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
43884Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
35875But who is privileged to step forward at such a time as judge in his own defense?
35875One did not want to believe this, but what did one imagine such a war to be like if it should ever come about?
35875Shall we not admit that in our civilized attitude towards death we have again lived psychologically beyond our means?
35875Shall we not turn around and avow the truth?
35875Through what process does the individual reach a higher stage of morality?
60145Who Were the Romans?
60145One would ask, on hearing such a person mentioned,"Does he belong to the sects or to the church people?"
60145Speranza, Gino,_ Race or Nation?_ Stanard, Mary Newton,_ The Story of Virginia''s First Century_.
60145When General Braddock, whose army was nearly wiped out by the French and Indians in 1755, sighed,"Who would have thought it?"
60145Why should outsiders be allowed to come in and take the jobs and lower the living standards of American labor?
2510Are they really exceptions, using that term in its current sense-- to denote something arbitrary, and therefore unaccountable?
2510But was there not something in their view, after all?
2510How did he discover his gospel?
2510How should he imagine that people who make such positive statements about their own country are merely exploiting his credulity?
2510What need for discussion or investigation?
34341''To which race do the Japanese belong?''
34341And why can heaven and earth endure and be lasting?
34341Do you ask why?
34341Is it not because he seeks not his own?
34341To indulge in Hamlet- like musing, deep in the grand doubt and sublime melancholy of the never- slumbering question''To be, or not to be?''
34341What name might fitly tell, what accents sing, Thy awful, godlike grandeur?
34341Who would deny that it has reflected in its serenity and grace as seen on a bright day all the ideals of the Japanese mind?
33131And who knows if that day has not already dawned, and the sun not risen, in the Easternmost horizon of Asia?
33131But is this the ideal of man which we can look up to with pride?
33131Can we have no doubt in our minds, when we rush to the Western market to buy this foreign product in exchange for our own inheritance?
33131Do we not see signs of this even now?
33131I asked myself,--''Will the dense mist of the iron age give way for a moment, and let me see what is true and abiding in this land?''
33131Is the instinct of the West right, where she builds her national welfare behind the barricade of a universal distrust of humanity?"
38945Face to face shall eagles fight; will you give quarter?
38945What broke?
38945Did Canute also patronise Anglo- Saxon literature?
38945He should, however, learn to be moderate in his avarice,--or does he plan to govern all the Northlands alone?
38945It should also be noted that one of the ships( c. 50) in addition to"nearly 60"passengers carried 36 beasts( heads of cattle?)
38945Or does he intend to eat alone all the cabbage in England?
38945The invasion must have come after Sweyn''s accession( 986?)
38945Unwan served as mediator between Canute and the Emperor when the alliance was formed in 1025(?
38945Would he not in time supplant the low- born Eadric?
39001Can they then, fail to be more full of dramatic charm than the entertainments provided in any other playhouse of the realm?
39001Has English organization for musical teaching outstripped English capacity for learning?
39001It remains concretely, if of necessity briefly, to answer the question: What actually has been done?
39001Thus, may it not be false economy to make absolute destitution and homelessness a preliminary condition of parochial help?
39001What are the changes that would most impress his mind?
39001What are the exact limits to be placed respectively to the provinces of elementary schools of both grades?
39001What are the facts relating to the Church to- day?
39001What claim did the accident of birth constitute to a monopoly of the more stirring and less exclusive forms of pleasure?
39001What is the personal result, the concrete individual product of these forces?
39001What then are the facts of population here to be dealt with?
39001What transformations has this latter passed through?
39001Why should the persons born with the proverbial gold spoon in their mouths alone be emancipated?
44867And beyond those limits--?
44867And now, how far is it possible at the present time to speculate on the particular outline the future will assume when it is investigated in this way?
44867And suppose it was a rather important promise?
44867Are we simply separating and contrasting two sides of everybody''s opinion?
44867But suppose it was not such very great suffering we were going to inflict, but only some suffering?
44867But why?
44867How far may we hope to get trustworthy inductions about the future of man?
44867Why are we so bound to it?
44867Why should not this rising curve rise yet more steeply and swiftly?
44867Why should things cease at man?
44867Would a man do right or wrong if he broke such a promise?
20461Dear peasant,says the priest,"wherefore camest thou hither, that thou shouldst make of a due[10] usury?
20461If I take no money for the money that I lend, how shall I then increase my hoard?
20461What has impelled thee, Franz,asked the Archbishop of Trier,"that thou hast so laid waste and harmed me and my poor people?"
20461Are they wise and honest people?
20461Dear princes and lords, know ye what to do, for God will no longer endure it?
20461Did not the fall of the old Church mean that the day was at hand when the elect should govern the world?
20461Eternal God, whither shall the widows and poor children go forth to seek it?"
20461Hath he a good house?
20461May not a man buy with his money what he will?"
20461Of what use are they who thus live in lust, nourished by the sweat and labour of others, and are a stumbling- block to the word of God?
20461Then say I to him:''Good, my friend, wilt thou pledge me thy holding?
20461Where would you find this popular culture in any other country?
20461Who knows but that a united States of Germany may then prove the first step towards a united States of Europe?
13940And if China does copy the model set by all foreign nations with which she has dealings, what will become of all of us?
13940But on what grounds can we think that the natures of clay and wood desire this application of compasses and square, of arc and line?
13940Can Chinese virtues be preserved?
13940FOOTNOTES:[ Footnote 63: On this subject George Gleason,_ What Shall I Think of Japan?_ pp.
13940Is it prudent to lose all enjoyment of the present through thinking of the disasters that may come at some future date?
13940Is it really wise to be always guarding against future misfortune?
13940One is forced to ask: What are the things that I ultimately value?
13940One of the feudal princes asked an official, saying,"Have not the people of the Wei State done very wrong in expelling their ruler?"
13940Or must China, in order to survive, acquire, instead, the vices which make for success and cause misery to others only?
13940Should our lives be passed in building a mansion that we shall never have leisure to inhabit?
13940What is Americanism?
13940What sort of ends should I most wish to see realized in the world?
13940What will be the outcome of the contact of this ancient civilization with the West?
13940What would make me judge one sort of society more desirable than another sort?
13940What, meanwhile, is China''s interest?
13940Who then is it, except the Sovereign, that can appoint, dismiss, and punish a Minister of State?
50148And now comes an important question: Was America prepared in 1899 to clash in naval combat with the combined forces of Spain, France and Germany?
50148Can any human experience be more dreadful than this one?
50148Did England view with friendliness and complacency the development of the American Colossus?
50148How can a nation of 40,000,000 people, like England, hold under her sway a far distant continent like India with its population of 350,000,000 people?
50148How did all this happen?
50148In 1899 the question was repeatedly asked, how can England with a mere corporal''s guard, hold together the vast, mystic India under her sway?
50148In what light was the stupendous fabric of the United States of the Americas regarded by England in that year?
50148Ought Dewey to have vacated Manila bay and made a laughing- stock of himself or stand his ground and bring the fight with Spain to a finish?
50148This deed of self- defence accomplished, then what?
50148To the inquiring mind the question naturally offers itself: In what manner was the great American Republic governed in 1999?
50148Was England in 1999 the same powerful, cordial friend of America that she so well proved herself to be in 1898?
50148What better could any tramp ask for?
50148Would it not be better for them to make common cause with their great American neighbor and live under one flag?
34324''Why so silent?''
34324( Examples might include: Why did Bodhidharma come from the West, that is, from India to China?
34324But how can such a truth be taught?
34324Does Ryoan- ji have beauty in any conventional sense?
34324Does a dog have Buddha- nature?
34324How do you write a critical analysis of a work of art that only takes shape after it gets inside your head?
34324How does the Japanese- style room alter human perception in such a way that people''s experience of each other is intensified?
34324It is clearly a symbol-- but a symbol of what?
34324It is clearly an invitation to open one''s perception-- but open it to what?
34324Not knowing what to make of his guest, the emperor backed away and inquired,"Who exactly are you who stands before me now?"
34324The emperor was startled but persisted,"Tell me then, what is the most important principle or teaching of Buddhism?"
34324Therefore, I ask you: What is my merit: What reward have I earned?"
34324What did Zen artists look for when they scavenged the surrounding mountains for special rocks?
34324What do you do about daily life, where the world carries on as though it really does exist, dualities and all?
34324What exactly can you make of a philosophical system whose teacher answers the question,"How do you see things so clearly?"
34324What is the counter mind really like?
34324What is there about it that has caused Western thinkers to disavow its functions for so many centuries?
34324What was your face before your mother was born?)
34324What were the qualities of these stones that they should have been hauled for hundreds of miles and prized by shoguns and Zen aesthetes alike?
34324Why do Zen ceramics always manage to make one take special notice of their surface?
34324Why, for instance, does a Japanese garden often seem much larger than it really is?
34324With no usable rhymes and no stress, how can the music of poetry be created?
34324[?]-ca.
34324_ Haru ya mukashi no_ Can it be that the spring_ Haru naranu_ Is not the spring of old times?
34324_ Tsuki ya aranu_ Can it be that the moon has changed?
34324with the seeming one- liner,"I close my eyes"?
2076May then a subject,he asked,"put his sovereign to death?"
2076What do you mean?
2076At length he was summoned into the presence of Kublai Khan, who said to him,"What is it you want?"
2076How should such men trouble themselves with the conventionalities of this world, or care what people may think of them?"
2076How, then, is it that some men are evil while others are good?
2076Light asked Nothing, saying:"Do you, sir, exist, or do you not exist?"
2076My fields, my gardens, are choked with weeds: should I not go?
2076My soul has led a bondsman''s life: why should I remain to pine?
2076Of what use, asked his great rival, is Hui Tzu to the world?
2076The four seasons pursue their courses and all things are produced; but does God say anything?"
2076The latter pointed out that Confucius, when asked to speak, so that his disciples might have something to record, had bluntly replied:"Does God speak?
2076The times are out of joint for me; and what have I to seek from men?
2076Then when nothing came into existence, could one really say whether it belonged to existence or non- existence?"
2076This brings us at once to the question-- What is meant by the term China?
2076To the same man, who inquired his views on capital punishment, Confucius replied:"What need is there for capital punishment at all?
2076What boots it to wear out the soul with anxious thoughts?
2076Where can he come from except from the small islands which fringe the Middle Kingdom, the world, in fact, bounded by the Four Seas?
2076Where does he come from?
2076Why rob one to feed the other?"
2076Why, then, not set our hearts at rest, ceasing to trouble whether we remain or go?
2076cried Light;"who can equal this?
28690And what remark shall I make of Japanese curios, the trade in which has assumed such very large dimensions?
28690Are there any signs or portents of his advent?
28690Have they no claim, some of my readers may ask, to be included in a chapter on art?
28690If such an upheaval is possible for one nation, who shall put any bounds to the potentialities of the world?
28690It is well to get down from eloquence of this kind to concrete facts, to come back to the point whence we started, viz., What will Japan become?
28690Now what do these several trivial, indeed contemptible, anecdotes prove?
28690The great poet or painter, the great artist in words, on canvas, in marble, or in wood-- where is he?
28690Underneath the portrait the inquiry was printed,"What will he become?"
28690What conclusion, may I ask, can the logical, reasoning Japanese come to in these matters?
28690What is her present condition?
28690What is to be the outcome of it all?
28690Where can the aspiring artist, under modern conditions of life, find such a haven of rest?
43910What like shall I work it?
43910Whatever may a scrapple be?
43910Dependent on the world for nearly every crumb, Is this a time when patriots should be dumb?
43910For whom yon glittering board is spread, Dress''d for whom yon golden bed?
43910From what models or pattern did these early sculptors copy their designs?
43910Has the oldest industry of the county had a share in this attainment of wealth, or its rural population derived advancement?
43910He shouted to Bishop Cutheard and his congregation,"What can your dead man, Cuthbert, do to me?
43910How many of the thousands who annually visit the Isle of Man are aware that the island contains a veritable museum of Runic historical remains?
43910May we not suppose this to be from"rost,"a torrent or whirlpool, and"dale,"the Danish for valley?
43910Now what is to be said about the subjects carved on these crosses and about the date of the work?
43910Our own Wednesday, is it not still Odin''s day?
43910The Danish"buinn"is"prepared,"or"addressed to,"or"bound for,"as"Weere ar''t beawn furt''goo?"
43910The first question is, would home produced wheat pay?
43910The question is, where was the"tun"or village on the Brun?
43910The rough words he articulated, are they not the rudimental roots of those English words we still use?
43910To a tourist who made the somewhat stupid inquiry,"Does it ever rain here?"
43910WAS IT FOUGHT IN LANCASHIRE?
43910What are the facts disclosed by the figures for the past 25 or 50 years?
43910What call unknown, what charms presume To break the quiet of the tomb?
43910What has been the course of our agriculture for the past sixty years?
43910What is the use of threatening me with his anger?
43910What then was the Sochman?
43910Who is he with voice unbless''d That calls me from the bed of rest?
43910Who thus afflicts my troubled sprite And drags me from the realms of night?
43910Would not a system on similar lines have far- reaching results in this country?
43910[ Illustration] THIS ENGLISH(?)
43910an acre be worth cultivating?
43910arise and say What dangers Odin''s child await, Who the author of his fate?
43910my spell obey; Once again arise and say Who th''avenger of his guilt, By whom shall Hoder''s blood be spilt?
13048Ah? 13048 American?"
13048Do I not look well dressed, Mademoiselle?
13048Eh, what?
13048Have n''t you heard the news?
13048How do you expect me to earn my living if I have to go out of my way and wait a century outside a store?
13048Is it possible? 13048 Is it really so?
13048Where to?
13048You will come again soon, Mademoiselle, and see it for yourself?
13048_ Dites, Madame_,she said,"is it true that you give away flannel petticoats and stockings?"
13048_ Ecoutez_, do you know what is in that box I am going to get? 13048 _ Pays dévasté?
13048And I asked Sainte Claire,''May I not go to the well and bring up a bottle of wine?''
13048And for nothing?
13048And the bridegroom-- who is he?"
13048And, Madame, what do you think?
13048C''est vrai?
13048Can they hang it themselves?
13048Clothing?
13048Company?
13048Did you ever know an American to fail to make it worth your while?"
13048Food?
13048Is the town asleep?
13048LITTLE GRAINS OF SAND Shall I tell you about the old woman and her statue of Sainte Claire?
13048Or the one room left in that tiny house, shattered and bare, yet stamped indelibly with the character of its valiant occupants?
13048What are these pulsations that beat this day upon our soul?"
13048What good is he in a strange province where they eat such ridiculous things, and where everyone has the craze for machinery?
13048What news?"
13048What ripples from the seething capitals will stir the placid thoughts of your stouthearted peasants?
13048What secret of yielding and resisting was hers?
13048Would you like to see my''_ tiote[1] Sainte Claire_?"
13048est- ce possible?_ What happiness for that good girl!"
29639Have ye founded your thrones and altars, then, On the bodies and souls of living men? 29639 After all, what would independent initiative have been worth without fire or arrow or earthern kettle, or cow or horse or wheel, or sword and shield? 29639 And think ye that building shall endure Which shelters the noble and crushes the poor?
29639Are there persons in America who say what, until the present war, many in Old England thought-- that there is nothing new under the sun?
29639But have we not found the process during the last four hundred years to be from citizenship to godship, from creature to creator?
29639But is locomotor- ataxy a disease?
29639Can human audacity reach higher?
29639Can the assumption of divine and creative responsibility by man out- strip this latest act of self- government?
29639Can the creature dare it?
29639From beast to citizen, did we say?
29639Had I asked,"Is Civilization Christian?"
29639IS CIVILIZATION A DISEASE?
29639IS CIVILIZATION A DISEASE?
29639IS CIVILIZATION JUST?
29639In order to open such lines of anthropological investigation and ethical reflection, I have raised the question:"Is Civilization a Disease?"
29639Indeed, I even shrank from asking,"Is civilization unethical, or wrong, or bad?"
29639Is our subjection justifiable?"
29639Is this the great venture?
29639Is this the meaning of the travail of the ages?
29639Otherwise, why has the relative degradation of woman deepened universally with the progress of civilization?
29639The very name of the book made one ask:"Is civilization then a disease?"
29639To them what would humanity be but civilization''s opportunity, its habitat, its food- supply?
29639What is to determine whether you are on the side of the man or the microbe?
29639Who can think otherwise as he recalls the Athenian drama, eloquence and philosophy, architecture and sculpture?
29639generously made available by The Internet Archive/ Canadian Libraries) Barbara Weinstock Lectures on The Morals of Trade IS CIVILIZATION A DISEASE?
5979He asked,says Adams,"whether our countrey had warres?
5979Why must there always, remain the width of a world between us?
5979*** What then will become of the ancient morality?--the ancient cult?
5979Are we to understand Hirata literally?
5979Are you, then, responsible for the faults of another person?
5979Beauty, according to our Western standards, can scarcely be said to exist in this race,--or, shall we say that it has never yet been developed?
5979But even in that case what are we to think of his ascription of divinity to the race, in view of the moral and physical feebleness of human nature?
5979But is she not, then, one may ask, an artificial product,--a forced growth of Oriental civilization?
5979Does this signify incapacity for independent work[ 440] upon Occidental lines?
5979Further he asked me in what I did beleeue?
5979Had not the Gods and the Buddhas been called devils by these missionaries from Portugal and Spain?
5979He asked me diverse other questions of things of religion, and many other things: As, what way we came to the country?
5979How would it be, think you, if we were to demolish Nambanji[ The"Temple of the Southern Savages"--so the Portuguese church was called]?''
5979If this error[ or deception?]
5979Is not this to forget the origin of one''s being?"
5979It will perhaps be asked, What becomes of the cult in such cases?
5979One will naturally ask how can such a doctrine exert any moral influence whatever?
5979Though it be an ancient custom, why follow it, if it is bad?
5979Well may we pity the victims of this pitiless faith, and justly admire their useless courage: yet who can regret that their cause was lost?
5979Why didst thou not observe that which I charged thee?...
5979disinclination or indifference?
5979incapacity for creative thought?
5979lack of constructive imagination?
57786But do they make you take your cloak off?
57786What,they would ask,"did the girl suppose he had married her for?
57786And the question is, how is the seeing eye to be obtained?
57786And what curves or angles ought they to follow?
57786And what did she_ want_ to be married for?
57786And what is marriage for, if not for that?"
57786As emancipation has progressed, the young girl has been allowed a voice in choosing her husband; but what is the result?
57786But if we have the thing, one may ask, what does the word matter?
57786But what is the fundamental principle of the Montessori system?
57786But what kind of strokes?
57786But, in other respects, why should we Americans be conservative?
57786Certainly-- why not?
57786Do n''t you know they''ll give you the fever?"
57786How many critics of the French conception of love have taken the trouble to consider first their idea of marriage?
57786I. III TASTE I French taste?
57786In the light of that definition, has not license kept the better part?
57786Is either of these affirmations exact?
57786Or is there any; and are not some races-- the artistically non- creative-- born as irremediably blind as Kentucky cave- fishes?
57786That is the technical situation; but what is the practical fact?
57786The point is, the French might return, what are we to be formed for?
57786There are more people who can read in the United States; but what do they read?
57786What has become, in America, of the copse, the spinney, the hedgerow, the dale, the vale, the weald?
57786What is the operation for taste- blindness?
57786What, then, is the place they give to the disturbing element?
57786Why not have substituted as a title"Prejudice"--or simply"Stupidity"?
57786Why, what do you mean?"
57786_ Es ist verboten._""Forbidden?
57786the traditional attitude is:"Why should I do my neighbour a good turn when he may be getting the better of me in some way I have n''t found out?"
121111728), Thomas Frye( 1710- 1762), Edward Fisher( 1722- 1785?
121111816?
12111And what of the women of Ireland today?
12111And when that"next rebellion"came, the great uprising of the outraged race in 1641, what do we find?
12111But, we may lawfully ask, will not this peace bring with it a special danger, against which we ought to take precautions?
12111Could there be more striking proof of the natural bent and aptitude of the Irish mind for journalism?
12111Did they keep before the Norsemen to America too?
12111From our point of view, what would be the result of that arrangement?
12111If it be further asked:"Does this statement stand the test of strict investigation?"
12111If it is a question of languages, why not learn one of the more useful ones?
12111Oh, whose shall be the potent hand To give that touch informing, And make thee rise, O Southern Land, To life and poesy warming?"
12111On our side, what shall we say of it?
12111Shall they come short of the high ideal of the past, falter and fail, if devotion and sacrifice are required of them?
12111To what element in the Irish nature are we to attribute this joyous and illuminating gift?
12111We can do it if we wish it: the question is, shall we wish it?
12111What did learning bring him?
12111What of the sister of Henry Joy McCracken, Mary, the friend and fellow- worker with the Belfast United Irishmen?
12111When did this language begin to be used in literature?
12111Who does not know of his brilliant performances on the track?
12111Who has not heard of the great music school of San Gallen, founded by St. Gall,"the wonder and delight of Europe,"whither flocked German students?
12111Who has not heard of the wondrous little Thomas Conneff from the short- grass county of Kildare?
12111Who would ask anything racier in its kind than the former''s"Father O''Flynn"?
12111Why was he so eager to bear for its sake"all the thousand aches That patient merit of the unworthy takes"?
12111With such workmen, having such instincts and training, what of the housing and surroundings to contain them and give them a fit and suitable setting?
12875Hannibal has beaten the Romans at Cannae: shall he or shall he not proceed directly to attack Rome? 12875 What madness is it,"he asks of the man whom he supposes himself to be addressing,"that drives you to marry?
12875What of the baths of the freedmen? 12875 Why should you be made to wear the muzzle?"
12875Why take into your house some one who will perhaps shut the door in the face of an old friend whom you have known ever since he was a boy?
12875''And why have you none?
12875''And why not here?''
12875''How can that be?''
12875''Then why did you call him back?
12875''Well,''said he,''what is your own practice?''
12875''Where?''
12875''Your freedmen as well?''
12875Amid all this splendour and spaciousness of public buildings, what is the aspect of the ordinary streets?
12875And yet what does this"most indolent person"himself do in the course of a lifetime?
