Questions

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
4241Is it wonderful if such treatment should throw a sadder tinge on a disposition otherwise mild, hopeful, and philosophic?
4241Should this man be thus lost?
50734If so, is it expedient to do it?
46493*** Or will you by flight seek to hide yourselves in mountains and forests and thus oblige us to hunt you down?
46493*** Will you then by resistance compel us to resort to arms?
46493Is it any wonder that the springs of hope should dry up within their breasts?
46493Second, If not, do they derive any such power or right by the provisions of any of the treaties between the United States and the Cherokees?
29513Can this Court revise and reverse it?
29513If we consult the history of the day, does it not inform us that the United States were at least as anxious to obtain it as the Cherokees?
29513Is this the rightful exercise of power, or is it usurpation?
29513Or has nature, or the great Creator of all things, conferred these rights over hunters and fishermen, on agriculturists and manufacturers?
29513The more important inquiry is, does it exhibit a case cognizable by this tribunal?
29513Were not both parties desirous of it?
29513When the United States gave peace, did they not also receive it?
29513Will these powerful considerations avail the plaintiff in error?
29513or to compel their submission to the violence of disorderly and licentious intruders?
53375And now how do you like this?
53375Does he linger in the mountains, Far up toward the radiant sky? 53375 How does it sound with me?"
53375Tell me, vale or rippling water, Tell me if ye can or will, If you''ve seen my long- lost lover Known as wandering Whippoorwill?
53375Why and where now does he linger? 53375 Will he come back with the morning, Borne upon its wings of light, From the shade that long has lingered, From the darkness of the night?
53375And when Whippoorwill had left them, Good old Junaluska said To his daughter Occoneechee,"Would you like this brave to we d?"
53375Ani`-sgayaiyi--"Men town"(?
53375Bitterly she wailed in sorrow, Saying"Tell me, tell me why I am left out here so lonely, And my tears are never dry?
53375Ge`yagu`ga( for Age`hya`-guga?)
53375Gulsadihi( or Gultsadihi`?)
53375Has some evil spirit seized him, Hid or carried him away Far beyond the gleaming sunset, Far out toward the close of day?
53375He saw the queer black thing by the well and said,"Who''s there?"
53375How?
53375Is there none to bring me answer?
53375Shall we go home now like cowards, or shall we raise the warwhoop and let the Seneca know that we are men?"
53375So he gathered up his chattels, Springing spryly on his steed, Made inquiry of the warrior,"Which of us shall take the lead?"
53375Tali`wa-- the site of a traditional battle between the Cherokee and Creeks about 1755, on Mountain(?)
53375Tell me, silver, crescent moon, Shall our parting be forever-- Shall our hopes all blast at noon?
53375Ukte`na--"Keen- eyed(?)"
53375When love''s bright star shines the brightest Shall it be the sooner set?
53375Why he comes not at my calling, Why he roams some lonely way, Why does he not come back to me-- Why does he not come and stay?
53375dasun`tali-- ant; dasun`tali,"stinging ant,"the large red cowant( Myrmica?
53375ha`tlu-- dialectic form, ga`tsu,"where?"
53375hila`gu?--how many?
53375how much?
53375nakwisi` usdi`--"little star"; the puffball fungus( Lycoperdon?).
53375uda`i-- the baneberry or cohosh vine( Actaea?).
45634And now, how do you like this?
45634And what are they made of?
45634But why did n''t you come in to dinner?
45634Cadmus, what means this? 45634 Did you find it?"
45634Do n''t you see?
45634Do you find it good?
45634How does it sound with me?
45634Is it good?
45634Is this where you live?
45634So you are going to kill me?
45634What did the cannibals do to you?
45634Why do you say that?
45634Why is your wife crying?
45634Why not come now and have supper with me?
45634Why not come with me?
45634You bad boys,said their father,"have you come here?"
45634''Oh,''said he in answer,''the bear understood me very well; did you not observe how ashamed he looked while I was upbraiding him?''"
45634), Cauchi( Nacoochee?
45634A close parallel to the Cherokee story is found among the Nisqualli of Washington, in a story of three[ four?]
45634About the year 1700 Lawson estimated them at 1,200 warriors( 6,000 souls?)
45634According to Haywood, an aged Cherokee chief, named the Little Cornplanter( Little Carpenter?
45634According to tradition a party of Spaniards advancing into the mountains was attacked here by the Cherokee, who threw one of them( dead?)
45634Ani''sgaya''yi--"Men town"(?
45634Another spring(?)
45634Are you hungry?"
45634Are you the fellow they call Flint?"
45634As he listened one said to the other,"Where''s the water?
45634At the governor''s suggestion, one chief, called Wrosetasatow(?)
45634But how could they join the birds when they had no wings?
45634Canogacole(?).
45634From here a trail went northward to Guatari, Sauxpa, and Usi, i. e., the Wateree, Waxhaw( or Sissipahaw?
45634From there they followed"along the mountains"to Tocax( Toxaway?
45634Ge`yagu''ga( for Age''hya- guga?)
