, as Sibbern had suggested, to be compared with a birth? |
8160 | Who had written the addresses? |
8160 | Who would not be glad to be even so little useful?" |
8160 | Why did not God protect him from consumption? |
8160 | Why? |
8160 | Will you kindly repeat one of them before the People''s Society in the Casino''s big room?" |
8160 | Would the earth ever again produce frescoes of the same order? |
8160 | You can not realise that you will have to die one day? |
8160 | You said the other day( for a joke?) |
8160 | _ I_--Do you know, Filomena, that I eat_ grasso_? |
8160 | _ I_--How do you know, Filomena, what Religion means? |
8160 | _ I_--Why? |
8160 | _ I_--You ate_ magro_ to- day? |
8160 | bien, que dites- vous de l''empereur_?" |
8160 | had she to be all that, too? |
8160 | it was in the same tone and style in which another priest would have shouted out:"Darest thou, with thy limited human intelligence, deny the miracle?" |
8160 | or to Shakespeare that Romeo and Juliet were acted in Chicago? |
8160 | or,"Did you see what beautiful cuffs the tall, dark man( M. the painter) had on yesterday?" |
8160 | or,"Excuse my skirt being so marked now, I am going to have a clean one later in the day,"or,"Is my cheek dirty? |