12875Apart from the lands thus appropriated, what happens to the rest of the conquered territory which is theoretically Roman property?
12875At this he said,''It costs you a good deal?''
12875But how could he thus perpetually interfere and yet appear to remain a constitutional officer?
12875Doubtless this is logical enough, but how is one to attain to such right mental operations, and to become what was called a"sage"?
12875For what is"pleasure"?
12875How did he lead the ordinary Roman official life and yet accomplish all this before he was fifty- six?
12875How, think you, does he pass the time while the beaters are driving the animals towards the net?
12875I said,''Are you at school?''
12875Library?
12875Said my uncle,''I suppose you had caught the meaning?''
12875Says Nero''s own tutor, Seneca,"Do you want to propitiate the gods?
12875Shall he be killed, or shall he not?
12875There is nearly always some basis of truth in a classic satire, but the question is"How much?"
12875What more could a man desire, if he was satisfied to forego the name of autocrat so long as he possessed the substance?
12875What then of the gods of the state?
12875What was an emperor?
12875What were his powers, and how did he exercise them?
12875Who shall scrutinise too closely that delicate blue which tinges her temples?
12875Why was Christianity thus singled out?
12320Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, where are they?
12320Are we producing potential fitness?
12320Are we reproducing fitness or unfitness?
12320But man himself?
12320Can he change human nature?
12320Can man change himself?
12320Can western civilization be reformed to meet the new historical situation created by the great revolution or must it be rejected and replaced?
12320Could human beings as we know them be transformed sufficiently to live and survive under the life- style that replaces civilization?
12320Could it not only survive but build up a social system which contradicted and condemned the underlying precepts of the West?
12320Could this new"subversive"government survive in the merciless free- for- all in which western man was engaged?
12320Have they rendered the forms and functions of civilization obsolete?
12320He might have added:"What were they?
12320How did they come into being?
12320How limited?
12320How successful have civilized peoples been in achieving their objectives?
12320If the conditions presently existing in human society affordment, skills and technical experience necessary to make significant changes, why wait?
12320If wood was available where must it go?
12320In a word, could socialism be built in one country, surrounded by civilized monopoly capitalist powers?
12320Lowie, Robert H.,_ Are We Civilized?_ N.Y.: Harcourt Brace, 1929.
12320Must we follow it?
12320Need we follow this course?
12320Or do we study their experiences, benefit from their successes and learn from their mistakes?
12320Should they fit in or drop out?
12320What effect will they have on the institutions and practices of western civilization?
12320What has caused the pattern of civilization to appear, disappear and reappear again and again during the period of written history?
12320What has made the difference between their use of the earth and ours?
12320What has western civilization done to human society as such?
12320What purposes dominated and directed the lives of civilized peoples?
12320What steps must they take in order to realize their hope and fulfill their aspirations?
12320What was the nature of their experience?
12320What were the prevailing ideas of civilizations and what ideas were put into practice?
12320When asked whether the village across the valley was Sunrise Mountain the local peasant could reply:"How should I know?
12320Who are the occupants of town, city, state, and national positions of authority and responsibility?
12320Who else but the concerned ruling oligarchy?
12320Who will be the judge, jury and executioner in the case?
12320Why not proceed forthwith to live a better life?
12320_ Civilization and Beyond_ rounds out a series of studies that I began in 1928 with_ Where Is Civilization Going_?
8077''Should the workingman think freely about property?
8077And why not?
8077Are we not all implicated?
8077As godlike beings why should we not rejoice in our omniscience?
8077But must we?
8077Did they succeed in defending the truth or"safeguarding"society?
8077Do we believe in what is commonly called progress, or do we think of that as belonging only to the past?
8077Do we believe, in other words, that truth is finally established and that we have only to defend it, or that it is still in the making?
8077Does it not make plain that the"conservative", so far as he is consistent and lives up to his professions, is fatally in the wrong?
8077Have we any other hope?
8077Have we, on the whole, arrived, or are we only on the way, or mayhap just starting?
8077How are we to put ourselves in a position to come to think of things that we not only never thought of before, but are most reluctant to question?
8077In short, how are we to rid ourselves of our fond prejudices and_ open our minds_?
8077Professor Giddings has recently asked the question, Why has there been any history?
8077Shall we buy U. S. Rubber or a Liberty Bond?
8077Shall we have dinner at seven or half past?
8077Shall we take the subway or a bus?
8077Shall we write a letter or no?
8077Should soldiers think freely about war?
8077Should young men and women think freely about sex?
8077WHAT OF IT?
8077WHAT OF IT?
8077We may still well ask, Is man by nature bad?
8077What did the Inquisition and the censorship, both so long unquestioned, accomplish?
8077What then will become of military discipline?''"
8077What then will become of morality?
8077What then will become of us, the rich?
8077What was going on in the heads of our untutored forbears?
8077Why did the Greeks not go on, as modern scientists have gone on, with vistas of the unachieved still ahead of them?
8077[ 13] But what about the mind?
8077[ 31] But is this not a complete reversal of the obvious truth?
8077[ l0] But why did man alone of all the animals become civilized?
44495-> unknown?
44495...''And on the other hand, how will the shrieks of parents fill every ear?
44495...''Shall we impute to the Almighty what we can not impute to a man without a heinous affront?
444959,"The Lord said to Cain, Where is Abel, thy brother?"
44495After he was away, the lady asked Mr. Hogg, What he thought would come upon him?
44495And these, whence?
44495Ask him whence that animal arose?
44495But what shall we say to the Scotch bishops, who applauded him, of whose conduct they were daily witnesses?
44495But where is that with us?''
44495But why name the penalty, and suppress the offence?
44495Considering the cruelties he committed, what sort of instructions could his superiors have given to him?
44495Et si les Anglois ardent nos maisons, que peut il chaloir?
44495Has it not been a burden to you, to sit so long in the church?
44495He says,''It may be necessary to mention here, that the dispute between Dr. Monro and me is, who first discovered the lacteals of birds?
44495I asked him what would relieve him?
44495If those that withold the duty of the Kirk,_ wherethrough Ministers want their stipends_, may be excommunicate?
44495Lord Godolphin asked him, if he expected to have any body killed to make room?
44495Ne savons- nous pas bien faire notre guerre sans eux aux Anglois?
44495On the other hand, the inductive method would have taught them that the first question was, whether or not they had been supernaturally communicated?
44495Such men are outlaws; they are the enemies of the human race; who shall wonder if they fall, or, having fallen, who shall pity them?
44495What further evidence need I bring to elucidate the real character of one of the most detestable tyrannies ever seen on the earth?
44495What is that but disdaining the grave way of walking, to affect an art in it?
44495What more need I say?
44495[ 604]''If God loved riches well, do ye think he would give them so liberally, and heap them up upon some base covetous wretches?
44495[ 608] What need for him to live?
44495[ 66] When the French arrived in Edinburgh, the Scotch said,''"Quel diable les a mandà © s?
44495as many do now in our days; and shall this be displeasing to the Lord, and not the other?
44495is not man become so brutish and ignorant, that he may be sent unto the beasts of the field to be instructed of that which is his duty?''
44495or of the Commanders- in- chiefe of the English forces?
44495or of the English Judges in Scotland?
44495said to the king, before the congregation,"Sir, I assure you, in God''s name, the Lord will ask at you where is the Earl of Moray, your brother?"
33818''Is the boy become blind, who called himself Schlingdengau? 33818 The father said,''And how do they name you?''
33818Then the master of the house spoke in homely phrase,''Are you my son Helmbrecht? 33818 ''Are not those dear children?'' 33818 ''How so?'' 33818 ''What,''said he,''you villain, is it not enough for you to come here so constantly, to fill your hungry body and to fatten your meagre carcass? 33818 ''_ Ei wat segget ihr Gebureken? 33818 All the evidence of their life in the flesh-- which evidence was not rare nor imperceptible-- was of no avail; who could succeed here? 33818 And who knows, dear honoured sister? 33818 But underneath this network of old customs freer views began to germinate: already did the troublesome question arise-- wherefore? 33818 Do you choose to give my master this_ Deo gratias_? 33818 For they made demands on the peasants''fields generally, when fodder for cattle was failing: how, then, could the peasants maintain their own animals? 33818 Fox:Who are these citizens and peasants?"
33818I equally shortly and frankly asked,''Whether she could make up her mind to marry the Herr von Summermann?''
33818I have often flourished my switch over them; they are the best oxen in the world; will you recognise me now?
33818Is it necessary that he should, as a rule, take in no other newspaper than the small sheet of his own district?
33818Is it necessary that our neighbour the countryman should so seldom read a good book, and still less often buy one?
33818Is it necessary that the peasant of the present day should be deficient in it?
33818Must all that we possess of most beautiful be incomprehensible to half our nation?
33818Shall I drag on three years with a foal or an ox, when I may every day have my booty?
33818She replied shortly,''What kind of proposal?''
33818She wept with me, asking whether I now repented, and whether I had not long known these defects of hers?
33818So she asked me what was the reason?
33818Tell me, what is that scar you have on your forehead?
33818The mother laid before me the two letters, and asked,''Do you confess that you have written these?''
33818Then said my eldest sister, who was three years older than I,''Why should we pray now?
33818Then the master of the house, quite horrified, replied,''Are you Helmbrecht, my son?
33818What is thy state of mind?''
33818What reason had I to entertain any hopes, as I had for nearly a whole year been guilty of marked inattention?
33818What was the aim and object of his life?
33818What will now remain in the water?
33818When I was on the stairs I heard the count call out,''Where is my wife?''
33818When he was young, what rights had the heart of a poor scholar against a cold, tyrrannical world?
33818Who could be more joyful than I when I found that my prayer had been heard?
33818Who could be more joyful than I, who had deprived the devil of a roast?
33818Who could know that it would turn out so ill?
33818min parit_,[8]_ minen klaren Lif soll kein bureumaun nimmer angripen_''( What are you boors saying?
44494''For why,''he says,''should history be only a recital of battles, sieges, intrigues, and negotiations?
44494-> reste, p. 459: je vous l''ai déja-> déjà p. 459: vous conduise, je na''i-> n''ai?
44494379, 380):''On demande s''il est permis de faire alliance avec une nation qui ne professe pas la même religion?
44494And what then?
44494Comment son agriculture et son industrie furent- elles ruinées?
44494Comment vit- elle disparaître plus d''une moitié de sa population?
44494How can they, constantly occupied with their lofty pursuits, have leisure for such inferior matters?
44494Otherwise, whence does the belief arise?
44494Si les traités faits avec les ennemis de la foi sont valides?
44494Their fathers having lived in the midst of it, why should not they do the same?
44494This is deciding the question very rapidly; but in the meantime, what becomes of the geometrical laws of minerals?
44494Vingt ans plus tôt, combien une telle résolution n''eût- elle pas agité et divisé les esprits?
44494Was this the fruit of the royal patronage?
44494Was this, then, the consequence of the royal bounty?
44494We can point out the year in which the Reform Bill was passed; but who can point out the year in which the Reform Bill first became necessary?
44494What can kings and ministers know about those immense branches of knowledge, to cultivate which with success is often the business of an entire life?
44494What can you do with a nation like this?
44494What is the use of laws when the current of public opinion thus sets in against them?
44494What marvel if, to minds of this sort, the most insignificant trifles should swell into matters of the highest importance?
44494Where are their works to be found?
44494Where have their names been registered?
44494Who can wonder that the greatest and noblest minds in France were filled with loathing at the government by whom such things were done?
44494Who is there that now reads the books of those obscure hirelings, who for so many years thronged the court of the great king?
44494Why should they, to whom transcendental truths are unknown, labour to remove the superstitions which darken the truths?
44494[ 1380]''Mais aussi de quelle manière les élève- t- on?
44494[ 232] And, as to man himself, what is he but the incarnation of thought?
44494_ Travels by a Gentleman_( by Bromley?
44494and what are we to do with that relation between their structure and optical phenomena, which Sir David Brewster has worked out with signal ability?
44494et comment presque tout son commerce passa- t- il dans les mains de ses plus grands ennemis?
44494or whether the people should be governed by laws made by themselves, and live under a government derived from their own consent?
33819Meanwhile every morning we received orders to load quickly; this gave rise among the old soldiers to the following talk:''What shall we have to- day? 33819 ''For God''s sake, Herr Zittermann,''I continued,''what does this mean?'' 33819 ''How? 33819 ''What are the people above there doing?'' 33819 ''What? 33819 ''Why not?'' 33819 Besides their Prince and the army itself, what had they in Prussia to honour? 33819 But how was this possible? 33819 But she left Zittau soon, and never did a word escape my lips-- and how could it? 33819 But were they too old? 33819 Dear scenes of home, what have become of you in most families? 33819 Did he now eat little children? 33819 Do you know of anything greater?
33819For what are your wars to me?
33819From whence did these tendencies arise in him?
33819He made shift as he best could, what did it signify now?
33819How do you know this?"
33819How in the world, I thought, could my poor Socrates help not having been born later, not having lived in Judea?
33819I:''And that is all to be paid for out of six groschen?''
33819I:''To whom else can I complain?''
33819In what lay the magic of these slight traits of life?
33819Is this old age, is it reflection, is it reason?
33819My brother was a very rare exception of quiet earnestness; and yet who knows how often even he may have been equally distracted?
33819Now it does not signify to you; for have you not something to sell?
33819Now there was much wondering and inquiring, who I was?
33819Of what avail against this was violence, the opening of letters and secret investigations?
33819This took place as follows:--The president inquired of those assembled,''Who will act the part of Hans Waldmann?''
33819Was it Brandenburg blood?
33819Was it an impulse to unrestrained roving?
33819What remained now, what was left of any value to them?
33819What use was confiscation?
33819What would happen if the people were roused to political excitement?
33819When those present protested against this, the King asked angrily how otherwise he could obtain satisfaction for his injured honour?
33819Where was there anything great or strong?
33819Why should he have hung himself in misfortune?
33819Why was it so?
33819Would you not rather be a servant to our King, than to his lieutenant?''
33819[ 40] But those who were the leaders, but not men, who were they?
33819a recruit?''
33819answered I,''from whom?
33819for me?''
33819had shown no harshness to the Countess of Lichtenau; that he was a very good husband[38] and father, an upright man who had the best intentions?
33819or a longing for dissipation?
33819or youthful presumption which fancied it needed no guide?
33819thought I, what is all this?
33819what for?''
33819what''s the use of asking questions?
33819what?
33819where any fresh life to give enthusiasm and warmth?
33819where, then?''
33819why I had come?
10642: is our present system of education adequate to the sufficient development of character, and if not, how should it be modified?
10642And here it was not things that failed, but_ men._ What of the world since the Peace of Versailles?
10642And what did he leave behind him?
10642And yet, had we this right?
10642Are not children the true artists?
10642Are the two so very far apart?
10642Assuming that this is so, two questions arise: what is to take the place of imperial industry, and how is this substitution to be brought about?
10642Certainly this is possible; greater miracles have happened in history but, failing this, what?
10642Do we not speak of the call of a missionary from an unshepherded flock to a large city parish as a call to"a wider sphere of usefulness"?
10642Does it manifest itself with power today in the dealings between class and class, between interest and interest, between nation and nation?
10642For those who can go with me so far, the question will arise: How then are we so to reorganize society that we may gain the end in view?
10642How has this been possible, what has been the sequence of events that has brought us to this pass?
10642How is this to be accomplished?
10642How, humanly speaking, is the redemption of society to be achieved?
10642I would not exchange Kit Marlowe''s_"Is this the face that launched a thousand ships And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?
10642In our prayer- life today do we recognize sufficiently the need for_ listening_ to God?
10642Is it due to the viciousness of the worker, to his natural selfishness, greed and cruelty?
10642Is there any one who would confess that character and intelligence are now a helpless minority in this nation?
10642Is there any value in an estate where status is heritable?
10642Is this supernatural gift of charity a mark of contemporary civilization?
10642Is this"chimerical and irrational"?
10642May it not be infinitely complex, as the ripple rises on the wave that lifts on the swell of the underlying tide?
10642On this assumption what are these enduring principles that will control the guild system of industry in the new State, however may be its form?
10642Shall I put the whole thing in a phrase and say that the object of teaching English is to get young people to like good things?
10642The man asks of God:_ O when did I give Thee drink erewhile, Or when embrace Thine unseen feet?
10642The rise and fall of the line of civilization; showing also the nodal points at the Christian Era and at the years 500, 1000, 1500 and 2000(?)]
10642These are hard sayings and strong doctrine, but will any one say they are not true?
10642Today, when we accept the necessity of labour, and even worship activity for its own sake, do we not need to be reminded that to pray is to labour?
10642What if this all did fade in the miasma of Versailles and the cynicism of trade fighting to get back to"normalcy,"and the red anarchy out of the East?
10642What is spirit?
10642What is the reason for this?
10642What is the reason for this?
10642What is their source?
10642What then is matter and what is spirit?
10642What then, in the premises, can we do?
10642What, after all, does this imply, so far as the social organism is concerned?
10642What, precisely has taken place?
10642When you or I conceive of any piece of work as"important"is it not because it involves either great numbers or great sums of money?
10642Which shall we choose,_ if_ we choose, and do not content ourselves with an easier inertia that allows nature to take its course?
10642Why did these things come, and how?
10642Why is it that this is so?
10642but the kingdom of heaven is_ within you._ Why a second birth?
2445But how is it possible for you,said I, with some warmth,"to know whether your discourse is really inspired by the Almighty?"
2445My dear sir,said I,"were you ever baptised?"
2445Well,said I to him,"what sort of a communion have you?"
2445What have you, then, taught us?
2445You have, then, no priests?
2445*** And who is there, say you, that dares deny So owned a truth?
2445After this, shall people quarrel with me about the name I give it?"
2445And are the several ideas of which thy soul receives the impression formed by thyself?
2445And how is this reflection performed?
2445And in case its influence reaches so far, is it not very probable that this power retains it in its orbit, and determines its motion?
2445And was not France very happy, when the power and authority of those petty robbers was abolished by the lawful authority of kings and of the people?
2445As you can not comprehend either matter or spirit, why will you presume to assert anything?
2445But are not the French fond of life, and is beauty so inconsiderable an advantage as to be disregarded by the ladies?
2445But are they less obliged to him because he did not know the reason why the muscles contract?
2445But art thou circumcised?"
2445But by what are they impelled?
2445But in case the moon obeys this principle( whatever it be) may we not conclude very naturally that the rest of the planets are equally subject to it?
2445But what do I say?
2445But what would these people say should they themselves be proved irreligious?
2445Ce maitre pretendu qui leur donne des loix, Ce roi des animaux, combien a- t''il de rois?"
2445De tous les animaux il est ici le maitre; Qui pourroit le nier, poursuis tu?
2445Faut- il vieillir courbe sous la main qui m''outrage, Supporter, ou finir mon malheur et mon sort?
2445From what cause, therefore, do colours arise in Nature?
2445I have made choice of part of the celebrated soliloquy in_ Hamlet_, which you may remember is as follows:--"To be, or not to be?
2445In the remaining twentieth part how few are readers?
2445L''homme est ne pour agir, et tu pretens penser?"
2445Que peut il faire?
2445Qui suis je?
2445Shall I ascribe to an unknown cause, what I can so easily impute to the only second cause I am acquainted with?
2445Shall he not be allowed to say?
2445Shall we, after these words, cheapen, as it were, the Gospel, sell the Holy Ghost, and make of an assembly of Christians a mere shop of traders?
2445This book was forbid in France, but do you believe that the English Ministry were pleased with it?
2445What, then, is this secret disposition?
2445Why should we abandon our babe to mercenary nurses, when we ourselves have milk enough for it?
2445Would not one suppose that these sublime discoveries had been made by the greatest philosophers, and in ages much more enlightened than the present?
2445Wouldst thou deprive us of so happy a distinction?
2445baptism a Jewish ceremony?"
2445et qu''est- ce que la mort?
2445no communion?"
2445will these people say further;"and to what purpose are so many calculations to tell us what you yourself do not comprehend?"
44493''La question: Sommes- nous libres?
44493-> divested?''
44493Again, at p. 226:''Theology, what is it, but the science of things divine?
44493And he indignantly asks those who insist on the supremacy of faith,''May we cause our faith without Reason to appear reasonable in the eyes of men?''
44493And why?
44493Aut quod olim erat verum, nunc statim, quia istis non placet, erit falsum?''
44493Aut quod tum laudabatur in illis, i d nunc damnatur in nobis?
44493But how can a man be conscious''that nothing whatever_ can_ force his will''?
44493But if it be admitted that he acts as a slave, why blame him for not possessing the virtues of a free man?
44493But now, how stands the fact?
44493But what could that avail such readers as they?
44493But why was it not adopted in 1687?
44493By whom, indeed, could he be divested?
44493Ergo tot veterum episcoporum et doctorum virorum tanta consensio nihil aliud erat quà   m conspiratio hà ¦ reticorum?
44493For where can we find, even among the most ignorant or most sanguinary politicians, sentiments like these?
44493For why should certain truths be rejected in one age, and acknowledged in another?
44493For, whence did they derive that knowledge, of which they are always ready to assume the merit?
44493He adds in the same work, p. 381,''Is it for this benefit we open"the usual relations of peace and amity?"
44493How could so wonderful a progress be made in the face of these unparalleled disasters?
44493How could such men, under such circumstances, effect such improvements?
44493How could they support a sovereign who sought to favour those who differed from the national church?
44493How could they tolerate a prince who would not allow them to persecute their enemies?
44493How did they get at their principles?
44493How did they obtain their opinions?
44493In Mrichchakati, the judge says to a Sudra,''If you expound the Vedas, will not your tongue be cut out?''
44493Is it for this our youth of both sexes are to form themselves by travel?
44493Is it for this that with expense and pains we form their lisping infant accents to the language of France?...
44493Quodque in illis erat catholicum, i d nunc mutatis tantùm hominum voluntatibus, repentè factum est schismaticum?
44493The work of Gibbon remains; but who is there who feels any interest in what was written against him?
44493Was there ever any other man who wished to afflict the human race with such extensive, searching, and protracted calamities?
44493What science can be attained unto, without the help of natural discourse and Reason?''
44493Whence, they ask, can this arise?
44493Why need our children learn its language?