45634Gûlsadihi''( or Gûltsadihi''?)
45634He kept on running and jumping up at the vine until the Deer came along and asked him what he was doing?
45634He saw the queer black thing by the well and said,"Who''s there?"
45634He was almost dead with fear, and said,"What kind of horrible place is this?
45634His wife, whose name was Cuhtahlatah( Gatûñ''lati,"Wild- hemp"?
45634In one version of the story the medicine- man uses a long udâ''i or cohosh( Actæa?)
45634In the Creek story,"The Lion[ Panther?]
45634In the night a voice spoke to the younger woman,"Is that where you are resting?"
45634In the night when two Pins met, and one asked the other,''Who are you?''
45634John Ax says the pregnancy was brought about by the"Little People,"Yuñwi Tsunsdi'', who commanded the woman to rub spittle( of the brother?)
45634Leaving Otariyatiqui, they went on to Quinahaqui, and then, turning to the left, to Issa, where they found mines of crystal( mica?).
45634Meherrin?.
45634One Cherokee informant told Hagar( see above) that"Thunder is a horned snake(?
45634Ross(?
45634Said the old man to his wife,"Well, what luck did you have?"
45634See number 19. ha''tlû-- dialectic form, ga''tsû,"where?"
45634Shall we go home now like cowards, or shall we raise the war whoop and let the Seneca know that we are men?"
45634Suddenly the old woman said to her husband,"Who is over in the corner?"
45634Tali''wa-- the site of a traditional battle between the Cherokee and Creeks about 1755, on Mountain(?)
45634Tennessee river was crossed at Tuckers(?)
45634The Muscogee, Alabama, Koasati, Hichitee, and Taskigi(?)
45634The Period of Spanish Exploration--1540-?
45634The cow- ant( Myrmica?
45634The first incident is paralleled in a Creek story of the Rabbit and the Lion( Panther?)
45634The giga- tsuha''`li("bloody mouth,"Pleistodon?)
45634The hunter had killed a deer and had the meat drying over the fire, so he said,"What kind do they want?"
45634The large horned beetle( Dynastes tityus?)
45634The man thought again,"How can I get anything to eat?"
45634The name was originally applied to a mountain to the northeast( Rock mountain?
45634The poisonous wild parsnip( Peucedanum?)
45634The snapping beetle( Alaus oculatus?)
45634Then his mother said,"You say you had dinner there?"
45634There was also, for a time, a"Pretty- woman town"( Ani''-Gilâ''hi?).
45634These three subtribes were:( 1) The Minsi or Munsee( people of the"stony country"?
45634They sat down in a corner, but soon the bears scented the hunter and began to ask,"What is it that smells bad?"
45634Ukte''na--"Keen- eyed(?)"
45634Uyâhye is also a peak of the Great Smokies, while Gâtegwâ''hi,"Great swamp or thicket(?
45634What luck did you have?"
45634When inquiring as to the sex of the new arrival the Cherokee asks,"Is it a bow or a( meal) sifter?"
45634When the hunter had despatched the bear, I asked him how he thought that poor animal could understand what he said to it?
45634Where are both thy shoulders and thy hands?
45634Where are thy feet?
45634Where is thy color?
45634While standing on a hill overlooking the valley he saw several Cherokee on an opposite hill, and called out to them,"Do you still own Cowee?"
45634Why do n''t he wait?
45634[ 152] Martin(?)
45634[ 204] Foote(?
45634[ 542] In a Jicarilla myth a somewhat similar incident is related of the Fox( Coyote?)
45634[ 69] Meadows(?
45634and, while I speak, where all else besides?"
45634are you here again?"
45634dasûñ''tali-- ant; dasûñ''tali atatsûñ''ski,"stinging ant,"the large red cow- ant( Myrmica?
45634ga''tsû ga''tsû ha''tlû how much?
45634hila''gû?--how many?
45634how much?
45634nakwisi''usdi''--"little star"; the puff ball fungus( Lycoperdon?).
45634or,"Is it ballsticks or bread?"
45634the reply or pass was,''Tahlequah-- who are you?''
45634udâ''i-- the baneberry or cohosh vine( Actæa?).
31801A fawn? 31801 A fawn?"
31801A food riot? 31801 And how did you know that I speak French?"
31801And how do_ you_ know that I am French?
31801And to- morrow-- and yet next day?
31801And what does the great Earl of Loudon? 31801 And what of the torture, the knife, the fagot?"
31801And where is he now?
31801But do we really expect it? 31801 But how can we help it?"
31801But if a wolf licks your hand, sir, would you pat him on the head?
31801Child,said Mrs. Halsing, solemnly,"why did you ever come to the frontier?"
31801Dispatches?
31801Do you consider yourself so free, then? 31801 Have the French armed no Indian allies?
31801Him?
31801How can I sleep,--with this sense of responsibility?
31801If we do not keep our word, how can we expect Oconostota to keep his word?
31801In what capacity?
31801John Stuart,he said,"have I not called you my friend?
31801Known what better?
31801May I tell my husband?