44493Will you say, that when one event precedes another, the one which comes first is the effect, and the one which follows afterwards is the cause?
44493Would their philosophy have been equally secular; or, being equally secular, would it have been equally successful?
44493[ 15] If this boasted faculty deceives us in some things, what security have we that it will not deceive us in others?
44493[ 307]''Voulez- vous savoir de quoi dà © pend le sexe des enfants?
44493[ 622] This is tersely expressed by M. Lamennais:''Pourquoi les corps gravitent- ils les uns vers les autres?
44493[ 892] Why, then, need men travel in it?
44493and why are we to endanger the morals of our ambassadors?
44493p. 72: l''Amà © riqueMà © ridionale-> l''Amà © rique Mà © ridionale p. 80: he be divested?
2582Did you read my pastoral letter?
2582Do you see that young man of twenty- five who will soon traverse the sanctuary to find the sinners awaiting him? 2582 What has proved of most use to you in behalf of religion in your diocese during the last fifteen years?
2582What works are deemed satisfactory?
2582Why is confession ordained?
2582( A speech by Father Ravignan, August 3, 1848)"What nation in the Roman church is more prominent at the present day for its missionary labors?
2582( And then, pointing upward:)"Who made all that?"
2582( If the soul dies with the body what happens to God?
2582( SR.)][ Footnote 5340: Like a central committee of the communist party?
2582--"Why again?"
2582And yourself?"
2582Between the two domains, between that which belongs to civil authority and that which belongs to religious authority, is there any line of separation?
2582Did Lenin and Stalin use this description of catholic brainwashing as their model?
2582Did Lenin have Taine translated?
2582Except for such beneficial generalities which may provide general hygienic guidelines, could M. Taine have suggested immediate remedies?
2582Have you seen the pastoral declaration of Boisgelin, archbishop of Tours?...
2582How could such a profound change in the condition of humanity fail to undermine everywhere the order of things which group men together?
2582How dare the Academy speak of regicides?...
2582How does the shrunken family come to live only for itself?
2582How does"this common factor combine with special factors, permanent and temporary,"belong to our system?
2582Is it through this-- is it through that?
2582Man?
2582On what lines must the metamorphosis be effected in order to arrive at a viable creations?
2582Philosophy?)
2582Quid homo?
2582Quid philosophia?
2582Quid societas?
2582Society?
2582The knowledge we have of our origins, of our psychology, of our present constitution, of our circumstances, what hopes are warranted?
2582Villagers, after listening to a sermon against the tavern and drunkenness, murmur and are heard to exclaim:"Why does he meddle with our affairs?
2582Were we good citizens?
2582What if he, like so many other highly talented and intelligent men, took his own superb intelligence and imagination for granted?
2582What if the talent of such men is inherited?
2582What is the priest?
2582What would this book have been?
2582While M. Thiers, with equal vivacity, in the parliamentary committee exclaimed:"Cousin, Cousin, do you comprehend the lesson we have received?
2582Who, then, can criticize a Government because it insists that all children be taught these basic skills?
2582Why in modern France does he give his thoughts to"pleasure and of excelling in his career"?
2582Why should not the new milieu at once attack all ancient forms of society?
2582[ 5282]"Ecclesiastical obedience is... a love of dependence, a violation of judgment.... Would you know what it is as to the extent of sacrifice?
2582[ Footnote 5117: What impression could this have made on Lenin?
2582[ Footnote 5132: Ibid., p.154:"Is it not better to organize worship and discipline the priests rather than let things go on as they are?"]
2582[ Footnote 6115:"Histoire du Collége Louis le Grand,"by Esmond, emeritus censor, 1845, p.267"Who were the assistant- teachers?
2582[ Footnote 6362: All this was in 1890, a long time ago, and if there was much to learn then, how much do we not have to learn now?
2582[ Footnote 6380: But what if Taine was mistaken?
19229A certain lack of solitude there may be perhaps, and-- Will conspicuous advertisements play any part in the landscape?...
19229And as for the world beyond our urban regions?
19229And how will the New Republic treat the inferior races?
19229And upon that assumption, in what direction are these new motor vehicles likely to develop?
19229But how does this fit into the childless, disunited, and probably shifting_ ménage_ of our second picture?
19229But is it likely that this will remain a rude levy?
19229But is it?
19229But then, on the other hand, does the ordinary monogamic wife do that?
19229But what of the Welsh- speaking Welshman?
19229But why was it not invented?
19229Can the wife in any sort of polygamic arrangement, or a woman of no assured status, attain to the maternal possibilities of the ideal monogamic wife?
19229Charity is in the air, and why should not charming people meet one another?
19229He will echo our question,"Why_ did_ people stand it?"
19229How can capable and active men be expected to live and work between this upper and that nether millstone?
19229How far will that possible diffusion accomplish itself?
19229How is it that the steam locomotive appeared at the time it did, and not earlier in the history of the world?
19229How will it deal with the black?
19229Is Germany to her utmost possibility making capable men?
19229Now, in what direction will matters move?
19229Or is Germany doing no more than cash the promises of those earlier days?
19229Or is it only unprecedented?
19229Our marksmen will snatch at their field- glasses, tremulously anxious,"Is that a white flag or no?...
19229Spanish and Russian are mighty languages, but without a reading public how can they prevail, and what prospect of a reading public has either?
19229Was its appearance then due only to the attainment of a certain necessary degree of public credit, or was it correlated with any other force?
19229What can you expect of them?
19229What else is there?
19229What is the will and purpose that these men of will and purpose will find above and comprehending their own?
19229What life or strength will be left in the old order to prevent this new order beginning?
19229What now are the centripetal forces against which these inducements contend?
19229What of the Basque and the Lithuanian who can speak only his mother tongue?
19229What will have happened?
19229What will these aggregating world- languages be?
19229Why should it be so hopeless to suggest an edition of the"Golden Bough"with footnotes by Mr. Lang and Mr. Fraser''s replies?
19229Why should not men of opposite opinions collaborate in their discussion?
19229Will the resultant of these forces be, as a rule, centripetal or centrifugal?
19229[ 45]_ Is War Now Impossible?_ and see also footnote, p. 210.
19229[ 51] How will the landscape shape itself to the dominant men of the new time and in relation to themselves?
19229and where finally will they take us?
19229how will it deal with the yellow man?
19229how will it tackle that alleged termite in the civilized woodwork, the Jew?
19229how will they react upon the railways?
17648Rhode Island? 17648 What am I to do with you, Tommy?
17648*****"What am I who doth rail against the fate That binds mankind?
17648American parents are doubtless more familiar than others with the plaintive remonstrance:"Why did you not bring me up more strictly?
17648An American says,"Would n''t you_ like_ to do this for me?"
17648An Englishman says,"Would you_ mind_ doing so- and- so for me?"
17648And even if he does, do A, and B, and C?
17648And shall I ever forget the grotesque gravity of the negro brakeman in Louisiana, with his tall silk hat?
17648Are you nobody, too?
17648As we come over"Nob Hill"we take in the size of the houses of the Californian millionaires, note that they are of wood( on account of the earthquakes?
17648But, alas, who is quicker to resent our criticism than they of our own household?
17648Do not our very cooks the same as far as they can?
17648Have not our novelists and satirists reaped the most ample harvest from the pitiable spectacle and all its results?
17648I suppose that''s because he''s a Scotsman?
17648I thought he would n''t let you come?"
17648Is the world fouler for a gnat''s corpse?
17648Is there not a picturesque side to the triumph of civilisation over barbarism?
17648Is there not an element of the picturesque in the struggles of the Western farmer?
17648Nay, The ocean, is it shallower for the drop It leaves upon a blade of grass?"
17648One says to the other:"How did you manage your father?
17648Our genial satirist_ Punch_ hit the nail on the head:"Shall we-- eh-- reverse, Miss Lilian?"
17648Surely the American journalist has a fatal facility of repetition or--?
17648These poems are all short, and their titles( such as"What Shall It Profit?"
17648This may be so; but where else in the world will you find such a volume and expanse of free trade as in these same United States?
17648To which the Boston girl:"Well, whose trunk was it?"
17648We may feel ourselves, for example, the equal of a marquis, but does he?
17648What am I to do with you?"
17648What has American culture and civilisation to say to this mode of training youth?
17648What if I sin-- am lost-- do crack my life Against the gateless walls of Fate''s decree?
17648What right- minded man in any circle of British society has not shuddered at the open pursuit of young Croesus?
17648Which of our enlightened British companies is going to be the first to win the hearts of its patrons by the adoption of this neat and easy device?
17648Who are you?
17648Why did you give me so much of my own way?"
17648Why should she hypocritically subordinate her personal instincts to a general theory of taste?
17648Would you mind going out with my little girl while she makes some purchases?"
17648or the pair of gloves pathetically shared between two neatly dressed negro youths in a railway carriage in Georgia?
17648or the pickaninnies slumbering sweetly in old packing- cases in a hut at Jacksonville, while their father thrummed the soft guitar with friendly grin?
17648rather than"Of what kind?"
27250A man who takes a holiday at Trouville or Dieppe is not confronted on his return with the question,''When is your book on France going to appear?''
27250And if we did ask him to bring his wife, how many wives would he bring?
27250Are these the amiable and pacific relations which will unite England and America, when Englishmen can get to America in a day?
27250Are you an atheist?''
27250Assuming all the desperate composure of Slim Jim himself, I replied,''You mean you are connected with the police authorities here, do n''t you?
27250But because I know that Bilge is only Bilge, shall I stoop to the profanity of saying that fire is only fire?
27250But is my American critic really ready to treat the sacrifice of blood in the same way as the sacrifice of beer?
27250But perhaps a better answer would be that given to W. T. Stead when he circulated the rhetorical question,''Shall I slay my brother Boer?''
27250But right in what?
27250But the English are not always saying, either in romance or reality,''What''s to be done, if our food is being poisoned by all these baronets?''
27250But what are those rights?
27250But what did it write on Belshazzar''s wall?...
27250But what would be the good of imaginative logic to prove the madness of such people, when they themselves praise it for being mad?
27250Can it be possible that he brought it from Virginia, where the cigarettes come from?
27250Can we say in any special sense nowadays that clergymen, as such, make a poison out of the blood of the martyrs?
27250Can we say it in anything like the real sense, in which we do say that yellow journalists make a poison out of the blood of the soldiers?
27250I suppose most of your people are agricultural, are n''t they?''
27250If he was a lunatic who thought he was an astronomer, why did he have a badge to prove he was a detective?
27250If the police insist on his wearing clothes, will he recognise the authority of the police?
27250If there are no rights of men, what are the rights of nations?
27250If_ Martin Chuzzlewit_ makes America a lunatic asylum, what in the world does it make England?
27250In short, as in the American formula, is he a polygamist?
27250In short, as in the American formula, is he an anarchist?
27250Is Mr. Campbell content with a Prohibition which is another name for Privilege?
27250Is bloodshed to be as prolonged and protracted as Prohibition?
27250Is the Hairy Ainu content with hair, or does he wear any clothes?
27250Is the normal noncombatant to shed his gore as often as he misses his drink?
27250O, hidden face of man, whereover The years have woven a viewless veil, If thou wert verily man''s lover What did thy love or blood avail?
27250One of the questions on the paper was,''Are you an anarchist?''
27250Only, if war is the exception, why should Prohibition be the rule?
27250Shall I blaspheme crimson stars any more than crimson sunsets, or deny that those moons are golden any more than that this grass is green?
27250Take that innocent question,''Are you an anarchist?''
27250The inquisitor, in his more than morbid curiosity, had then written down,''Are you a polygamist?''
27250Then there was the question,''Are you in favour of subverting the government of the United States by force?''
27250To which a detached philosopher would naturally feel inclined to answer,''What the devil has that to do with you?
27250Was he a detective?
27250Was he a wandering lunatic?
27250Was he an astronomer?
27250What has become of all those ideal figures from the Wise Man of the Stoics to the democratic Deist of the eighteenth century?
27250Which has most to do with shekels to- day, the priests or the politicians?
27250Who and what was that man?
27250Why not wear his uniform, if he was resolved to show every stranger in the street his badge?
27250Why should the world take the chains off the black man when it was just putting them on the white?
27250Would etiquette require us to ask him to bring his wife?
27250_ Is the Atlantic Narrowing?_ A certain kind of question is asked very earnestly in our time.
27250or''Are you a philanthropist?''
27250which is intrinsically quite as impudent as''Are you an optimist?''
15084And as to the second point, I would ask whether M. Bergson possesses a clock or a watch, and if he has, how he supposes time is measured on them?
15084And if not, what becomes of a''growth of the soul''?
15084And not only happiness and love, but knowledge also: the Earth calls to the Sky:''Heaven, hast thou secrets?
15084And what is this Jury of people situated in the natural conditions of laborious life who are to decide not individually but as a Jury?
15084But are they also deeper?
15084But can we possibly distinguish between industrial and political matters?
15084But how was it, with such a Poor Law, that the hand- loom weavers did not die of starvation by the thousand?
15084But what is it that really happens when the artist addresses us, and why does he wish to address us?
15084But which had the best chance of seeing truly, the life- long companion and lover, or the stranger, sad, lonely, and longing for home?]
15084But why should we want art at all?
15084But, the objector will inquire, does this imply the enlargement of every individual or even of the average or the typical personality?
15084Croce does not see that the question-- What is expression?
15084Do not great mountains sometimes rise from the sea and sometimes from the high plateau?
15084For what in this reference is''the community''?
15084How can a monster beget an angel?
15084How did they live, what did they think about, what did they count for then, what do they count for now?
15084How did this new and amazing experience react upon their poetry?
15084How then does the history of poetry in Europe during these sixty years stand in relation to these underlying processes?
15084If I really give my mind to the task, can not I define a continuous function which is_ not_ differentiable?
15084If any one mysteriously falls ill and dies, the question at once presents itself to the savage mind, who did it?
15084If it were your idea of a horse, why should you look at it?
15084If the state can be described as a person, may not also a church and a trade union?
15084In what sense, then, can we speak of the evolution of religion?
15084Is it not this that divides our modern local poetry from his?
15084Need we doubt that with the general raising in the level new eminences will appear?
15084Shaw, it is reported, asked the sculptor:''I suppose you meant your own hand after all?''
15084The problem immediately propounds itself-- what are the factors which control this differentiation?
15084There is a relation, and a necessary relation, between the artist and his public; but what is the nature of it?
15084True enough, as far as it goes; but what do we mean by expression?
15084Was the compulsion to drink an oppression?
15084We must then, I hold, regard it as an integral part of the whole story of everything to find an answer to the questions What is good?
15084What else could they do but hand them on to the men?
15084What has happened?
15084What is the condition of the rural counties of Wessex?
15084What is the cure for it?
15084What is the distinctive note of this new poetry of nationality?
15084What is the truth?
15084What may not be hoped of men if once they learn to live with their fellows?
15084What then is it in totemism from which, on Sir James Frazer''s view, something comes?
15084Where would English industry have been without its king?
15084Which of all types of modern men is the most habitually hopeful, the man of letters, the politician, the business man, or the man of science?
15084Who can say whether he himself belongs to them?
15084Who is to choose them?
15084Why?
15084You have not been equal to it, and why?
15084[ 21] What is a navvy and how does he live?
15084_ What is Art?_ is a most interesting book, full of incidental truth; but I believe that the main contention in it is false.
15084and What is beautiful?
15084as well as to the question What is fact?
15084depends upon the question-- What is the relation between the artist and his audience?
2581And you, like the rest, took part in the Revolution through ambition?
2581Fuck, where were you then?
2581General Dumas,[1244] said he, abruptly, to Mathieu Dumas,"you were one of the imbeciles who believed in liberty?"
2581I am inflexible on exemptions; they would be crimes; how relieve one''s conscience of having caused one man to die in the place of another?
2581Is a statesman,said he,"made to have feeling?
2581What do they want of me?
2581What do you want?
2581What has become of the men of the Revolution? 2581 What remains then to fill this fearful void( in the finances)?
2581Who is the rich man to- day? 2581 Why did I stop and sign the preliminaries of Leoben?
2581With a bishop who is merely a damned fool, why are you so often away, etc.?
2581Yes, but how maintain my army? 2581 You pass through Paris?"
2581[ 1136]Are you married?"
2581''And why, citizen Consul?''
2581''What do I care?
2581''What''s the matter with you, Portalis?''
2581( Speaking of his brothers and sisters in the"Memorial"Napoleon says):"What family as numerous presents such a splendid group?"
2581):"What is a man, master of himself?
2581--"What do you mean by that?"
2581--"What is it?"
2581--Ibid., 279:""What is the right of property?
2581--Thibaudeau, 99:"What do I care for the opinions and cackle of the drawing- room?
2581--To the grand- vicars he says,"Which of you governs your bishop-- who is at best a fool?"
2581Adoption, what is that?
2581And better yet, the master deigns to lecture Beugnot on his personal tastes, on his regrets, on his wish to return to France: What would he like?
2581But how, except through divination, can these passions, which grow out of the deepest sentiments, be reached?
2581Did n''t that burly Soult want to be king of Portugal?"
2581Do you know any man vile enough to take part in such contrivances?
2581Do you suppose also that it is for the establishment of a republic?
2581Does he imagine that they are fond of him personally?
2581Does not public morality demand that it should be so considered?
2581Eh, what do I care for your intelligence?
2581Has any difficult task been accomplished?
2581He has spoilt the finest reign Russia ever saw.... How can he admit to his society such men as a Stein, an Armfeld, a Vinzingerode?
2581How can you imagine any man of talent or at all honorable contentedly playing the part of a hog fattening himself on a few millions?"
2581How many have you yourselves not asked for?
2581How, save by conjecture, can forces be estimated which seem to defy all measurement?
2581In what attitude does he wish to place me before the French people?
2581Is he not wholly an eccentric personage, always alone by himself, he on one side and the world on the other?
2581Is it for France or for himself that Napoleon works?
2581Is it possible not to feel that one no longer has a country, that one is under constraint, wounded in feeling and humiliated?...
2581Is it reasonable to work so hard for this, and is so slight an object worth so great an effort?
2581Is it to have nothing, then, to have no parliaments, no provincial governments, no privileged classes, no clerical bodies, no nobility?
2581On the right of children to be supported and fed although of age, he says:"Will you allow a father to drive a girl of fifteen out of his house?
2581Seeing a public functionary issue out of nothingness, where is the shoeblack whose soul would not stir with ambition?"
2581She bears me children, and I then discover she is not my cousin-- is that marriage valid?
2581Some days before Napoleon had said to M. de Narbonne, who told me that very evening:"After all, what has this( the Russian campaign) cost me?
2581The poor Archbishop of Tours, my old schoolmate...''''Eh, well, what has happened to him?''
2581To be his minister in Paris?
2581To that one,"When did you come here?"
2581What started the Revolution?
2581What will end it?
2581When this army of boys is gone, what will you do then?"
2581Where ought this to originate?
2581Who knows how much time he will require to again change the face of Europe and resurrect the Western Roman Empire?"
2581Why should not France have its laws adopted in Holland?...
2581With our customs, our vices, how is that possible?
2581[ 1145]''''Is that useful?''
2581[ 12141]"Do they want me to dishonor myself?
2581[ 3328]"I am more brilliant[3329], you may say?
2581inquired Napoleon,''are you ill?
2581or, again,"When are you going away?
2581says he to this one, and"How many children have you?
2581who told you to come here and stir up my bile in this way?
56484Are the workers here in any way members of the community?
56484Are you an Anarchist?
56484Are you an Anarchist?
56484But the old religion of Oneida?
56484How many hours a day may a child work in New York,I began to ask people,"and when may a boy leave school?"
56484Is n''t that possible?
56484May we not become a peculiar people-- like the Jews?
56484Resist what?
56484The Chinese?
56484Was it by any chance very, very black?
56484Was n''t he making trouble?
56484What are you going to make your future_ of_, for all your airs?
56484What do you mean?
56484What on earth,said I,"is that baby doing abroad at this time of night?"
56484What shall be those counter elements of civilization? 56484 What will the property- owners in Paterson say to us if this man is released?"
56484Who was he?
56484Whose head?
56484Why did he go there?
56484Will this enormous space of sunlit woodland and marsh and meadow really be filled at any time?
56484With all this,I asked him,"why does n''t the place_ think_?"
56484You do n''t think they''ll swamp you?
56484A hundred tons of water stuns one altogether, and what more do you want?
56484All depends upon the answer to this question: Is the average citizen fundamentally dishonest?
56484And at a cheaper rate?...
56484And of all the races upon earth, which has suffered such wrongs as this negro blood that is still imputed to him as a sin?
56484And then-- what use will it make of its prey?
56484Are n''t we driving ahead westward at a pace of four hundred and fifty miles a day?
56484Are you ashamed of your poor relations?
56484Are you bound to inform your customer of every defect?
56484Are you bound to spend more upon cleaning and packing them than he demands?--to wrap them in gold- foil gratuitously, for example?
56484But where will one find that class?
56484But will the uneducated whites endure even so submissive a vindication as that?
56484Do geographical positions or mineral resources make for riches?
56484Do you think it is generous?"
56484How are you going to answer these questions?
56484How far do they suffer under that plight of feminine education-- notetaking from lectures?...
56484How far, I wonder still, are these girls thinking and feeding mentally for themselves?
56484How shall it be prevented from becoming in obedience to a similar inexorable law, a curse?
56484How subtle, how collected and patient, how far capable of a long plan, is this American nation?
56484III Is Progress Inevitable?
56484Is an abundant prolific life at a low level indicated?
56484Is he a rascal and humbug in grain?
56484Is he fair?"
56484No national income- tax is legal, and there is practically no power, short of revolution, to alter that.... Could anything be more emphatic?
56484Or between themselves for the matter of that?
56484Or is he fundamentally honest, but a little confused ethically?...
56484Suppose you are, then are you bound to examine your goods minutely for defects?
56484Suppose you want to grow very rich and found a noble university, let us say?
56484The seller seeks to appreciate, the buyer to depreciate; and where is there room for truth in that contest?
56484Then can you decently join in the outcry against the Chicago butchers?
56484Then if you intrust that duty to an employee ought you to dismiss him for selling defective goods for you?
56484They have secret agents, false names, concealed bargains,--what else could one expect?
56484They have, no doubt, carried sharpness to the very edge of dishonesty, but what else was to be expected from the American conditions?
56484Well, do you expect me, now I''m here, to shut the door on any other poor chaps who want a start-- a start with hope in it, in the New World?"
56484What are you going to make your future_ of_, for all your airs, we want to know?
56484What can you do with a public opinion made of this class of ingredient?
56484What do they discuss one with another?
56484What elements of a future, as futures have gone in the great world, are at all assured to you?"
56484What is America saying to itself?
56484What is happening to those who have not got and who are not getting wealth, who are, in fact, falling back in the competition?
56484What is the form of that process as one finds it in America?
56484What made him so sure of this progressive magnificence of Boston''s growth?
56484What matters it?
56484What shall we have?
56484What will they be up to?"
56484Who can invent a rule to determine what expedients are permissible and what not?
56484Will they suffer the horrid spectacle of free and self- satisfied negroes in decent clothing on any terms without resentment?
56484_ What_ Princess?"
33795''What other will you do? 33795 But what does this signify to us?
33795But who would venture to describe all the cunning practices whereby these strollers contrive to make and collect money? 33795 It is asked what will be the issue?
33795So the King''s judge spoke to the town clerk saying:''Are the women without?'' 33795 The first words of the major were:''Children, what are you doing here?''
33795When we came to the afore- mentioned village, we formed ourselves in column, fixed our bayonets, and thought what will now take place? 33795 ''Indeed,''he continued;''but if the Meiningens come?'' 33795 ''Spectacles for the Evangelical Apple of the Eye;''''A sharp round Eye on the Romish Pope;''''Who has struck the Calf in the Eye? 33795 ''Why then were the gates closed and barricaded, and we not allowed to pass through?'' 33795 ''_ Oh, mon Dieu!_''exclaimed he,''we must return thither, even were we to sit down before the gates; where are your majors?'' 33795 After a friendly greeting the father asked him in which faith he had at last resolved to die? 33795 And shall it fare better with you who have exercised more than Turkish cruelty in many evangelical places? 33795 And who knows wherefore this has begun? 33795 Are these your secret projects which are brought to light to- day? 33795 Are they the masters of my honoured mother- in- law? 33795 As, however, it is already very late, I wish my treasure to inform me whether it please her to be reconciled with me here?'' 33795 At last Levi called to the priest by his side and asked him in a clear voice what he would promise if he should consent to be baptized? 33795 Ay, ay, what have you done?'' 33795 But his Princely Highness continued:''Who may this faithless person be? 33795 But who has exalted himself above them with kingly magnificence, a great retinue and boundless expense, is it not your chief( Oxenstiern)? 33795 Do you think that this has not been complained of at every court? 33795 Does he think that anything else can be obtained by prayers, entreaties, or the like means? 33795 Have you had too little bloodshed? 33795 He asked further:''Did you all march?'' 33795 He then said, would I wish to send my wife away? 33795 Hereupon he asked once more whether they would amicably open the gate? 33795 Hereupon our lord and husband answered:''Why is so much proof required? 33795 Hereupon, Major von Benkendorf asked whether they were the councillors? 33795 How ancient was Loyola? 33795 How can we expect better than to fall into their hands? 33795 How has this money been spent? 33795 How will it fare with thee after my death? 33795 I answered, No; whereupon he inquired of me, whether I knew that the Meiningens meant to attack us that night? 33795 I asked the citizen where our soldiers were? 33795 I thought:''What the devil is the matter?'' 33795 If we have been able to bring the men into the right path, why should we not be able to deal with these little brutes?'' 33795 Is this the custom of war? 33795 Is this to be allowed? 33795 Major von S---- came straight up to me and asked me secretly, whether I had heard any news? 33795 Meanwhile, do you think that God has a flaxen beard, and will allow himself to be led by the nose? 33795 My host, himself a councillor, came and asked me what was the meaning of our not marching further? 33795 Now it was right to pay my respects to the Privy Councillor, and ask him whether he had any commands for Wasungen? 33795 Perhaps it was the grace of God? 33795 Rest assured that I am right; what think you, gentlemen? 33795 She turned herself round to the others and said:''Women, is this your will?'' 33795 The Major accosted him sharply, asking how it was that the gates were fastened, and whether a public high road did not pass through there? 33795 The Major asked him once more, whether he would yield up the ground? 33795 The Major asked whether this was not the highroad to Nuremberg? 33795 The beautiful or the frivolous? 33795 The citizens also began to inquire:''Wherefore is all this running to the commander at theBear?"''
33795The citizens quarrelled with the soldiers, and asked why they had not marched away yesterday or early to- day, and whither we had intended to go?
33795The fearful S. J. which shone in gold on the stones of the college, how long would it last?
33795The fifth then began:''That is right, cousin Hopf: do you not remember how it fared with us when the Imperial cavalry came?
33795The said Major asked him,''Who is there besides?''
33795The seventh spoke thus:''Did I not tell you, gentlemen, what would happen, by keeping these people so long outside?
33795Then Captain Brandis, who had not consented to this at their council of war, asked what this meant?
33795Then I said,''Is that the way the cards are shuffled?
33795They also had probably passed an unquiet night; wherefore?
33795They answered:''Yes, and what did we desire?''
33795They are our border neighbours too; why should we not give them a night''s lodging?''
33795This took place after the lapse of two hours, when our husband thus addressed us in our chamber:''Is my treasure still angry with me?''
33795Was it a higher morality?
33795Was it gaiety?
33795What can we say?
33795What might not the electors of Saxony and Brandenburg together with these cities, accomplish?
33795What was this new device to the seed of Abraham?
33795What were Loyola and his school to the ancient Abeles and to Levi Kurtzhandl?
33795When I challenged him, he called to me,''Do you not know me?''
33795Whereupon he replied,''Who gave you the right to upbraid me as a dishonest Prince?
33795Who asked them to wait so long here?
33795Who could have imagined such a trick?
33795Who was the man who created languages?
33795Who would have dreamt of such a trick?
33795Why did you not tell me the truth instead of sending me out of Wasungen by such deceit?
33795Would it be well, and could one make up one''s mind to confine, or drive them all away at once?
33795Would you throw the blame on the toll gatherers?
33795_ What kind of a thing is that Neutrality?
33795are these councillors?
33795suppose we were to send a messenger on horseback to Meiningen?''
33795whereupon the man addressed me as if I were a thrasher, and asked me whether I had no orders to remain here?
33795who devised the most ancient law of nations?
33795who first thought of giving poetical expression to an elevated tone of mind?
33795who is without envious rivals?
28117Believest thou not that I am in the Father and the Father in me?
28117Have you procured the mustard seed?
28117What is the chief gate to hell? 28117 All we can do in its presence is to ask-- is this all that man, the flower of God''s universe, is to arrive at? 28117 And are they not at heart loyal to the caste of their fathers? 28117 And can anything be more degrading to an intelligent human being? 28117 And what is Rahu? 28117 And what shall I say of Jesus, the Christ? 28117 And what was the chief ambition for personal achievement sought by Jesus and Gautama? 28117 And who is to decide as to which catalogue is the worse and the more heinous in the sight of God? 28117 And why should they not, if our faith is to fit well the Oriental mind, and is to become a gracious power in its life? 28117 Are you satisfied? 28117 Are you satisfied? 28117 But to harbour him means to be outcast as a family; and how can they endure that? 28117 But what is it that such men as Vivekananda and Abhedananda, and all the rest of the_ Ananda_ tribe, teach upon their return to India? 28117 But what is one such school among the many millions of this community in India? 28117 But what is the picture which Hinduism has drawn of the finality of life to its followers? 28117 But, you ask, will not the_ Sattia yuga_--the golden age-- return again? 28117 For is notThou shalt obey implicitly thy caste,"the first law of the Hindu decalogue, and the one most sincerely believed by all Hindus?
28117For was it not the five thousandth year of_ Kali yuga_?
28117For, say many, are not these immoralities and evils an integral part of the time; and, if so, what harm is there in our partaking of them?
28117Gentlemen, can any amount of esoteric whitewashing justify these disgraceful and fairly incredible practices?
28117Has he heaped upon her abuse and called her"donkey"and"buffalo"?
28117Has man kept her in ignorance?
28117How can one expect such a man to meet with a foreigner on even terms, or to treat him with equality and true friendship?
28117How can one substitute here a sameness of_ Karma_ for identity of soul?
28117How can the diminutive doses of the white man and his establishment remove important difficulties and heal serious diseases?
28117How shall we account for this strange and very striking fact?
28117Hundreds of people saw her dying agonies as they passed by during those days; but no heart of sympathy went out to her; for was she not a stranger?
28117III What is there in the recent condition of the country and of the people, which warrants this unrest and discontent?
28117In further enforcement of this Oriental character he continues:--"Was not Jesus Christ an Asiatic?
28117In view of all these things, who would say that God did not visit this people, or left Himself without witness among them?
28117Is it a wonder that life is a weariness, and existence itself an unspeakable burden to such a man?
28117Is it not, to a very considerable extent, the reason why there are so few whole- hearted reformers in India?
28117Is it true, in this sense also, that"there is nothing new under the sun"?
28117Is that any reason why we should associate them with our religion and tempt the devil himself with their presence in our holiest places and shrines?"
28117Is there no_ progress_ in time?
28117Is there nothing better for him than to end his long, dreary existence in such an abject failure?
28117Must he descend from the plain of even a wretched human life to this the lowest reach of existence, if such we must call it?
28117Now, in view of all this, what shall the Christian teacher do in this land?
28117On another occasion he says:--"Where, then, is Christ now?
28117Parental love and family tenderness cling to the Christian youth; and is he not the hope of the family for the years to come?
28117Shall he also exalt this ideal and temper it with Christian wisdom and chasten it with Christian meaning?
28117The old system of_ Sati_, whereby a woman immolated herself on the funeral pyre of her dead husband, what was it?
28117The people said,"Here is mustard seed;"but when she asked,"Has there died a son, a husband, a parent, or a slave in this house?"
28117V Many are now asking,"How shall this trouble be removed and peace and good- will be restored to the land?"
28117What was the caste system recently enunciated by Abhedananda in Madras?
28117What was there, then, to connect one birth with another, according to his teaching?
28117Who could know the veritable Christ of God without light from above?...
28117Who, then, can dogmatically tell us that these centuries have been better or worse than the eras preceding them?
28117Why should she demean her lord by pronouncing publicly his sacred name?
28117Why should we be content with our dependence and not reveal our manhood and our prowess, as Japan did?"
28117With his own right arm of virtue he wished to carve his way into eternal life-- or, shall I say, eternal death?
28117Without a son, who is there to relieve their soul from destruction, and to bring to them future peace and rest through the_ Shradda_ ceremony?
28117even for the sake of sovereignty over the three worlds, how much less than for this earth( alone)?"
28117they replied:"Lady, what is this that you ask?
33794''Dear sons,''he said,''what do they think in Switzerland about Luther?'' 33794 After we had thus spoken, he inquired:''Where have you studied hitherto?''
33794Shortly after, he asked where we were born, but answered himself:''You are Swiss; from what part of Switzerland do you come?'' 33794 ''Tell me,''said the Dean,''what it is? 33794 ''What holy thing?'' 33794 ''What is your name?'' 33794 ''What?'' 33794 ''What_ Pfaff_, do you wish to drive me away? 33794 --Then he said:''How are things going on at Basle? 33794 After this his Princely Grace said to me:''Hans, did I not tell you beforehand that I would drive away my brother? 33794 And how was it with the heart of lovers? 33794 And whither was he taking them? 33794 Are you content? 33794 But what happened? 33794 But what was their position at home? 33794 But who was there that could teach me, and how was I to effect this? 33794 Carlowitz came running to him from the Chancellery, and said,''Whither will your Electoral Grace drive?'' 33794 Do you not see how luxuriously I live, that I do nothing but eat, drink, jump, and dance, and lead an enjoyable life?'' 33794 For what did the right teaching of their own Church signify to the papists of the sixteenth century? 33794 Good humour pervades the manly words,What shall I do?
33794Had he done anything so very unprecedented?
33794Had his gospel given greater unity and power to the nation?
33794Have we not ears and understanding?
33794He asked what I had done?
33794How does it happen that at one time you can bear it and at another time not?''
33794How is it that this hard man has so completely lost his composure?
33794I have enough for my whole life, do you not see how well I live?
33794I have taken a nun for my wife, and have had children by her; who has seen that in the stars?"
33794I hope that all the circumstances of my departure will show neither levity, wantonness, nor unseemly purpose?
33794I returned for answer to the Duke that it was no fault of mine; and why had not his Princely Grace sent for wine in proper time?
33794Is Erasmus of Rotterdam still there, and what is he doing?''
33794Is there nothing in this that speaks to us?
33794The Dean replied:''Do you then believe that Christ died for us?''
33794The Dean replied:''What of Jerusalem?
33794The Dean then asked:''Where was it consecrated?''
33794The noble Queen''s thoughts had been wandering to and fro, and she said to me,''What would you advise?
33794Then eight other scholars knelt before the ass, clasped their hands over their heads, and sang,_ Quantus est iste ad throni et dominationes occurrunt?
33794Then said my aunt:''Who knows?
33794Then said the Dean:''Appel, do I hurt you with my hand?
33794Then the Dean bent down towards her, took the stole out of her hands and asked her:''Dear Apollonia, how are you now?
33794There was a high school there, and I found some Swiss, who inquired of me from whence I came?
33794Thereupon the Dean proceeded:''But I wish to know yet one thing, whether you are alone, or have any companions with you?''
33794To which he said:''Why should I not believe it?
33794To which the answer was:"How could He otherwise bow down the stiff- necked?"
33794Was not that a wicked nation?
33794We replied,''We will do that with pleasure, but how must we designate you, that he may understand your greeting?''
33794What else can they preach to the poor people?
33794What if he should be in error?
33794What must have been the feeling of Abraham when he had to sacrifice his youngest and dearest son?
33794What was the Bible?
33794When we took leave of our mother, she wept and said,''Am I not to be pitied, to have three sons going to lead this miserable life?''
33794Where can I now remain, and where will they find brimstone, pitch, fire, and wood enough to pulverize the poisonous heretic?
33794Who was there to punish the young nobleman who maltreated the peasants?
33794With what cold irony he writes:"What shall I do, most holy father?
33794by what virtues could weak men hope to gain the endless treasure of God''s favour?
33794do you now know me and the other people?''
33794is not the coat made yet?
33794may God in Heaven hear me; this great calamity grieves me to the heart; Christ bless thee; what has happened to thee?''
33794our affairs are not going on well; they desire to stop us on our way; where shall we conceal the holy crown?
33794said the Dean earnestly,''you will not come out with the words?
33794said the Dean;''but tell me what is on your head?''
33794who to defend the poor citizen against the powerful family unions of the rich counsellors?
27604Do you contemplate retiring?
27604Dost thou never make a mistake and strike the stone?
27604How can peace be brought to the people,he asked,"by tormenting them to subscribe for such a purpose?"
27604Is the prime minister jesting?
27604Of what service is the sword to me?
27604Wherein lies the value of a rule of conduct? 27604 1407? 27604 And how was it that Yoshisada allowed her to do such a thing?
27604But by what avenue would he enter the Sea of Japan?
27604But had the Japanese a script of their own at any period of their history?
27604But how did the Japanese converts reconcile its acceptance with their allegiance to the traditional faith, Shinto?
27604But how were these prescriptive privileges to be abolished?
27604But if they turn not to the Three Treasures, wherewithal shall their crookedness be made straight?
27604But if wise men and sages be not found, how shall the country be governed?
27604But what is to be said of Ieyasu?
27604But what meaning is to be assigned to the"plain of high heaven"( Takama- ga- hara)?
27604But what was to be done with the troops which had debarked?
27604Can we desert both Emperor and parent and join with you?
27604Could a reformer with such a record be regarded as altogether sincere?
27604Dare we omit to practise our warlike exercise and drill?"
27604Did the overtures come originally from Hideyoshi, or did they emanate from Ieyasu and Nobukatsu?
27604For if they do not attend to agriculture, what will they have to eat?
27604For instance, is the earth suspended in space or does it rest upon something else?
27604He that has not learned the sacred doctrines, how can he govern himself?
27604He that is ignorant of the classics, how can he regulate his own conduct?
27604How are we to account for this seemingly rapid change of mood on Hideyoshi''s part?
27604How can anyone lay down a rule by which to distinguish right from wrong?
27604How can heaven be concerned about a loss of time?"
27604How can such be tolerated?"
27604How can the Emperor struggle against heaven?
27604How can they, as well as the Government, presume to levy taxes on the people?
27604How can we grudge our favour to so great meekness?
27604How could she venture to insult me with words so shameless?
27604How is it that none was found to die the death of fidelity?"
27604How shall a man who does not order himself be able to order his country?
27604How, then, are we to account for Masanori''s infidelity to the cause he had embraced?
27604How, then, did they proceed?
27604Ieyasu is reported to have avowedly adopted for guidance the precept,"Before taking any step propound to your heart the query, how about justice?"
27604If I had lost my brother, what consolation would my rank have furnished?"
27604If it be finite, what causes the air to condense in one particular spot, and what position shall we assign to it?
27604If it be said that the earth rests upon something else, then what is it that supports that something else?
27604If rats, weasels, and certain birds see in the dark, why should not the gods have been endowed with a similar faculty?....
27604If the lord and the vassal observe good faith one with another, what is there which can not be accomplished?
27604If they do not attend to the mulberry trees, what will they do for clothing?
27604If to this day I have survived all peril, may I not regard it as an answer to my prayer?
27604If you have desired to send your envoys to China, how much more should we?
27604If, then, the bells be classed as adjuncts of the Yamato culture, shall we be justified in assigning the bronze weapon to a different race?
27604Is he not also a hero who has made firm his country at the expense of his own life?"
27604Is it only when one has conquered in battle that one is to be called a hero?
27604Is there, perchance, anyone who could join with me in governing the world?"
27604Of complaints preferred by the people there are a thousand in one day: how many, then, will there be in a series of years?
27604Only the fool fears death, for what is there of life that does Not die once, sooner or later?
27604Shall we not keep the name of that ship from being lost and hand it down to after ages?"
27604Surely the Court is in error?
27604TRACES OF FOREIGN INFLUENCE What traces of Chinese or foreign influence are to be found in the legends and myths set down above?
27604The question is, was the shogun himself privy to the deed?
27604Then the Great- Name Possessor inquired, saying,"Then who art thou?"
27604To what quarter, then, is the instigation to be traced?
27604Was it Korea or was it China?
27604Was it to be supposed that heaven would hearken to the intervention of such sinners?
27604What is there that can not be then accomplished?
27604What is to be said, however, of the apparently radical policy of the Soga chief?
27604What man in what age can fail to revere this law?
27604What more do I desire?"
27604What talk is this of our joining you against China?
27604What was Kwammu''s motive?
27604What will the world call me?"
27604When I reflect that the life of man is less than one hundred years, why should I spend my days in sorrow for one thing only?
27604Where dost thou now wish to dwell?"
27604Where was the place thus designated?
27604Where, then, is collateral evidence to be found?
27604Wherefore just on this night when I am in childbirth and hanging between life and death, must thou go to Fujiwara?"
27604Who were these captives?
27604Who will dare to suggest contumely?"
27604Who, then, were they?
27604Why is it that you are not willing to admit the suzerainty of the Emperor, instead of harbouring such hostile intents against him?
27604Why should he have advocated so readily the introduction of a foreign creed?
27604Why the vice- provincial allowed merchants of his nation to buy Japanese and make slaves of them in the Indies?''
27604Why they and other Portuguese ate animals useful to men, such as oxen and cows?
27604Why they had induced their disciples and their sectaries to overthrow temples?
27604Why they persecuted the bonzes?
27604Why, then, did the former never dare to take up arms against the Bakufu, whereas the latter never ceased to assault the Ashikaga?
27604Yasutoki answered:"How can you call an incident insignificant when my brother''s safety was concerned?
41862Do you make as many jokes here,asked a friend,"as you used to make in Baltimore?"
41862How many children have you?
41862What then is the American,he asks,"this new man?
41862And Walt Whitman, the"democratic bard,"the poet who broke all the poetic traditions?
41862And if that fails, what then?
41862And if that fails, what then?
41862And then, at night, around the camp- fire, they smoke their pipes with me, and the question is, Who can tell the best story?
41862And what are these masses of people who are capable of cheering in unison for three- quarters of an hour, or an hour and a quarter?
41862And what have we here in the way of political doctrine?
41862And what have we here in the way of social theory?
41862And what is this but self- reliance?
41862And whence did this particular impulse spring?
41862But equal in what?
41862But what about the amount of pleasure, of real joy, of inward satisfaction that a man gets out of life?
41862But what are its results from the educational point of view?
41862But what if he does not like the results on either side?
41862But what is that equality?
41862But what of the religious bodies which exist under this system?
41862But when I laughed and said what I really wanted was that he should show me the way, he replied,"Why did n''t ye say so?"
41862But where is any ideal perfectly realized except in heaven and in the writings of female novelists?
41862Do you ask for my credentials as an ambassador?
41862Followed ten years of acrimonious and violent controversy and eight years of war,--about what?
41862Have I overaccented the inconsistencies in this picture postal- card view of America?
41862Have I sharpened these contrasts and contradictions a little?
41862How clearly, how beautifully, how perfectly, does it give that interpretation in concrete works of art?
41862How did this enormous enterprise of higher education come into being?
41862How far may the State go in promoting the higher education?
41862How is it to be reconciled with the spirit of fair play?
41862How long did Rome exist before its literary activities began?
41862How long was it, for example, before the Hebrews began to create a literature?
41862How many children were benefited by it?
41862I recall also the charming naïveté with which an English lady inquired,"Have you any good writers in the States?"
41862If this is true, then, of the individual, how much more is it true of a nation, a people?
41862Is he a good companion; has he the power of leadership; can he do anything particularly well; is he a vigorous and friendly person?
41862Is it merely hoarded, or used for selfish and extravagant luxury?