31801Must they have twenty thrys to hit a big black buffalo? 31801 Now, Hamish,"he said, smiling behind the candle as he held the wax in it for the seal,"can you do as much again?"
31801O''Flynn,he said,"do you deem this a fitting time to set the example of broils between the settlers and soldiers?
31801Parlez vous? 31801 The tinder- box-- the flint-- where are they?
31801The white captain calls on his friends-- and where are they? 31801 Was there a demonstration of the Indians last night, Captain?"
31801What do you think of them?
31801What do-- Choté-- old town?
31801What message did he send?
31801What prisoners?
31801What was I to do, Odalie?
31801What''s your name, my lad?
31801What?
31801Where go?
31801Where is Sandy? 31801 Where, Fifine, where?"
31801Where, Fifine? 31801 Where, Josephine?
31801Where? 31801 Where?"
31801Why could n''t they have brought some conveniences, such as knives and forks and cups and platters, instead of fool trifles?
31801Why do n''t you say that in French, Odalie?
31801Why preëmpt ill- fortune for them, John?
31801Why should you care?
31801Without seeing Sandy and Odalie?
31801Would he allow you to risk yourself?
31801You call on your friend-- where?
31801You will go back to Colonel Montgomery at Fort Prince George with dispatches?
31801You wo n''t wait for Governor Bull? 31801 A waving blotch of red leaves in the autumnal dusk,--what more natural? 31801 Alexander looked anxiously at his wife-- had she found the journey, then, so vexatious? 31801 And alas, what was their fate? 31801 And for what? 31801 And how had she selected so ill among her belongings as to what she should bring and what leave? 31801 And what did the Baron Des Johnnes? 31801 And what said Colonel Sumter? 31801 And what was there now at MacLeod Station? 31801 And what was this? 31801 And whence did they come? 31801 And whither did this unknown people go? 31801 And who so glad as Willinawaugh to lose naught of his satisfaction-- neither his material nor immaterial reward? 31801 And who were they? 31801 Are we here to wage war or to maintain peace?
31801At the stockade?
31801Besides, would they let you risk it again, even for them?"
31801But even at the best could such an expedition reach them in time?
31801Can not you strike a spark?"
31801Did he fear treachery?
31801Did they not do it first?"
31801Did we not make our peace and smoke our pipe and give our belts of white wampum and sign names to the treaty we made with the white English?
31801Do you call it freedom-- in the holy_ bonds_ of matrimony?
31801Does this fidelity so clothe your body that it will not burn and crisp and crinkle in the anguish as of your hell?
31801Flanzy?"
31801For was not Montgomery instructed to offer them terms on_ his_ account only?
31801Had he grounds to suspect any renewal of the English occupancy?
31801Had he knowledge of forces now on the march in the expectation of raising the siege of Fort Loudon?
31801Had his friend, his brother, deserved this?
31801Have I not given all I possess of wealth to save your life?
31801Have they broken into the smoke- house?"
31801Have we any guarantee?"
31801He gobbled a brisk and agitated imitation of the cry of the fowl, and then broke off to exclaim,"_ Quelle barbarie!_--eh, Odalie?"
31801How could the bough stir?
31801How should he have dreamed that Odalie''s little_ Vocabulaire Français_ would be more efficacious to save his life than his rifle and his deadly aim?
31801MacLeod?"
31801MacLeod?"
31801Now do n''t ye know such wiles as he hev got for them must be deceit?"
31801Odalie, trying to seem interested, demanded, lifting her eyes,"And what do women follow?"
31801Some hole?"
31801The men who had sung in the Christmas carols remembered old English ditties,--"How now, shepherd, what means that, Why that willow in thy hat?"
31801Then exclaimed--"_Oh_, is n''t it droll, Fifine?"
31801To make our fate certain?
31801To see the fellows salaaming to the very ground as I came across the parade!--what are you doing to my frock, Captain Demeré?"
31801Was he some slight thing,--_seequa, cheefto_, an opossum, a rabbit?
31801Was_ Sekakee_ hungry?
31801Were the Rush people poor and oppressed in Carolina?
31801What more fearful?
31801What more fearful?"
31801What more fearful?"]
31801What more wonderful?
31801What need had the Tennessee Warrior for diplomacy?
31801When?"
31801Where did you see Willinawaugh?"
31801Where is Odalie?"
31801Will you volunteer?"
31801Will your oath restore sight to your eyes when a red- hot iron has seared them?"
31801Would the great chief, whose words in whatever language were of paramount importance, accept a money price?
31801Ye must have seen it,"--lowering her voice,--"a love token?"
31801[ Footnote F: Is it not so?]
31801[ Illustration:"What more wonderful?
31801_ Wahkane, wahkane!_ Was it not so when the treaty of Lyttleton was broken and Montgomery, the Terrible, came in his stead?
31801_ Wahkane?_[F] Did we not join his cause and fight his battles and shed our blood in his wars against the French?
31801_ Wahkane_, John Stuart,_ wahkane_?
31801said the Cherokee,"and him?"
31801who now so glad to protest that he would waive any personal gratification that stood in the way of utility to the Cherokee nation?