41862Is it right to use the public funds, contributed by all the taxpayers, for the special advantage of those who have superior intellectual powers?
41862Is it succeeding?
41862Is it the culminating rite in the worship of the Almighty Dollar?
41862Is it the essential truth, the fundamental truth,_ la vraie verité_, that we discover through this glass?
41862Is it too soon to determine whether his revolution in literature was a success, whether he was a great initiator or only a great exception?
41862Is not this a kind of religion, and a very good kind?
41862Is this a merit or a fault in literature?
41862Now what have we here?
41862Suppose you followed one of these groups of children into the school, what would you find?
41862The Stamp Act?
41862The downfall of democracy?
41862The real question is, What kind of a fellow is the new man?
41862There are perhaps many of whom we might inquire, Which is who, and why is he somewhat?
41862This proves what?
41862What English novel gives a perfect picture of all England in the nineteenth century?
41862What are the qualities in which it really expresses the Spirit of America?
41862What are these scenes at which you have assisted?
41862What do these colleges and universities do for the intellectual life of the country?
41862What do they do?
41862What does it all prove?
41862What does this mean?
41862What if neither party seems to him clear or consistent or satisfactory?
41862What is it doing?
41862What is the nature of this attention?
41862What lines is it following?
41862What motives guide and control this big, good- natured crowd?
41862What personal qualities, what traits of human temperament and disposition does it reveal most characteristically in the spirit of the land?
41862What power could save them from their own bad judgment?
41862What reason or order is there in it?
41862What relation does it bear to the interpretation of nature and life in a certain country at a certain time?
41862What was that fact?
41862What wonder that the American people have been fascinated, perhaps even a little intoxicated, by the effect of their own will- power?
41862When I repeated this to an Englishman, he looked at me pityingly and said:"But how could you exaggerate a thing like that, my dear fellow?
41862Where are the changes most apparent?
41862Which is the most important?
41862Which of the French romances of the last twenty years expresses the whole spirit of France?
41862Who can make a general estimate in a matter which depends so much upon individual temperament?
41862Who can tell?
41862Who knows?
41862Who supports it?
41862Why did they not go to work at once, with their intense energy, to produce a national literature on demand?
41862Why has it been so slow to begin?
41862Why is it not more recognizably American?
41862Why?
41862Why?
41862Why?
41862_ In vino et in viatore veritas!_"But is it quite correct, after all, this first impression that travel is the great revealer of character?
41862said the Yankee,"ag''in?"
41862the Boston Port Bill?
41862the Paint, Paper, and Glass Act?
41862the Tax on Tea?
14294In killing Afzal Khan did Sivaji sin?
14294India for the Indians,will that come next?
14294Need we go out of India in quest of the true knowledge of God?
14294Where lies the land to which the ship would go? 14294 Why has it befallen him?
14294Why,Ramkrishna Paramhansa asks,"does the God- lover find such pleasure in addressing the Deity as Mother?
14294Without Christian dogmas, can not a man equally love and revere Christ?
14294[ 18] What now of the dignity of manual labour which many a high official has expounded to native youth? 14294 A conservative or a reformer? 14294 Again, what can be the remedy? 14294 And how, we ask, has Christ been introduced to India by association with the popular beliefs-- how, rather, has the attempt been made to do so? 14294 And what, his thighs and feet? 14294 And where the land she travels from away? 14294 And who make the nominations? 14294 Bose, B.A., B.L., a native of Eastern Bengal, regarding his youth[ 1860?] 14294 But how is the Indian feeling to be transformed? 14294 But in the final exposition of this pantheism, what do we find? 14294 But over against transmigration, what are the essential and distinctive features of that Christian belief? 14294 But we are dealing with modern, new- educated India, and now we ask ourselves: What does the modern, new- educated Indian mean by salvation? 14294 But what is poured into his ears? 14294 CHAPTER IX NEW RELIGIOUS IDEAS-- ARE THERE ANY? 14294 Does not that signify that he himself is stripped bare of belief? 14294 For Hindus or Mahomedans; for the million, English- speaking, or the many- millioned masses? 14294 For the Christian conception of the Here and the Hereafter-- what is it? 14294 From what then, during the nineteenth century, has the national consciousness come forth? 14294 He called aloud,''Who sleeps there? 14294 Hindu ascetic or Christian philanthropist? 14294 How far then have Christian and modern religious ideas been_ naturalised_ in New India, whether within the new religious organisations or without? 14294 How is it so? 14294 How shall we ticket that strange personage? 14294 How, indeed, could the educated Indian employ any other term with the desired comprehensiveness? 14294 I take the following from the question column:Do Christians believe in the doctrine of reincarnation?
14294If not, how do you account for blindness at birth?"
14294In answer to an inquirer''s question--"Is there only one God?"
14294In brief, what is the present position of India in regard to religious belief; and in particular, what are the prevailing beliefs about God?
14294In their helpless ignorance, what wonder that Britons''views are often incomplete and distorted?
14294Indian conservatism-- what is it?
14294Is there really any perceptible and significant change to record as the outcome of the influences of the nineteenth century?
14294Kayasth caste as he was born, or new brahman?
14294NEW RELIGIOUS IDEAS-- ARE THERE ANY?
14294One question is,"Can we know that eternal Being( the"One only without a second,"or"The All,"_ i.e._ pantheistic Deity)?
14294Our question merely is: How has the new regime affected native ideas?
14294Pantheism, or the doctrine that God is all and all is God-- what does it imply?
14294The Br[=a]hma Sam[=a]j, graft of West on East, and still sterile as an intellectual coterie, how would it fare, cut off from its Western nurture?
14294The Indian Christian Church, hardly yet acclimatised so far as it is the creation of modern efforts, would she survive?
14294The four new religious organisations described in the preceding chapters may or may not survive-- who can tell?
14294The reactionary Theosophists-- after the provocative action had ceased-- what of them?
14294The visitor questioned the jogi,"How can one obtain the knowledge of God?"
14294The[= A]rya Sam[=a]j-- what, in that event, would be her resistance to the centripetal force that we have noted in her blind patriotism?
14294To the pessimist, on the contrary[ and Hindu philosophy is pessimistic, whatever be the new mood of India], the question is,"Why was I born?"
14294What are they doing at the entrance to a Mahomedan mosque?
14294What does caste forbid and punish?
14294What element of truth is there in the idea, we may well ask?
14294What has been the nature and extent of the impact of Christian and modern thought upon India, and particularly upon Hinduism?
14294What ideas have such an attraction for the educated middle class, for to that class the[= A]ryas almost exclusively belong?
14294What is it?
14294What sin did the pandit commit, would be his natural reflection, that he was born again a Feringee, and a woman?
14294What was his mouth?
14294What were his arms?
14294What will she become?
14294What, we may ask, is to become of the 1886 sub- divisions of the brahman caste alone, all mutually exclusive with regard to inter- marriage?
14294When they divided him, How did they cut him up?
14294Whence came the Christian seed of Chet Ram''s vision?
14294Where are these 37 girls and women out of every 1000--over five million altogether?
14294Where shall we find evidence reliable of what British influence has been?
14294Where, then, is the testimony that is reliable?
14294Who are the electors enjoying the new political citizenship of India?
14294Why are the Indian figures so different?
14294Why does the thought of salvation by faith in Jesus Christ fail to reach his heart?
14294Why is it that Hindu doctrine has never set?
14294Why this double- mindedness in the same educated individual?
14294Why this incongruity between doctrine and domestic practice?
14294Why this un- British weighting of those who are behind in the race?
14294Why, one can not help asking, this invertebrate character of the new Indian religious associations in Western India?
14294Why, when an Assam Shaha takes up his residence again in his motherland, Bengal, should this Blue- book be casting up to him his humble origin?
14294Would not the Indian jungle, which they are trying to reduce to a well- ordered garden of indigenous fruits, speedily lapse to jungle again?
14294You lay your hand upon the arm of a boy, a new- comer to the school, and you ask him in English,"What class?"
14294[ 31][ Sidenote: Where is Hindustan?]
14294[ Sidenote: Due to nature?]
14294[ Sidenote: What is Pantheism?]
14294[ Sidenote: Who speak Hindustani?]
14294[ Sidenote: Will the new religious organisations survive?]
14294_ India for what Indians?_, we ask ourselves.
14294and whither shall I flee from Thy spirit?"
14294of a Mission College of the modern Calcutta University?
41495''And was she good?'' 41495 ''Do you strike at your own people, you devil''s whelp?''
41495''How now, my son? 41495 ''How shall we fight then,--with fists?''
41495''What are you doing?'' 41495 ''What was lacking to make him a true Cossack?''
41495And what great thing have_ you_ done?
41495To serve them?
41495We? 41495 What is that?"
41495What sort of fellow is your friend Bazarof?
41495Why so sad, brother?'' 41495 ''Are you in trouble?'' 41495 ''Is it well that such things should be brought to light?'' 41495 And all this for what? 41495 And how should he? 41495 And the poet Mikailof chides the revolutionaries with the words:Why not let your indignation speak, my brothers?
41495And what will foreigners say?
41495And where is the man?
41495And why should I not mock at you, I should like to know?''
41495And why the differences between French naturalism, the Russian_ natural school_, English and Spanish realism, and Italian_ verismo_?
41495Are the authors and critics the only ones responsible for this directive character of most Russian novels?
41495Are they any the less Realists for this?
41495As to Lermontof, is it not marvellous that a man who died at the age of twenty- six years should have produced anything like a novel?
41495But-- what can you do?
41495Could Gogol have been acquainted with the Tale of the Cid and the other Spanish Romanceros?
41495Did not the proclamation of the Czar read that they were free?
41495Did you say his boots?
41495Do not these words almost seem to describe the beginnings of Christianity in Rome?
41495Dost thou not feel thyself carried onward toward the unknown like this impetuous bird which nobody can overtake?
41495Doth the whirlwind sometimes nestle in their manes?
41495Had it not been for their omnipotent initiative, who knows if even now slavery would not stain the face of Europe?
41495Has any novel had any influence at all in Spanish political, social, or moral life?
41495Has the great writer died?
41495Has your hatred no power to threaten and to wound?"
41495Have your Polish friends been of much use to you?''
41495He sees a horse, and at once inquires,"When this animal dies, where will his spirit go?
41495If somebody were to kill her and use her fortune for the good of humanity, do you not think that a thousand good deeds would compensate for the crime?
41495In speaking of nihilism I have mentioned the most important one of the directive Russian novels, called"What to Do?"
41495Into the body of a man?"
41495Into the body of another horse?
41495Is it Malthusian pessimism which would refuse to provide any more subjects for despotism?
41495Is it a consequence of the theory which Schopenhauer preached, but did not practise?
41495Is it a manifestation of an idealist sentiment which is always present in revolutionary outbursts?
41495Is it a mistake to say that in this commonplace little episode there is more of poetry than in many elegies and innumerable sonnets?
41495Is it a result of the natural coldness of the Scythian?
41495Is it mere woman''s pride demanding for her sex liberty and franchises which she scorns to make use of?
41495Is it strange that the parishioner respects them but little?
41495Is it the lightning?
41495Is it the thunderbolt from heaven itself?
41495Is our horrible misfortune worthy of nothing more than a vain tribute of tears?
41495Is the goal which we desire to attain inaccessible?
41495Is there a single modern novel that is popular, in the true meaning of the word, among us?
41495Is this really true?
41495Is"War and Peace"a historical novel in the limited, archæological, false, and conventional conception?
41495Now, to begin, how did this much- discussed word originate?
41495Of what use then a mere smattering, which would be insufficient to give to my studies a positive character and an indisputable authority?
41495One asks,"Is everything gone up?"
41495The author wishes to solve the problem put by Herzen in the title to his novel,"Who is to blame?"
41495The driver?
41495The title is,"What to do?"
41495To begin with, is nihilism pure negation?
41495To what does the_ mir_ owe its vitality?
41495What artistic future awaits the young North American nation?
41495What cared they--"the little black men"--for the dignity of the freeman or the rights of citizenship?
41495What causes this movement of universal terror?
41495What have you done?
41495What man?
41495What must be the æsthetic and political determination of this race, which prefers the possession of the soil to the liberty of the individual?
41495What mysterious and incomprehensible force spurs on thy steeds?
41495What proportion does the artistic energy of England and Germany bear to their political strength?
41495What weight has a stupid, evil- minded old shrew in the social scale?
41495What?
41495Whence came the revolutionary element in Russia?
41495Where is there a person of nobler desires and projects than Alexander II.?
41495Wherefore, then, is he judged superior to the other classes of society?
41495Who can doubt the reflex action which the anonymous multitude exercises on eminent persons, when he contemplates the great Russian novelists?
41495Who can explain the causes of this diversity of destiny between the two branches that most resemble each other on this great tree?
41495Who can imagine a forum, an oracle, a tribune, in Russia?
41495Who ever heard of a satirist turning Church father?
41495Who has not sometimes entered a convent church on leaving a ball- room,--in the early morning hours of Ash- Wednesday, for instance?
41495Who has not sometimes experienced with terrible keenness what may be called the æsthetic effect of collectivity?
41495Who stops to see whether the life- preservers thrown to drowning men struggling with death are of elegant workmanship?
41495Why did he not go mad?
41495Why is love silent?
41495Why was romanticism so much the same in England, Germany, Spain, and Russia?
41495Your father?''
41495whither goest thou?
42224If we had so much stone, what could one do with it?
42224Let thy face be cheerful as long as thou livest; hast any one come out of the coffin after having once entered it?
42224What bringeth her heart to me, pray? 42224 Which is the true, and which the false?"
42224Which is the true?
42224Why from hands and from feet take the rings, pray, O porter?
42224Why tak''st thou from my breast the jewels, O porter?
42224Why tak''st thou from my neck the necklace, O porter?
42224Why tak''st thou from my waist my gemmed- girdle, O porter?
42224Why tak''st thou the great crown from my head, O porter?
42224Why tak''st thou the rings from my ears, O porter?
42224Why take from my body my cincture, O porter?
42224''Great father Amon, I have known thee well, And can the father thus forget his son?
42224''Hast thou tried the wool of a young sheep?''
42224( 3)_ Men._"Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the Gods?
42224( But what) shall I answer the city, the people, and the elders?"
42224:"Am I now come up without the Lord against this place to destroy it?
42224A definite time the god Shamash had appointed: The ruler of the darkness(?)
42224After Ishtar, the goddess, had( been thus afflicted)(?)
42224After working out an outline of their political development, suppose it should be asked, But how did these people dress?
42224Am I now come up without the Lord against this place to destroy it?
42224And I-- have I not brought Thee many victims, And filled Thy temple with the captive folk?
42224And for Thy presence built a dwelling place That shall endure for countless years to come?
42224As soon as dawn began to appear,( Five or six lines wanting) The weak(?)
42224As soon as the mistress of the gods arrived She lifted up the great jewels(?)
42224Behold he said to me,"For what cause hast thou come hither?
42224But Rab- shakeh said unto them, Hath my master sent me to thy master, and to thee, to speak these words?
42224But if we look at the matter more closely, do we not see other, deeper reasons?
42224But what has Egypt to offer the modern man?
42224Consider, is he not toiling on the river?
42224Does it interest any but specialists and archaeologists?
42224Does not the face grow pale, of him who beholds thy countenance; Does not the eye fear, which looks upon thee?"
42224Every carpenter carrying tools,--is he more at rest than the laborer?
42224For where was Chufu[1] now-- the king who had cemented that mountain of stone with the sweat of his subjects?
42224Has a matter come to pass in the palace?
42224Has the king of the two lands, Sehetepabra, gone to heaven?
42224Hath any of the gods of the nations delivered at all his land out of the hand of the king of Assyria?
42224Have I done aught without Thy high behest, Or moved or staid against Thy sovereign will?
42224Have I ever opened his door, or leaped over his fence?
42224Have I in any deed forgotten Thee?
42224He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set where were they?"
42224Her wise ladies answered her, Yea, she returned answer to herself,"Have they not found, Have they not divided the spoils?
42224How are they to be explained?
42224How can we account for the frequent despoiling of her proud cities during her later years?
42224How then wilt thou turn away the face of one captain of the least of my master''s servants, and put thy trust on Egypt for chariots and for horsemen?
42224How was that lintel- stone raised?
42224How were these capitals lifted?
42224I opened(?)
42224I provided a rudder(?)
42224In heaven who is supreme?
42224In heaven, who is supreme?
42224It is some envious jealousy from seeing me; does he think that I am like some steer among the cows, whom the bull overthrows?
42224Like a reed that is broken she( bent to the ground)(?).
42224Ninib openeth his mouth and speaketh, He speaks to the warrior Bel:"Who but Ea doeth( this) thing?
42224Now on whom dost thou trust, that thou rebellest against me?
42224O Judah, what shall I do unto thee?
42224On earth, who is supreme?
42224On earth, who is supreme?
42224One day the hurricane( raged), Violently it blew, the waters( covered?)
42224Six_ sars_ of bitumen I spread on the outside(?).
42224The question arises consequently, how did the idea of a future existence, of a soul apart from the body, have its origin among men?
42224The question naturally arises: Who makes these discoveries, and under what circumstances are the secrets of the tombs revealed?
42224The ruler of the darkness(?)
42224They chose new gods; Then was war in the gates: Was there a shield or spear seen Among forty thousand in Israel?
42224This I did-- When were such things done in former time?
42224This law, this fiend- destroying law of Zarathustra, by what greatness, goodness, and fairness is it great, good, and fair above all other utterances?
42224What did not this mother do?
42224What did the war- loving, blood- thirsting Assyrians leave for future ages?
42224What effect did the worship of these gods have upon his life?
42224What is the sum of the cats, mice, ears and grains?"
42224What more noble forms could have ushered the people into the temple of their gods?
42224What part did the citizen take in the worship of his national gods?
42224What then were the points of advantage for Thebes, lying 400 miles farther south?
42224What trouble?
42224When Allatu these tidings received( from the porter), Like a tamarisk cut she( bowed herself down)(?).
42224Where are the gods of Hamath, and of Arpad?
42224Where are those stately ruins which, even in the middle ages, extended over a space estimated at half a day''s journey in every direction?
42224Where is the Memphis of Herodotus and Strabo?
42224Which is the fifth place where the Earth feels sorest grief?"
42224Which is the first place where the Earth feels most happy?"
42224Which is the first place where the Earth feels sorest grief?"
42224Which is the fourth place where the Earth feels most happy?"
42224Which is the second place where the Earth feels most happy?"
42224Which is the second place where the Earth feels sorest grief?"
42224Which is the third place where the Earth feels most happy?"
42224Whilst Asshur and Ishtar support me, who can prevail against me?
42224Who could describe them all?
42224Who is like thee, glorious in holiness, Fearful in praises, doing wonders?
42224Who is the first that rejoices the Earth with greatest joy?"
42224Who shall give unto my tongue authority to utter unto the young men the counsels from of old?
42224Why tarry the wheels of his chariots?"
42224Will God forget what he has ordained, and how shall that be known?"
42224With this one forsooth( shall I share my dwelling?)
42224_ Women._ Gilead abode beyond Jordan--_ Men._ And Dan, why did he remain in ships?
42224_ Women._ Through the window she looked forth, and cried, The mother of Sisera, through the lattice,"Why is his chariot so long coming?
42224_ Women._ Why satest thou among the sheepfolds, To hear the pipings for the flocks?
42224hath he not sent me to the men which sit on the wall?
42224have they delivered Samaria out of mine hand?
42224he covered(?)
42224or who vouchsafeth unto me to declare the counsels received from on high?
42224where are the gods of Sepharvaim, Hena, and Ivah?
609Ca n''t you spare a glance? 609 After all, the main question is, does a sensational play exercise a beneficial or a pernicious influence over the audience? 609 Again, can Americans say that they are happier than the Chinese? 609 Air in a closed cage must be mischievous, and what are ill- ventilated rooms but vicious air cages, in which mischiefs of all sorts breed? 609 America professes to believe in publicity, and what ispublicity"but the open window and the open door?
609American versus Chinese Civilization( Continued) The question has often been asked"Which are the civilized nations?"
609Are not many women practically governed by their husbands, whose word is their law?
609Are there not many in their midst who are friendless and penurious?
609Are they happier than others?
609Are they indeed so"highly civilized"as to be in all respects worthy paragons to the so- called semi- civilized nations?
609Are they not swayed in politics by their"bosses", and do not many of them act and vote as their bosses dictate?
609But are they perfectly free, and are they really independent?
609But do Chinese really make good husbands?
609But what have been the advantages to Great Britain?
609But when a serious play ending tragically is put on the boards is that amusement?
609But who wishes to attack her?
609But why not consent to allow the cardinal principles of morality to be taught in every school?
609Does not this indicate that the intellect of the American woman is equal, if not superior, to that of the men?
609Does the superior cunning and intellect of man warrant his taking life for fun?
609During the Russo- Japan War was it not the yellow race that displayed the superior intelligence?
609First, as regards the weather, does woman''s dress protect her from the cold?
609Have they succeeded in prolonging their lives?
609Have we got a chance?
609How does this compare with the states in America?
609I should like to know how many persons pay even a little attention to this important subject of pure air breathing?
609If so, why?
609If this high- toned doctrine continues where will it end?
609In addition to the suggestions I have made, may I be pardoned another?
609In domestic circles are not many husbands hen- pecked by their wives, because they, and not the men, rule the roost?
609In his home and his office has he not enough to engage his serious attention, and to frequently worry his mind?
609In society are they not bound by conventionalities and, dare they infringe the strict rules laid down by the society leaders?
609In the matter of dress also are they not slaves, abjectly following new- fangled fashions imported from Paris?
609Is anything more important than that which concerns their health and comfort?
609Is it advisable to adopt a similar system in the United States?
609Is it for the purpose of emigration?
609Is it for the purpose of trade?
609Is it not amusement?
609Is it not good for both to learn the same subjects?
609Is it to be wondered at that American servants have different manners from their brethren in other countries?
609Is it worth his while to dress and spend an evening watching a performance which, however skilfully played, will make him no happier than before?
609Is not the slogan of nationality, to a great extent, the root of the evil?
609Let me ask again what is the object of nations seeking new possessions?
609Now Hongkong is a self- supporting colony, but what benefits do the British enjoy there that do not belong to everyone else?
609Now does the dress of Americans meet these requirements?
609Now what is Civilization?
609Ought a free and independent people to live after this fashion?
609Should such people be denied admission into Australia, Canada, or the United States?
609Should we encourage such artful devices?
609Sir, strive to keep the world in its original simplicity-- why so much fuss?
609That which is good for a boy to learn is it not equally advisable for a girl to know, and vice versa?
609The Importance of Names"What''s in a name?
609The name of Emperor may be distasteful to some, but may not a new meaning be given to it?
609The theater, as I have already said, was in several countries religious in its origin; why not use it to elevate people indirectly?
609Then I said to the young lady,"Will you accept his offer?"
609This science is undoubtedly of the first importance, but what advantage is good birth if afterward life is poisoned with foul air?
609To the query,"What about the nations in the East?"
609Was I to be blamed for wondering if the elevator would be my coffin?
609What about the sufferings of pugilists who take part in the prize- fights, in which so many thousands in the United States delight?
609What benefit does he receive from witnessing a tragedy?
609What effect will this have on mankind?
609What pleasure can there be in being tricked?
609What right have we to wantonly kill these harmless and defenseless birds flying in the air?
609What, I ask, is the advantage of adding to national territory?
609What, however, we may ask, is the object of the theater?
609When he said this did he think of the way the women of his country dress when they go to a ball?
609When such a state of things exists can international peace be perpetuated?
609When the matter is further pressed and it is asked,"What about China?"
609When you purchase a knife do n''t you expect to use it?
609Whence but from himself?
609Why are the world''s armaments constantly increasing?
609Why do we dress at all?
609Why not convene an international congress to decide as to the best form of dress for men and women?
609Why not go a step further and preach through a play?
609Why should not hostesses make as much effort to stimulate the minds of their guests as they do to gratify their palates?
609Why should such matters invariably be remanded to formal conferences and set speeches?
609Why should the world assume a depressing monotony of costume?
609Why should we allow nature''s diversities to disappear?
609Why then forbid cockfighting or bull- baiting?
609Will not occasion be found to test those war implements and to utilize the naval and military men?
609Will not such a policy create mutual sympathy between the sexes?
609Will some one inform me why so many varieties of wines are always served on American tables, and why the sparkling champagne is never avoidable?
609Will the great American nation still refuse to consent to this?
609Will the twentieth century witness the collapse of our present civilization?
609With their genius for invention why have they not discovered means to safeguard themselves so that they can live longer on this earth?
609Would not the exclusionists in those countries profit by association with them?
609what differs more than man from man, And whence that difference?
8646Can men behold their superior and not tremble? 8646 I asked him once, why they did not, for their own sakes, enable their kings to assume a little more state?
8646Shall any one,says Antoninus,"love the city of Cecrops, and you not love the city of God?"
8646What wonder,says the old Priam, when Helen appeared,"that nations should contend for the possession of so much beauty?"
8646When will you begin to practise it?
8646A perfect agreement in matters of opinion is not to be obtained in the most select company; and if it were, what would become of society?
8646And is death the greatest calamity which can afflict mankind under an establishment by which they are divested of all their rights?
8646And that the pacific citizen, however distinguished by privilege and rank, must one day bow to the person with whom he has intrusted his sword?
8646And whence should they come to me?
8646And why do you not all go forth to so great a war?"
8646And would assurance of success fill the intervals of expectation with more pleasing emotions?
8646Are the apprehensions of the severe, therefore, in every age, equally groundless and unreasonable?
8646Are they not your people?
8646Are we never to dread any error in the article of a refinement bestowed on the means of subsistence, or the conveniencies of life?
8646Ask the busy, where is the happiness to which they aspire?
8646But for what end, it may be said, point out an evil that can not be remedied?
8646But if nature is only opposed to art, in what situation of the human race are the footsteps of art unknown?
8646But is he on that account their superior?
8646But is it equally unforeseen, that the former order may again take place?
8646But is it hope alone that supports the mind is the midst of precarious and uncertain prospects?
8646Can it be more clearly expressed, that temperance, prudence, and fortitude, are necessary to the character we love and admire?
8646Can no reflections aid us in acquiring this habit of the soul, so useful in carrying us through many of the ordinary scenes of life?
8646Can they converse without a precise and written ceremonial?
8646Did he mistake the means of procuring to mankind what he points out as a blessing?
8646Do continued disappointments reduce sanguine hopes, and familiarity with objects blunt the edge of novelty?
8646Does experience itself cool the ardour of the mind?
8646Events may have changed the situation in which I am destined to act; but can they hinder my acting the part of a man?
8646Has not the human race been planted like the colony in question?
8646Have the multiplied words of a statute an influence over the conscience and the heart, more powerful than that of reason and nature?
8646How can he who has confined his views to his own subsistence or preservation, be intrusted with the conduct of nations?
8646How is it possible, therefore, to find any single form of government that would suit mankind in every condition?
8646How shall we reconcile these jarring and opposite tenets?
8646If it be admitted that we can not, are the facts less true?
8646If such revolutions should actually follow, will this new master revive in his own order the spirit of the noble and the free?
8646If the question be put, What the mind of man could perform, when left to itself, and without the aid of any foreign direction?
8646If we are asked therefore, where the state of nature is to be found?
8646If we are required to explain, how men could be poets, or orators, before they were aided by the learning of the scholar and the critic?
8646If we ask, why they are not miserable in the absence of that happiness?
8646In great and opulent cities, where men vie with each other in equipage, dress, and the reputation of fortune?
8646In what situation, or by what instruction, is this wonderful character to be formed?
8646In what society are not men classed by external distinctions, as well as personal qualities?
8646In what state are they not actuated by a variety of principles; justice, honour, moderation, and fear?
8646Is it found in the nurseries of affectation, pertness, and vanity, from which fashion is propagated, and the genteel is announced?
8646Is it not possible, amidst our admiration of arts, to find some place for these?
8646May the business of civil society be accomplished, and may the occasion of farther exertion be removed?
8646May the society be again compared to the individual?
8646Must we perish?
8646Or what persuasion can turn the grimace of politeness into real sentiments of humanity and candour?
8646Temperance, prudence, fortitude, are those qualities likewise admired from a principle of regard to our fellow creatures?
8646Was it in vain that Antoninus became acquainted with the characters of Thrasea, Helvidius, Cato, Dion, and Brutus?
8646We are sometimes willing to acknowledge this vice in our countrymen; but who was ever willing to acknowledge it in himself?
8646What charm of instruction can cure the mind that is stained with this disorder?
8646What defect of police?
8646What delay to affairs?
8646What fuel can the statesman add to the fires of youth?
8646What heart burnings?
8646What hopes of peace, if, the streets are not barricaded at an hour?
8646What if he will not?
8646What interest had he, or the bones of his father, in the quarrels of princes?
8646What is happy or wretched, in the manners of men?
8646What is it that constitutes our restraint from offences that tend to distress our fellow creatures?
8646What is it that excites one half of the nations of Europe against the other?
8646What is it that prompts the tongue when we censure an act of cruelty or oppression?
8646What is it that stirs in the breasts of ordinary men when the enemies of their country are named?
8646What is just, or unjust?
8646What syren voice can awaken a desire of freedom, that is held to be meanness and a want of ambition?
8646What want of secrecy and despatch?
8646What was enjoyment, in the sense of that youth, who, according to Tacitus, loved danger itself, not the rewards of courage?
8646What wild disorder, if men are permitted in any thing to do what they please?"
8646What, in their various situations, is favourable or adverse to their amiable qualities?
8646When a judge in Europe is left to decide, according to his own interpretation of written laws, is he in any sense more restrained than the former?
8646Whence are the prejudices that subsist between different provinces, cantons, and villages, of the same empire and territory?
8646Whither should his feelings and apprehensions on these subjects lead him?
8646Who has directed their course?
8646Who would, from mere conjecture, suppose, that the naked savage would be a coxcomb and a gamester?
8646Why not be dejected, when his country was overwhelmed?
8646Why not, since they render men happy in themselves, and useful to others?
8646Why rejoice in a disappointment?
8646Why should we indulge a false delicacy, or require from the earth fruits which she is not accustomed to yield?
8646Will he renew the characters of the warrior and the statesman?
8646Will he restore to his country the civil and military virtues?
8646and that his principal care would be to adorn his person, and to find an amusement?
8646or whose example have they followed?
8646that he would be proud or vain, without the distinctions of title and fortune?
8646we may inquire, in our turn, how bodies could fall by their weight, before the laws of gravitation were recorded in books?
8646whose instruction have they heard?
6200''And another disputed point is, which is the fairer?'' 6200 ''And is this wish and this desire common to all?
6200''And what does he gain who possesses the good?'' 6200 ''And which is the nobler?
6200''But why of generation?'' 6200 ''I shall not ask which is the richer,''I said;''for you two are friends, are you not?''
6200''Still,''she said,''the answer suggests a further question: What is given by the possession of beauty?'' 6200 ''Then if this be the nature of love, can you tell me further,''she said,''what is the manner of the pursuit?
6200''Then love,''she said, may be described generally as the love of the everlasting possession of the good?'' 6200 ''To which must be added that they love the possession of the good?''
6200''What then?'' 6200 And you will grant that what is fairest is loveliest?
6200Do you really covet wealth,he asks,"with all the trouble it involves?"
6200I said:''O thou stranger woman, thou sayest well; but, assuming Love to be such as you say, what is the use of him to man?'' 6200 I turned to Menexenus, and said:''Son of Demophon, which of you two youths is the elder?''
6200I was astonished at her words and said:''Is this really true, O thou wise Diotima?'' 6200 Since these orators have appeared,"he says,"who ask, What is your pleasure?
6200Then said Evangelist,''If this be thy condition, why standest thou still?'' 6200 Then said Evangelist,''Why not willing to die, since this life is attended with so many evils?''
6200What is piety?
6200What is temperance?
6200Who stole my cushions and pillow?
6200''But who then, Diotima,''I said,''are the lovers of wisdom, if they are neither the wise nor the foolish?''
6200''Husband,''I say, with a tender solicitude,''Why have you passed such a foolish decree?''
6200''What would ye write on the side of the Treaty- stone?''
6200And even so, even admitting the ground of supremacy, with what providence or consistency of purpose is it exercised?
6200And how about house accommodation?
6200And is that all?
6200And it is this feeling that we want to understand when we ask ourselves the question, what did a belief in the gods really mean to the ancient Greeks?
6200And what are these conceptions?
6200And will there be no more gambling?
6200And wo n''t one be robbed of one''s cloak at night?
6200But he smites his own shrine with these arrows divine, and"Sunium, Attica''s cape,"And the ancient gnarled oaks: now what prompted those strokes?
6200But how about those who have no land, but only money that they can hide?
6200But is it not He who compels this to be?
6200But now, when everything will be in common what will be the good of keeping anything back?
6200But some one will say: Of the beautiful in what, Socrates and Diotima?
6200But what about the clothes?
6200But what was the main aim of the artist who made it?
6200But what, but what?
6200But whence then, my friend, does the thunder descend?
6200But why do ye say so?
6200Come, how can that be?
6200Croesus, proud of his boundless wealth, asks the Greek stranger who is the happiest man on earth?
6200Does it really account for the existence and nature of the world?
6200Euripides is there accused of lowering the tragic art by introducing-- what?
6200God, he says, ordained the institution of marriage; but on what grounds?
6200Here, for example, is a poem by Mimnermus characteristic of this mood of the Greeks:"O golden Love, what life, what joy but thine?
6200How are they to be provided?
6200How communism?
6200How could he find out?
6200How is such division possible in the will of the supreme god?
6200How then did the constructive thinkers of Greece attempt to meet it?
6200Husband says angrily,''What''s that to you?
6200I looked then, and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, and asked,''Wherefore dost thou cry?''
6200If right, why was Orestes punished?
6200If so, what becomes of that unity of the divine law after which every religious nature seeks?
6200If wrong, why did Apollo command it?
6200In illustration we may cite the following lines from the"Medea,"applicable,_ mutatis mutandis_, to how many generations of suffering wives?
6200In that case, where did the man who lent the money get it from?
6200Is it but a phantom that the high goddess Persephone hath sent me, to the end that I may groan for more exceeding sorrow?''
6200Is it on this that the lordship of heaven and earth depends?
6200Is n''t it just the people who have all these things that are the greatest thieves?
6200Is that a matter of dispute too?''
6200No Zeus up above in the sky?
6200Nor yet, if one sleeps out, as one used to do?
6200Or are there, as Aeschylus would have it, two"rights", one of Apollo, the other of the Furies?
6200Or is the"fate"of which he speaks something outside himself?
6200Or who would not have such children as Lycurgus left behind him to be the saviours not only of Lacedaemon, but of Hellas, as one may say?
6200S.-S. Are there any means of making a great man Of a sausage- selling fellow such as I?
6200S.-S. Come, master, what''s the use of making game?
6200Shalt thou then a sound so loud and profound from thy belly diminutive send, And shall not the high and the infinite sky go thundering on without end?
6200So what will be the good of keeping anything back?
6200Such being the general view of the Greeks on the subject of death, what has their religion to say by way of consolation?
6200Supposing a man were to lose his suit in the courts, where are the damages to come from?
6200Tell me truly: are ye allied To the families of gentry?
6200Then would we question you mildly and pleasantly, inwardly grieving, but outwardly gay;''Husband, how goes it abroad?''
6200Then, perhaps, in Zeus, Zeus, who is lord of all?
6200This that we are to worship as highest, we of the brain and heart and soul?
6200Vortex?
6200Was there ever a shower seen to fall in an hour when the sky was all cloudless and blue?
6200What is he to do?
6200What is it then, this persistent, obscure, unnameable Thing?
6200What is it?
6200What is to be made of a god who seduces and deserts a mortal woman; who suffers her to expose her child, and leaves her in ignorance of its fate?
6200What the clouds?
6200What then was it?
6200What then_ are_ we to worship?
6200What will there be to play for?
6200What would be the good of fighting?
6200What''s the meaning Of these misgivings?
6200What, but the worth of the lessons he taught us Discipline, arms, and equipment of war?"
6200What_ can_ he do?
6200What_ is_ this higher"fate?"
6200When fellows come to blows over their cups, where are the damages to come from?
6200Whence comes then the thunderbolt, pray?
6200Where is the single purpose that should mark the divine will?
6200Who will do the field work?
6200Who would not emulate them in the creation of children such as theirs, which have preserved their memory and given them everlasting glory?
6200Who, for example, would not rather look at a Tanagra statuette than at the equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington?
6200Who, when he thinks of Homer and Hesiod and other great poets, would not rather have their children than ordinary ones?
6200Why ca n''t ye let me wash my guts and tripe, And sell my sausages in peace and quiet?
6200Why not?
6200Why should any one steal what is his own?
6200Why should there be any?
6200Why, what do you mean?
6200Will there be no more thieves?
6200Would that be an ignoble life?''
6200and do all men always desire their own good, or only some men?--what say you?''
6200and if above him, what is he?
6200and what is the object which they have in view?
6200did I hear you aright?
6200did it touch the conscience as well as the imagination and intellect?
6200does not Zeus this Necessity send?
6200how can I oblige you?
6200or rather let me put the question more clearly, and ask: When a man loves the beautiful, what does he desire?''
6200we would ask of him;''what have ye done in Assembly to- day?''
6200what are they doing who show all this eagerness and heat which is called love?
6200what shall I move?
6200what the main effect on the spectator?
6200where the repose of the wisdom that foreordained and knows the end?
31345And can this God have a mother? 31345 Can you really wonder that all this should come to an end?
31345Dost thou see aught?
31345What am I?
31345What can I know?
31345Already the Catholic party, in preparation of its commencing atrocities, ominously inquired,"Is the vengeance of God to be defrauded of its victims?"
31345Among such appearances, how shall we select the true one, and, if we make a selection, how shall we be absolutely certain that we are right?
31345Among the great prelates, who was there to stand in the place of those men whose achievements had glorified the human race?
31345And what is the result to which all this carries us?
31345And, even if such a criterion existed, must we not have for it, in its turn, some higher criterion?
31345Are these the deeds of civilized men, or the riotings of cannibals drunk with blood?
31345As to the gods, those dà ¦ mons in whom you trust, did they always save you from calamity?
31345As to the reality of these apparitions, why should a hermit be led to suspect that they arose from the natural working of his own brain?
31345As to the sentiment of patriotism of which you vaunt, was it not destroyed by your own emperors?
31345But how shall we be sure, in any one case, that we have examined all the individuals?
31345But if there be this impossibility of attaining knowledge, what is the use of man giving himself any trouble about the matter?
31345But what is that murmur except the sum of the sounds of all the individual drops?
31345But what is the cause of all this?
31345But what was the cost of all this?
31345But who is that one God?
31345Could a creature bear the uncreated?"
31345Do we ask any proof of the condition of art to which the Egyptians had attained at the time of their earliest monuments?
31345Do we not want some criterion for it?
31345Does the procession of nations in time, like the erratic phantasm of a dream, go forward without reason or order?
31345Has it been annihilated?
31345Has man a criterion of truth?]
31345Hence arises the fourth great question of Greek philosophy: Have we any criterion of truth?
31345How can it be otherwise since they are not permitted to pray in a mosque upon earth?
31345How can there be a religion where there is no God?
31345How could he better find adherents from the centre to the remotest corner of the empire?
31345How else, in this manner, could the like extricate itself from the unlike; the one deliver itself from, and make itself manifest among the many?
31345How is it possible to arrest the spread of a faith which can make the broken heart leap with joy?
31345How long did Hannibal insult them?
31345How shall we ascertain the real state of the case?
31345How shall we understand his faith unless we see it illustrated in his life?
31345How was it possible that unlettered men, who with difficulty can be made to apprehend obvious things, should understand such mysteries?
31345If the divinity is undistinguishable from heat, whither can we go to escape its influences?
31345If things material and tangible, and therefore the most solid props of knowledge, are thus abruptly destroyed, in what direction shall we turn?
31345If thus, in the recesses of the individual economy, these natural agents bear sway, must they not operate in the social economy too?
31345If we rely upon Reason, how do we know that Reason itself is trustworthy?
31345If you ask them how they defend these monstrosities?
31345In such a state of things, what else could be the result than disgust or indifference?
31345In that final moment, what is it that is lost?
31345In what latitude is it that the domain of the physical ends, and that of the supernatural begins?
31345Indeed, do not all our expectations of the stability of social institutions rest upon our belief in the stability of surrounding physical conditions?
31345Is it not best to accept life as it comes, and enjoy pleasure while he may?
31345Is it not reason?
31345Is it surprising that all Asia and Africa fell away?
31345Is there an object presented to us which does not bear the mark of ephemeral duration?
31345Is this world an illusion, a phantasm of the imagination?
31345Of a thousand acts, all of surpassing interest and importance, how shall we identify the master ones?
31345Of what avail is it if a barbarian chieftain drives a horde of his savages through the waters of a river by way of extemporaneous or speedy baptism?
31345Of what use were sacrificial offerings and entreaties directed to phantasms of the imagination?
31345Shall we begin our studies by examining sensations or by examining ideas?
31345Shall we find in his private life any explanation of this mystery?
31345Shall we inquire with Spinoza whether we have any ideas independent of experience?
31345Shall we say with Descartes that all clear ideas are true?
31345The pulse of its life- giving artery makes but one beat in a year; what, then, are a few hundreds of centuries in such a process?
31345This being the case, how shall we know that any information derived from such unfaithful sources is true?
31345Thus it appears that the first inquiry made by European philosophy was, Whence and in what manner came the world?
31345To Nature, when she is transmuting a worthless into a better metal, what signify a thousand years?
31345To reason may we not then trust?
31345To what are we to attribute this pause?
31345To what part of the world could the Egyptian travel without seeing in the skies the same constellations?
31345Was it a goose or a god that saved the Capitol from Brennus?
31345Was it a nonentity?
31345Was there not in the streets a profligate rabble living in total idleness, fed and amused at the expense of the state?
31345Were there not natural waters of very different properties?
31345What is God?]
31345What is it that assures us of the unreality of the fiery circle, the rainbow, the spectre, the voices, the crawling of insects upon the skin?
31345What is that something?
31345What is that soul?
31345What is the soul?]
31345What shall we say of such a system and of such a state of things?
31345What should we say of him, who, contemplating it in its state of rest, asserted that it was impossible for it ever to move?
31345What testimony does physiology offer on this point?
31345Where were the gods in all the defeats, some of them but recent, of the pagan emperors?
31345Whereupon she uncovered her face and said,"Dost thou see it now?"
31345Which of these classes shall we regard as the truest and most perfect type?
31345Who was to succeed to Archimedes, Hipparchus, Euclid, Herophilus, Eratosthenes?
31345Why are facts to be burdened with such hypothetical creations, when it is obvious that a much simpler explanation is sufficient?
31345Why was it that civilization thus rose on the banks of the Nile, and not upon those of the Danube or Mississippi?
31345With Plato shall we say it was in one of our prior states of existence, and the long- forgotten transactions are now suddenly flashing upon us?
31345Would any one deny the influence of rainy days on our industrial habits and on our mental condition even in a civilized state?
31345by an exposure of base material in the furnace for a proper season, may we not anticipate the wished for event?
31345hast thou ever said to men, Take me and my mother for two gods beside God?
31345how things do not fall away from the earth on that side?
31345was not Roman idleness the inevitable result of the filling of Italy with slaves?
31345what is it that has come to an end?
31345who to Plato and Aristotle?
8882According to Buddhism, therefore, he has obtained no merit?
8882And at last, knowing not what else to do, I took away by stealth[ the spirit?] 8882 And by those knowing the Law, what will be thought of the results, the karma of his act?"
8882And is it not like tearing the hands of Kobodaishi, thus to tear a letter written with characters? 8882 And what shall it be?"
8882At all events,he cried in a cheery tone,"they''ll be appreciated in the British Museum-- eh?"
8882But was it the duty of the priest,I asked,"to disfigure his face?"
8882But what is the teaching?
8882Did any person tell you these were devils trampling on the cross?
8882Do n''t you see what they are? 8882 Do you mean that in some former life also he may have tried to escape from sin by destroying his own body?"
8882For old bronze?
8882How did you ever manage to get those big figures upstairs?
8882Josses?
8882Know you not that a woman is less pure than a man? 8882 Suppose that he sought death only to escape from sinning?"
8882Well, come, and look at my collection, wo n''t you? 8882 Well?"
8882What else are they doing?
8882What of his future lives?
8882What would you call that?
8882When do you intend to offer the collection to the British Museum?
8882Who is that man?
8882Why do you think they will make a sensation?
8882Why, the story of Buddha is like the story of Christ, is n''t it?
8882Will you not please permit me to stay, if only for a little time? 8882 Woman or wood- fairy?"
8882Would you really have broken it up?
8882( 1)"Is that really the head of your father?"
8882( 3) Nono- San, or O- Tsuki- san Ikutsu?
8882A tale: then of what is it best that we should tell?
8882Again we may vainly ask, What becomes of the forces which constituted the vitality of a dead plant?
8882Also Nobuyoshi said to his wicked wife:"What do you mean by remaining here?
8882And being so young, how came you to commit such a dreadful crime as incendiarism?"
8882And the bamboo- screen having been rolled up before her, Terute- Hime asked:"What is the cause of all this laughing?
8882And the painter questioned her, sayings"Shall I paint you the picture of a very old plum- tree, or of an ancient pine?"
8882Are you really in earnest?
8882Are you truly in your right senses?
8882Buddhist faith, however, answers the questions"Whence?"
8882But are they so antagonistic?
8882But if inquiry is pushed a stage further, and the question is asked, What, then, do we know about matter and motion?
8882But what is the meaning of a perfect imagination?
8882But what was her age?
8882But which of the man servants or maid servants would you wish to go with you?"
8882But whose the witchcraft?
8882Can all this mean more than the ordered conservation of forms after the departure of faith?
8882Could it, as his aged teacher averred, have some occult relation to a higher religion?
8882Could she not call back her boy for one brief minute only?
8882Did the Buddhist landscape- gardener wish to tell us that all pomp and power and beauty lead only to such silence at last?
8882Does it go on existing viewlessly, like the forces that shape spectres of frondage in the frost upon a window- pane?
8882Does the evil stop even there?
8882Going to the middle one, she greeted the smith, and asked him:"Sir smith, can you make some fine small work in iron?"
8882Hastening on, she met five or six persona going to Kumano; and she asked them:"Have you not met on your way a blind youth, about sixteen years old?"
8882Her husband answered,"Yes, surely; but what is it that you wish to do for seven days?"
8882How can the beliefs of Shinto coexist with the knowledge of modern science?
8882How can the men who win distinction as scientific specialists still respect the household shrine or do reverence before the Shinto parish- temple?
8882How do you like the baby?"
8882How long do you require to go?"
8882How should he want for milk?"
8882Is all well with you, honored parents?"
8882Is it any power in the living idol?
8882Is it not a self?
8882Is it not all a lie?"
8882Is it not certain that with the further progress of education, Shinto, even as ceremonialism, must cease to exist?
8882It would trouble the little soul; but would he not gladly bear a moment''s pain for her dear sake?
8882Little comrades would ask him mockingly,"Do you still need milk?"
8882Might they not signify also the inevitable penalty of long- forgotten sins?
8882Must not the same truth hold of that shock which supreme art gives?
8882Nevertheless, though the fact be unique in human history, what does it really mean?
8882Not twelve?
8882Question: Is an artist justified in creating nakedness for its own sake, unless he can divest that nakedness of every trace of the real and personal?
8882See that Jizo in the corner,--the big black fellow?
8882Servants disputing, ask each other,"By reason of what ingwa must I now dwell with such a one as you?"
8882She was accepted into the Order, and became a holy nun.... Well, which was the wiser, that woman, or the priest you wanted to praise?"
8882Shuntoku asked:"Why do you laugh?
8882Suppose he sought death that he might not, unwittingly, cause others to commit sin?"
8882THE BALLAD OF SHUNTOKU- MARU_ Ara!--Joyfully young Daikoko and Ebisu enter dancing_ Shall we tell a tale, or shall we utter felicitations?
8882That one there looks just like a Virgin Mary, does n''t it?"
8882The dreams of Buddhism can scarcely be surpassed, because they touch the infinite; but who can presume to say they never will be realized?
8882Then Otohime, a daughter of that family, hearing the voices, came out, and asked the maid:"Why did you laugh?"
8882Then she thanked him, and asked:--"Now will you say again for me the little word which I prayed you to tell your honored father?"
8882Then tremblingly she questioned:--"Why must I sorrow for my child?
8882Then what is it?
8882Therefore may I beseech you to bestow some suitable name upon me?"
8882Uma ni yaru?
8882Ushi ni yaru?
8882VI What of the future of Japan?
8882What care we now if the posts should fall, if the wires be broken?"
8882What else could you do with it?...
8882What is it that suffers by karma; what is it that lies within the illusion,--that makes progress,--that attains Nirvana?
8882What is it?"
8882What is the divine magic of the woman thus perceived?
8882What is the justice of the gods?"
8882What is the shock?
8882What is the story of a common Japanese dwelling?
8882What remains in Nirvana?
8882What though the shattered body fall?
8882What, of bad men and of bad acts in this theory of Shinto?
8882When the plant turns to clay, what becomes of the vibration which was its life?
8882Where are the outward material signs of that immense new force she has been showing both in productivity and in war?
8882Wherefore, then, do you, born a woman, thus presume to tear a letter?
8882Why does he not go to the Palace of the Dragon- King of the Sea, like Urashima?"
8882Why does it call once more?
8882Why has that bugle ceased to call?
8882Why not?
8882Why should not Japan become the France of the Further East?"
8882Why should not prayers now also be made?
8882Why sounds the stirring signal now More faintly than before?
8882Will you give it to the cow?
8882Will you give it to the horse?
8882Will you take me now?''
8882With what sword shall we fight?
8882XI IN THE TWILIGHT OF THE GODS"Do you know anything about josses?"
8882and"Whither?"
8882are you really Otohime?
8882is she present?"
8882not fourteen?
8882not thirteen?
54370Am I not to believe what I see with my own eyes, and hear with my own ears?
54370O, Sir,cried one of the islanders,"why can we not return to the old way and not have all these modern ideas?
54370Again, should a conqueror be classed among the great?
54370And do not all persons develop one or more faculties, and neglect others, without causing any change in the bones of the face?
54370And how do they do it?
54370And should they?
54370And that if she took any other drug, the effects would not be about the same as they are known to be in practically all cases?
54370And then what more can the gods require?
54370And what are we to do with this common enemy of mankind?
54370And, if so, would it take eight or ten years before this could be done?
54370Are not animals affected by disease as well as man?
54370Are our churches to encourage the vice at their fairs in order to make money to_ redeem_ the world?
54370Are we to allow gambling houses to exist in our midst, thus inviting our young men to become victims?
54370Are we to allow lotteries and petty gambling devices everywhere as we do now?
54370Are we to emulate the faults of the great, or their virtues?
54370Because some men will steal, should we license them and furnish them with ways and means to carry out their brutal instincts?
54370But hold,--other difficulties present themselves: Who would compel the organized industries( Trusts) to reduce the hours of work?
54370But what has Christian Science done?
54370But what were the forlorn islanders to do about it?
54370But, should we listen for a moment to those who seek to exterminate the Trust?
54370But, who may say?
54370Can a person be a gentleman part of the time and not all the time, or is he born one way or the other?
54370Can a person who was not born a gentleman acquire the title?
54370Can so immense a collection of bodies meet and combine with unanimity?
54370Can such an association or society be organized?
54370Do we not all know now what a gentleman is?
54370Do you wish to isolate yourself from your fellow men and separately make and raise everything you eat and wear?"
54370Do you wish to return to that?
54370Does it not require quite a stretch of a sacrilegious imagination to picture a clothing factory in the spiritual world?
54370For example, suppose the coal mines remained idle,--what if the operators refused to obey the national directory?
54370For that matter, who can?
54370Has not the burden of the world''s work been lightened and lessened by this combination and organization?
54370How can the phrenologist reconcile his philosophy to this stubborn fact?
54370How can there be when a gentleman is a_ perfect man_?
54370How can we conquer the giant without slaying him?
54370How do we know that a man is popular with the people?
54370How?
54370I have frequently been asked by believing friends,"How do you account for this?"
54370If God is able to prevent evil, and is not willing, where is His benevolence?
54370If God is both able and willing, whence then is evil?
54370If God is willing, but not able, where is His power?
54370If employment is all we seek, why not tear down the public buildings and then hire men to build them up again?
54370If not, how about Confucius who was yellow?
54370If so, who would say that their meager minds could cause it?
54370If the public is the majority, who is to say that they are wise or unwise, right or wrong, fools or philosophers?
54370Is a great hangman as great as a great divine, and is the greatest clown to be numbered among the greatest men of history?
54370Is a great shoemaker a great man?
54370Is it a matter of birth, a matter of character, a matter of conscience, a matter of dress, a matter of conduct, or a matter of education?
54370Is, then, the spirit world( heaven), no improvement on our own world?
54370It asks itself"What is right?"
54370It sometimes attaches to ignorance, for who is today more popular than our champion batter or prize fighter?
54370It sometimes attaches to immorality, for did it not adopt the infamous Pompadour and du Barry?
54370It sometimes attaches to trifles, for was there ever such a fuss made over anything as the Teddybear?
54370It sometimes attaches to tyrants, for were not Caligula and Nero more popular than Germanicus?
54370Must the constitution be amended in order that NATIONAL DIRECTION shall be put into effect?
54370Now, my friends, why do you keep these God- given advantages to yourselves?
54370On the other hand, versatility of genius is not uncommon, for was not Leonardo da Vinci master of all the arts?
54370Or a Lincoln, Grant or Lee?
54370Or, should we try to cure it of its faults by training it to do our bidding?
54370Shall Booker T. Washington''s name not go on the immortal list just because he is black?
54370Shall Jesus''name be written on the scroll and not Buddha''s or Mohammed''s?
54370Shall Theodore Roosevelt go on the list?
54370Shall we class Joan of Arc among the great?
54370Shall we give Socrates a niche?
54370Shall we nominate Diogenes?
54370Shall we put Martin Luther on, and not Voltaire?
54370Shall we stop all this and let man''s passions have full sway?
54370Somebody has said that the majority is usually wrong, but who is to decide whether the majority or that"somebody"is wrong?
54370Still here mean that Osteopaths have a certain magic touch which is so powerful and wonderful that it must be used with great caution?
54370Still says that Osteopaths adjust displaced muscles, does he not?
54370That this touch lets loose certain drugs or chemicals which the body needs to cure itself?
54370The question is asked: Will all of the milk dealers one day combine and form a Trust?
54370The question may be asked, What power can compel the Trusts to do that which they have been directed to do by the nation?
54370There is an old saw that runs--"What is a gentleman?
54370These are questions on every tongue, yet who may say the answer?
54370Was Caesar great?
54370Was there ever a more popular man than Dewey after the Manila victory?
54370What are the qualifications and requirements?
54370What can be done with this unmanageable monster to destroy its faults and yet not spoil its virtues?
54370What does all this show?
54370What is a gentleman?
54370What is a wedding, and a marriage, and why?
54370What is genius?
54370What is greatness?
54370What kind of a beard shall we wear?
54370What matter if all of that is true or false?
54370What object was sought, in the beginning, when custom demanded a marriage ceremony before cohabitation?
54370What people?
54370What then have bumps to do with his mind?
54370What would prevent them charging exorbitant prices?
54370Who are the great and the greatest men of the time?
54370Who or what is to be the court of last resort?
54370Who or what would prevent the captains of industry filling their own pockets and keeping the great profits to themselves?
54370Who or what would prevent the rich from growing richer, and the poor poorer?
54370Who were the greatest men of history?
54370Who would favor a"beardless youth"to Numa Pimpolius-- he of the magnificent flowing beard?
54370Who would know good horses if there were no heavy loads?"
54370Who would prefer a Shakespeare, a Longfellow, a Whitman, a Ruskin, a Charlemagne, shorn of their hirsute adornments?
54370Who would say that the Boston tea party_ caused_ the Revolutionary war, or that the firing on Fort Sumpter_ caused_ the"late unpleasantness"?
54370Why can we not go back to the old way?"
54370Why do n''t you exchange what you make or raise for the products of your neighbors?
54370Why do we cling to error so tenaciously?
54370Why does every new, occult fad soon attract a host of followers?
54370Why has that ancient custom followed man to every far corner of the globe, and why do all peoples resent any effort to destroy that custom?
54370Why is it that so many are willing to attribute occult powers to all magicians who perform inexplicable tricks?
54370Why so many different forms of ceremony, what do they mean, and why do they differ so?
54370Yes, who would not expect it?
54370Yet who would say, under those circumstances, that Mind has endowed those drugs with the powers to act on the system as they do?
54370You say that Julian argued arduously against the beard?
54370You say the ancient Egyptians wore no beards?
54370_ The Public_ Who or what are the public?
54370and was not our own Franklin equally famous for his several accomplishments?
54370did not Lord Brougham excel in everything, until they said of him"Science is his forte, omniscience his foible"?
54370exclaims Chamfort,"how many fools does it take to make the public?"
54370not"What will the public applaud?"
54370on all beards above a fortnight''s growth?
54370or, that of walking under a ladder, for how many times in a lifetime does a person have occasion to avoid doing so?
30549All straight goods, eh, John?
30549And how do you find them?
30549And how many people might there be in the two together?
30549And the colonel?
30549But,objects the English wildfowl shooter,"suppose the birds are not get- at- able in any other way?"
30549Can any of you mensaid the newcomer"take a boat out for me to San Francisco?"
30549Can you identify yourself, sir?
30549How''do, John?
30549I can let you travel cheaper than he can, ca n''t I, Bill?
30549Insular?
30549Is he the man as built the bridge?
30549What can you do?
30549What do we need of a lawyer?
30549What have you got to complain of? 30549 What is the American Utopia, how much Will is there shaping to attain it?"
30549What is your trade?
30549Why? 30549 You can read that, eh?"
30549''"[ 89:1] Has Mr. Wells ever gone about England asking Englishmen the same question:"What are you going to make of your future?"
30549***** And the conclusion?
30549***** But would it be bad politics?
30549***** Does any one doubt it?
30549***** What has been the course of events in England in the same period?
30549And by what so tutored and guided that it reaches only for what is good?
30549And if he so erred, how shall all the lesser teachers from whom England gets its knowledge of America keep straight?
30549And if it is in truth in their power to do this thing, how can either conceivably convince itself that it is not its duty?
30549And is it not sufficient for her pride that she, one people, should win-- if it be only-- half of all the world''s honours?
30549And what is the result?
30549And what would be the effect on the British race?
30549And when all this has happened, will England''s position be shaken?
30549And when they have crossed, what then?
30549And when those who would be their coadjutors are willing and waiting and beckoning them on, have they any right to hold back?
30549Are they approximately the qualities most likely to equip a man to play the noblest part in the life of modern America?
30549Are you an American?
30549Are you an Englishman?
30549Baldwin?)
30549Burke( was it not?)
30549But because Nice and Naples are entitled to give themselves airs, under what patent do Chicago and Pittsburgh claim the same right?
30549But it is not many years since an eminently distinguished authority on iron and steel( was he not President of the Iron and Steel Association?
30549But whence derived?
30549But why should Englishmen know anything of the United States?
30549But why should I not mention their names?
30549By what power or instinct do they do it?
30549Can it ever, in the long run, be bad politics to champion any cause which is great and good?
30549Do you want it?"
30549Does America suppose that she also did not learn her lesson?
30549Does a brother not love his sister because he says rude things about her little failings?
30549For the rest, what is there in the country which the living American has not made himself, or which his fathers did not make?
30549How is it possible that the American should think of England as the Englishman thinks of the United States?
30549How is it tempered that she remains all pure womanly at the last?
30549How many New Yorkers have helped to organise a new mining town?"
30549How much less"at a loss"does he anticipate that he would find them?
30549How should they have been otherwise when separated from that world by three thousand miles of ocean?
30549How then, in 1895, could they have had any fear of the United States?
30549However strong Southern_ sentiment_ may still be, what is there of the Southern_ spirit_ even in Richmond or in Louisville?
30549I am well aware that many American readers will say:"What is the man talking of?
30549If Americans were given the option to- day to take more Philippines, would they take them?
30549In Africa?
30549In America?
30549In Asia?
30549In Australia?
30549Is it ambition?
30549Is it anything other than moral cowardice if they do?
30549Is it not reasonable to suppose that he will be no less earnest in the study of Botticelli?
30549Is it ten per cent.--or five per cent.--or two per cent.?
30549Is it to be wondered at that he thinks of Englishmen otherwise than as Englishmen think of him?
30549Is the American people as well educated or as well informed or as well cultivated as the English?
30549It goes farther back than the"Who ever reads an American book?"
30549Just go ahead will you and see to it?"
30549Mary, who painted that picture over there-- the big tree and the blue sky?"
30549Moreover, have not many visitors, though finding much to criticise, complimented them always on their rapidity of thought and action?
30549Mr. Wells, by his own account, went about the country confronting all comers with the questions,"What are you going to make of your future?"
30549Nonsense?
30549Or will the same tendencies persist, so that the currents will cross and again diverge, occupying inverse positions?
30549S----y B----l. And when the Englishman thinks of the possibility of war with the United States, with whom is it that he pictures himself as fighting?
30549The American thinks in round numbers:"What will the whole thing come to?"
30549The two currents, once divergent, now so closely confluent, will meet; but will they continue to flow on in one stream?
30549The words"Can we hold him?"
30549Was he not an Honourable and the son of a Baron and the"real thing"in every way?
30549Was she referring to the fact that we were on a special train composed of private cars, or what?
30549What are the party leaders to do in such a case?
30549What did she mean?
30549What have you got to do?"
30549What then can there be in the fighting strength of the United States, for all the figures that she has to show, to breed in him a suggestion of fear?
30549What would be the result if suddenly the limits of the British Isles were to be miraculously expanded?
30549When, moreover, the cheaper magazines became a possibility, how came it that such publications as_ McClure''s_ and_ The Cosmopolitan_ arose?
30549Where is it that spheres of influence are not delimited?
30549Which is ridiculous, is it not, English reader?
30549Why can not the educated American keep his speech silver and gold for educated ears?
30549Why not then go out and enjoy ourselves?
30549Will America ever oust Great Britain from the position which she holds as the Mother of Sports and the athletic centre of the world?
30549Will not Americans understand with what utter reluctance she has been compelled again and again to take more?
30549Will, who is the portrait of your grandfather by-- the one over there in his robes?"
30549With whom?
30549Would she not be bluntly refused to- day?
30549Would the United States accept the plea?
30549[ 169:1] Are they really the qualities most desirable even in an Englishman to- day?
30549or( what is infinitely worse)"Can he hold us?"
30549said the manufacturer,"but you say that''s what they want out there?
37115But what does this prove? 37115 Whence does this arise?"
37115[ 78] And why does not misery spur on other nations placed under similar circumstances? 37115 Admitting that we are more enlightened upon some subjects, in how many other respects are we inferior to our more remote ancestors? 37115 And has Christianity, then, no civilizing influence? 37115 And if he were led to adopt that opinion, how would he attempt to account for the striking diversities in their aspect and manner of existence?
37115Are not these perfect resemblances?
37115Are not these sentiments very monarchical for a democrat; very religious for an atheist?
37115Are political institutions to be the test?
37115Are the most intellectual, the best informed men generally the best Christians?
37115Are the negroes, then, more closely allied to our race than the Sclavonic nations?
37115Are the results of these ideas and facts such as are conformable to the instincts, the tendencies, of the masses?
37115Are we, then, so infinitely more civilized than France?
37115At what time of the world''s history then have we-- the_ civilized_ nations-- passed through this stage of semi- civilization?
37115But are these mental faculties, which every individual of our species possesses, susceptible of indefinite development?
37115But are we warranted thence to conclude that the nation to which this individual belongs, is susceptible of adopting our civilization?
37115But does not the free population of Rome afford a perfect analogue to a modern body politic?
37115But has the human mind really expanded since the days of Pythagoras and Plato?
37115But how shall we distinguish the latter?
37115But is the Bible really explicit on this point?
37115But so soon as these men have sufficiently mastered the first elements of knowledge, to what use do they, for the most part, apply them?
37115But what becomes of the population of the rest of the world, who are not included in this classification?
37115But what interest had they in the success of the great king?
37115But whom did this civilization embrace?
37115But why are they lost?
37115But why revert to the past, and to distant scenes?
37115But, as these nations have few points of resemblance, the question suggests itself: Do not, then, all civilizations tend to the same results?
37115But, asks Mr. Gobineau, what is degeneracy?
37115By what contrivance did the engineers of that people hoist those enormous masses to a dizzy height?
37115Can we not admire the Almighty as well in the variety as in a fancied uniformity of His works?
37115Could the name of Cyrus, the remembrance of the storming of Sardis, the siege of Babylon, the conquest of Egypt, fire them with enthusiasm?
37115Did prejudice operate four thousand years ago exactly as it does now?
37115Do we find this homogeneity in European nations?
37115Do we recognize here a people in a state of moral and social advancement?"
37115Does it exist only in the minds of the visionary, or is it a mere bugbear of the timorous?
37115Has human nature changed, or has it even modified its failings?
37115Has the thinker of the nineteenth century faculties and perceptions which they had not?
37115Have all men the same capacity for intellectual progress?
37115Have we not daily proofs around us that the heroic virtues of by- gone ages still live in ours?
37115Have we one virtue more or one vice less than former generations?
37115How can a religion be true which makes adherence to such an order a fundamental article of its creed?
37115How can it be proved that any existing forms primordially were distinct?
37115How many European countries can pretend to this?
37115How many discoveries which we owe to mere accident, or which are the fruits of painful efforts, were the lost possessions of remote ages?
37115How many more are not yet restored?
37115How then shall we judge of the degree of intellect necessary to be a follower of Jesus?
37115How were they transported the vast distance from the quarries where they were hewn?
37115How were those blocks of stone, thirty- five feet long and eighteen thick, raised one upon another?
37115How, then, can an animal be taken as an analogue for man?
37115How, then, shall we define this term?
37115If this were the case, why was it necessary, until the last expiring throb of Paganism, to preserve its temples and pay the hierophants?
37115In South America, where Spain ruled with unrestrained power for centuries, what effect has it produced?
37115In other words, can cultivation raise all the different races to the same intellectual standard?
37115In this miserable corner of the world, what were the Jews?
37115Is not this a very high prerogative allotted to that branch of the human family?
37115Is not this like the reasoning in the child''s story- book: Why is Jack a bad boy?
37115Is the diffusion of knowledge by popular education to be the test?
37115Is the perfection to which the arts are carried, the test of civilization?
37115Is this civilization?
37115It is owing to a natural law of death which seems to govern societies as well as individuals; but, does this law operate alike in all cases?
37115Many affect to deride the idea of"manifest destiny"that possesses us Anglo- Americans, but who in the main doubts it?
37115Now is this the case?
37115Now, I ask, in what does the difference consist?
37115On the contrary, does not most of the talent of England spring up from plebeian ranks?
37115Or, are the useful arts to carry the prize?
37115Quod si causam ad coeli solique naturam referas, non homines albi in illis regionibus renascentes non nigrescunt?
37115That too great an extension of territory is the cause of weakness?
37115The great empires that overshadowed the world, where are they?
37115The youthful beauty of Canton would be handsome(?)
37115Then the question,"Which is the best government?"
37115This is, in a measure, true of nations of the same race, but is it true with regard to different races?
37115To forge still firmer their own fetters?
37115To whom pertains the glory of Grecian history?
37115We possess pure and exalted principles, I admit, but are they carried into practice?
37115What agriculturist could be made to believe that, with the same care, all plants would thrive equally well in all soils?
37115What are the material wants of the Hindoo?
37115What audience could now endure, or what police permit, the plays of Congreve and of Otway?
37115What was this famous Canaan?
37115What, then, can we call a Christian civilization?
37115Whence this result?
37115Whence, then, this gathering storm?
37115Where are the brutal fox- hunting country squires of former centuries?
37115Where are the results?
37115Where is there such a nation?
37115Who piled these monstrous masses, which modern art could scarcely move?
37115Who would dare to assert that Rome owed her universal empire to her geographical position?
37115Why does he disobey his parents?
37115Why has this been so?
37115Would not any naturalist consider as distinct species any animals of the same genus so distinguished?
37115Would this add one new faculty to the human mind, or ennoble human nature by the eradication of one bad passion?
37115Yet, who would decide which had the superior intellect?
37115and are no limits imposed to the perfectibility of our species?
37115asks M. De Tocqueville;"have we really more sensibility than our forefathers?"
37115is it uniform like the result it brings about, and do all civilizations perish from the same pre- existing cause?
37115the good old customs, when hospitality consisted in drinking one''s guest underneath the table?
44094I have no objection,said the mistress,"to grant you leave; but do you think you_ ought_ to attend Communion?
44094Lor''missus,replied the woman,"do ye think I''d let an old goose stand betwixt me and my Blessed Lord and Master?"
44094[ 42]He does not distress himself with the thought, Why did I not do what is good?
44094badfor what?
44094( Indeed how would she ever have got into the middle of Oxford Street at all, if she had not had one?
44094; and the question arises, Where is the grain of necessity which underlies it all?
44094Again, mentally, is not our condition most unsatisfactory?
44094And beyond that-- is not"a noble dissimulation"part and parcel of the very greatest characters: like Socrates,"the white soul in a satyr form"?
44094And how can we, gulfed as we are in this present whirlpool, conceive rightly the glory which awaits us?
44094And the question forces itself upon us, Are there really no natural boundaries?
44094And this Love, which is the culmination of desire, does it not appear to us as a worship of and desire for the human form?
44094And when he grows to manhood, what then?
44094And why will they be different?
44094Appoint an army of swabs there, but to what end?
44094Are there not also in every man the makings of a universal consciousness?
44094Are we to bolster up the old codes, in which we have largely ceased to believe, merely in order to have a code?--or are we to let them go?
44094Are we to say that man may be looked upon as a variation of a mollusc or an amoeba, or that the amoeba may be looked on as a variation of man?
44094At what point, then, does Boyle''s law really apply?
44094Besides, are we to suppose that Man, the lord and ruler of the animals, came merely by way of_ escape_ from the animals?
44094Besides, what_ can_ we do?
44094But can that really be done?
44094But does this really settle the matter?
44094But how shall I describe it?
44094But is he there in the dock, the patch- coated brawler or burglar, really harmful to Society?
44094But is this so?
44094But what would you have?
44094But why, we may ask, should people be afraid of rousing passions which, after all, are the great driving forces of human life?
44094But( is it not obvious?)
44094Cold to yourself, or to other people, or to polar bears, or by the thermometer?
44094Do lords and rulers generally come so?
44094Exactly; but who is to decide, as we saw at the outset, in what"stealing"consists?
44094Here are two directions of thought; which shall we choose?
44094How is this classification effected?
44094How many times a day do we perform an action that is authentic and not a mere mechanical piece of repetition?
44094How reconcile this contradiction-- if indeed a contradiction it be?
44094How then are we to know when it is right and when it is wrong?
44094IV And now, by way of a glimpse into the future-- after this long digression what is the route that man will take?
44094If so, why these divergencies in the simplest and most obvious matters?
44094If the question is: What is the cause of Variation among animals?
44094In this view the distinctions between the parts are effaced, and we have only one part instead of many-- but the question is"what is that part?"
44094Is it a mollusc, or is it a man, or what is it?
44094Is it ambition?
44094Is it closefistedness?
44094Is it laziness?
44094Is it not a commonplace to say that one man sees in the common objects of Nature what another is wholly unconscious of?
44094Is it not curious then that in this region he is least sure, least dogmatic, most doubtful whether there be a law or no?
44094Is it possible?
44094Is it women?
44094It was he insisted on the terms"good"and"bad"being restored to their proper use, as terms of relation--"good"for what?
44094May it be suggested that it is connected with"wick"or"quick,"meaning_ alive_?
44094May it not be so in animals?
44094May it not, must it not, be the same thing in animals and all through creation?
44094Probably there has never been an age, nor any country( except Yankee- land?)
44094The only conceivable answer to the question,"What is that which is now a mollusc and now a man and now an inorganic atom?
44094The question arises, What do_ we_ need?
44094The question is,"What is the destination of Man?"
44094To what extent may the facts of Nature thus be deepened and made more substantial to us-- and whither will this process lead us?
44094Was it fear that made him a man?
44094Were it not likelier that in that case he would have turned into a worm?
44094What are we to conclude from all this?
44094What are we to do?
44094What else is St. Paul''s reiterated charge to escape from the dominion of sin and law, into the glorious liberty of the children of God?
44094What is a machine in the ordinary sense?
44094What is its place and part in the great whole of human evolution?
44094What is more important than food, yet in what human matter is there more unaccountable divergence of practice?
44094What is the cause and purpose of this fall and centuries- long exile from the earlier Paradise?
44094What is the consequence?
44094What is the meaning of this loss of unity?
44094What is the meaning of this manifold and intensified manifestation of Disease-- physical, social, intellectual, and moral?
44094What is the scientific definition of it?
44094What kind of rigorous statement shall we reach when we have got_ all_ the facts in?
44094What right has he to lay a limit to the hunting grounds, or to spoil the wild free life of the plains with his dirty agriculture?
44094What then is a degree?
44094What then is desire in Man?
44094What then is it?
44094What then is that one thing?
44094What then is that thing?
44094What then is the function of Man?
44094What then is the path of the moon?
44094What then is this desire in Man, which seems to be the instigation and origin of all his growth and development?
44094What was that main contention?
44094Whatever should we do without him?
44094When the divine has descended among men has it not always, like Moses, worn a veil before its face?
44094Who knows whether we have ever seen each other?
44094Who knows whether we have ever_ seen_ the blue sky?
44094Why are tiles made S- shaped in some localities and flat in others?
44094Why did I do what is bad?
44094Why do we sit on chairs instead of on the floor, as the Japanese do, or on cushions like the Turk?
44094Why have I varied in one direction and my brothers and sisters from the same nest in other directions?
44094Why-- he might say-- am I a different person from what I was ten years ago, or when I was a boy?
44094Would you have a rabbit with the horns of a cow, or a donkey with the disposition of a spaniel?
44094Yet, if healthy, how does the tongue act?
44094You say, Why is a complete summary not possible?
44094[ It is asked]"Was not the Polynesian always unchaste?
44094_ Cold_--in what sense?
44094_ Is_--do you mean_ is_?
44094_ It_--what is that?
44094_ Temperature_--who knows what that is?
44094_ What_ is temperature?
44094and if she did get there with no destination at all, but merely to skip about, would there be any Mrs. Brown left in a short time?)
44094and what is Nature herself but one long and organised system of deception?
44094has not our life anywhere been founded on reason and necessity, but only on arbitrary habit?
44094is he more harmful than the mild old gentleman in the wig who pronounces sentence upon him?
44094or do you mean_ feels_,_ appears_?
44094say, what is it?
44094some approximation towards an answer ought to be got by each person asking himself,"Why do I vary?"
34051Did not the Saviour receive gifts of the wise men?
34051Upon this the senses replied,''What assurance have you that your confidence in reason is not of the same nature as your confidence in us? 34051 Where,"they say,"is your God, who can not deliver you out of our hands?
34051And now, what was it that awakening Europe found to be the state of things in Italy?
34051And what is the conclusion at which he arrives?
34051As to the connexion of electrical science with the progress of civilization, what more needs to be said than to allude to the telegraph?
34051Because the pontiff Marcellinus offered incense to Jupiter, must, therefore, all bishops sacrifice?"
34051But how is this to be co- ordinated with the conclusion just mentioned?
34051But what has become of the time- honoured doctrine of the human destiny of the universe?
34051But what is the weight of all this when placed in opposition with the mass of evidence offered by inclined and fractured strata?
34051But when the works on jurisprudence by Tribonian, under Justinian, have been mentioned, what is there that remains?
34051But who has presented in his beautiful geometry or deduced from his simple principles any of the inequalities which he left untouched?
34051But, as respects his intellectual principle, how does the matter stand?
34051Can that be true which requires for its support the murder of a true man?
34051Can the reader of the preceding paragraphs here pause without demanding of himself the value of human testimony?
34051Can they say that his judgment is before that of God which our synod pronounced?
34051Could there be a more brilliant exhibition of their power, a brighter earnest of the future of material philosophy?
34051Did you ever see any one who had risen from the dead?"
34051Do not the fortunes and way of progress of the one follow the fortunes and way of progress of the other?
34051Do we not herein recognize the agent that determines animal distribution?
34051Does he not, indeed, every summer penetrate northward in Asia as far as the latitude of Berlin, and retire again as winter comes on?
34051Does not absolute knowledge actually imply procedure by preconceived and unvarying law?
34051Does not heat thus confine within a fixed boundary the spread of these plants?
34051Does the geologist ask of the architect his opinion whether there have ever been upliftings and down- sinkings of the earth?
34051He asked,"Is it likely that the sun shines upon nothing, and that the nightly watches of the stars are wasted on trackless seas and desert lands?"
34051He could not help himself, and how can he be expected to help others?
34051He says,"How do your enemies say that, in deposing Arnulphus, we should have waited for the judgment of the Roman bishop?
34051How did the Church deal with this Albigensian heresy?
34051How shall we separate the history of the individual from the history of the whole?
34051How was it possible to conceive that beds many hundred feet in thickness should have been precipitated suddenly from water?
34051If from the construction of the human brain we may demonstrate the existence of a soul, is not that a gain?
34051If he did, would not every structure in Europe be brought forward as an evidence that nothing of the kind had ever occurred?
34051If the magnitude of the earth be too great for us to attach to it any definite conception, what shall we say of the compass of the solar system?
34051In such a state of things, what could be more unwise than to attempt to force opinion by the exercise of authority?
34051In those ages when there was not a man upon the earth, what was the object?
34051In vain the Inquisition exerted all its terrors-- and what could be more terrible than its form of procedure?
34051Is it at all surprising that, guided by such obvious thoughts and simple reasonings, he becomes superstitious?
34051Is it for nothing that Spain has been made a hideous skeleton among living nations, a warning spectacle to the world?
34051Is it not natural for us to attribute the evil we see in the world to these as the good to those?
34051Is not momentary intervention altogether derogatory to the thorough and absolute sovereignty of God?
34051May we not also, from our solar system, rise to a similar conception for the universe?
34051Moestlin expresses correctly the state of the case when he says,"What is the earth and the ambient air with respect to the immensity of space?
34051Now, when we look at the successive phases of individual life, what is it that we find to be their chief characteristic?
34051Open to such influences himself, why should he not believe in the efficacy of prayer?
34051Shall we compare it with the contemporaneous monk miracles and monkish philosophy of Europe?
34051Was it extraordinary that there should be a loss of papal prestige?
34051Was it to be wondered at that even still more dreadful heresies spontaneously suggested themselves?
34051Were human laws to take the precedence of the law of God?
34051Were the Jew and the Mohammedan to be permitted their infamous rites?
34051Were the clergy to be degraded to a level with the laity?
34051What am I?
34051What assurance have you that all you feel and know when you are awake does actually exist?
34051What could better instruct it than a formal congregating of neighbourhoods together each Sabbath- day to listen in silence and without questioning?
34051What is it that has been standing on the sun, and marking out the orbits and boundaries of the solar system?
34051What is it that has given to her her wonderful longevity?
34051What is it that has thus been measuring the terrestrial world, and weighing it in a balance?
34051What is it that would inevitably ensue if these exotics were exposed to a cold winter?
34051What is the use of addressing prayers to them?"
34051What more, indeed, could Paradise give them?
34051What must take place if, in Florida or other of the Southern states, a season of unusual rigor should occur?
34051What other explanation can we give of tempests in the sea or lightning in the heavens?
34051What other interpretation of layers of lava in succession, one under another, and often with old disintegrated material between?
34051What sort of a science would optics have been among men who had purposely put out their own eyes?
34051What was it that produced this barrenness, this intellectual degradation in Constantinople?
34051What would have been the progress of astronomy among those who disdained to look at the heavens?
34051What, then, is the conclusion inculcated by these doctrines as regards the social progress of great communities?
34051What, then, is the manner of origin of this infinite succession of forms?
34051What, then, is there possessed in common by the Chinese, the Hindoo, the Egyptian, the European, the American?
34051When they ask, Has any one ever witnessed such an event as the transmutation of one species into another?
34051Whence do they issue and whither do they go?
34051Whence results the confidence I have in sensible things?
34051Where am I?
34051Where is your God?
34051Where was the use of so much that was beautiful and orderly, when there was not a solitary intellectual being to understand and enjoy?
34051Who is there now that pays fees to a relic or goes to a saint- shrine to be cured?
34051Who will dispute with that illustrious people the palm of music and painting, of statuary and architecture?
34051Why does the tiger restrict himself to the jungles of India?
34051Why does the white bear enjoy the leaden sky of the pole and his native iceberg?
34051Why is it that the orange and lemon do not grow in New York?
34051Why need I speak of science alone?
34051Why should they have thought it expedient to suppress the Koran when it was printed in Venice, 1530?
34051Why should we cast aside the solid facts presented to us by material objects?
34051Why was it that Galileo was dealt with so considerately and yet so malignantly?
34051With a prophetic inspiration of the accusations of the Reformation, he asks,"Is he not Anti- Christ?"
34051Without a newspaper, what would be the worth of the most eloquent parliamentary attempts?
34051Yet what do we, who are living nearly a century after that time, find the event to be?
34051do not the apostles, John, Peter, nay, even the blessed Virgin, stand yet in the presence of God?"
34051has any experimenter ever accomplished it by artificial means?
34051produce the most brilliant of all artificial lights, rivalling if not excelling, in its intolerable splendour the noontide sun?
34051that he sees in every shadow a spirit, and peoples every solitary place with invisibles?
34051what was the state of morals in Italy?
34051what when he reads of the attempts of Abderrahman Sufi at improving the photometry of the stars?
34051would lead to the deflagration and dissipation in a vapour of metals that could hardly be melted in a furnace?
34051would occasion a complete revolution in chemistry, compelling that science to accept new ideas, and even a new nomenclature?
34051would show that the solid earth we tread upon is an oxide?
34051yield new metals light enough to swim upon water, and even seem to set it on fire?
27347Am I not clean?
27347Am I not healthy? 27347 And that is contrary to the system?"
27347And that one thing?
27347Are you getting your share of applications? 27347 At least,"he said,"you do not pretend that this is religion?"
27347But how can they govern what they ca n''t even see?
27347But why should the proper thing be done?
27347But your friend?
27347Can the souls of men be reincarnated as animals?
27347How about these beautiful spring days for hustling? 27347 Meaning by Culture?"
27347No,said my friend,"but do n''t you wish they were?"
27347One does not expect--why not?
27347Rocks that are bones, earth that is flesh, what, what do you mean Eyeing me silently? 27347 So many times the question is asked,''Why is it, and how is it, that Mr. So- and- so writes so much business?
27347The system?
27347Then what is this that looks like Life?
27347What_ do_ you want? 27347 Who can say?"
27347Why do you do it?
27347Why worry us?
27347_ Instead of being ashamed of his calling, he should be mortally ashamed of his not calling._Are you happy in your work?
27347_ Master._ But, my dear sir, why should you call it an earthen image? 27347 ANTÆUS 211 CONCLUDING ESSAY 218 PART I INDIA I IN THE RED SEABut why do you do it?"
27347Am I not athletic and efficient?"
27347And China does not change?
27347And after burial?
27347And in all this, is there no room for God?
27347And is not the following exactly parallel to a denunciation, from the mission- pulpit, of the unprofitable servant?
27347And should we ever have been presented with that new shibboleth"unassimilable"?
27347And the Jade Emperor-- is he a mere idol?
27347And the music?
27347And the other?
27347And what sense would there be if duty were nonsense?
27347And, if you do n''t, what becomes of your reputation?"
27347And--"would you believe it?"
27347Are there any opposites that exclude one another?
27347Are these people idolaters, these dignified old men, these serious youths, these earnest, grave musicians?
27347Are you?"
27347As we waited for the tram, someone said,"Would you like to see Kali?"
27347Because of the position of women?
27347But China?
27347But can you imagine a rural council in England breaking into this personal note?
27347But if education is to mean the substitution of the gramophone and music- hall songs for this traditional art, these native hymns?
27347But there was-- has the reader ever heard the second-- or is it the third?--overture to"Leonora"?
27347But they may say, some of them, as the Indian will certainly say,"Is that all?
27347But where is our sacred mountain?
27347But will their civilisation be of a kind to invite such reflection?
27347But, really, does anyone-- does any man of business-- think it a better education than Greek?
27347Can the ice be changed into red coal in your hearts?
27347Can we not save him?
27347Come along!--Success?
27347Could I have a bathing costume?
27347Did a host move out to meet the foe?
27347Did a wounded hero fall?
27347Did he see a warrior fall?
27347Did not we discover them?
27347Did not we squat upon them?
27347Divine somehow in its potentialities?
27347Divine to a deeper vision than mine?
27347Do I love God?
27347Do n''t you see?
27347Do you hear it?
27347Do you see it?
27347Drama was it?
27347Faster and faster, louder and louder, more and more intensely, crying and flaming towards-- what?
27347For good or for evil?
27347Forget what?
27347Had the writer, I wonder, ever been in Japan?
27347Had there been anyone?
27347Have I myself known God?
27347Have we not''mixed our labour with them''?"
27347Have you no place for the Eternal and the Infinite?"
27347Have you not observed?
27347He regrets to have missed my visit; will I not return and let him show me the school?
27347He thinks to himself,''Is it possible that the thought of God can make a man forget the world?
27347How can I describe it?
27347How long will it last?
27347How real is it, even now?
27347I reached the hotel; I bowed and smiled to the group of kow- towing girls; but how to tell them that I wanted a bathe and a meal?
27347I wonder?
27347III ULSTER IN INDIA"Are you a Home Ruler?"
27347If detected, will it be prosecuted?
27347If it is illegal, will it be detected?
27347If some other agent is up early, wide- awake and alert, putting in from ten to fifteen hours per day, he is bound to do business, is n''t he?
27347If the Japanese had had white skins, should we ever have heard of the economic argument?
27347In this respect what nation can compete with them?
27347Interesting, is it not?
27347Is East East?
27347Is West West?
27347Is he Buddhist or Taoist?
27347Is he right?
27347Is it Gounod''s"Faust"or an Anglican hymn?
27347Is it courage?
27347Is it family life?
27347Is it honesty?
27347Is it industry?
27347Is it sexual purity?
27347Is not that delightful?
27347Is patriotism the standard?
27347Is there also an East?
27347Is there going to be a melody?"
27347Might not this almost as well have been an address from the headquarters of the Salvation Army?
27347Money?
27347On that point, what Western nation can hold up its head?
27347On the contrary, I was pressed, urged, implored almost with tears in the eye-- to reform them?
27347Once more, what_ do_ the foreigners want?
27347Once more, what_ does_ he want?
27347Or am I wrong?
27347Or opera?
27347Or the wholesale massacre, robbery, and devastation which followed when the siege was relieved?
27347Or what?
27347Or_ is_ it divine?
27347Really, sir, what are we to think?"
27347Sacred to what god?
27347Streams that are voices, what, what do you say?
27347The men were dead, then, too?
27347The one or two children who died in the Legation, and the one or two men who were killed?
27347The question is a large one; but, summarily, where do the Japanese fail, as compared with the Western nations?
27347The real question is, will it pay?
27347This is the shop!--Health?
27347To what result?
27347To what, in fact, are most people on this continent turning theirs?
27347WHY IS IT?
27347Was battle engaged?
27347Was it Homer or Shelley that grasped Reality?
27347Was there a real voice?
27347Was there nothing else?
27347Was this India or Athens?
27347What English agricultural labourer would do as much?
27347What are our resources for evading or defeating the law?
27347What business have I to go about preaching to others?
27347What do they do with it when they get there?"
27347What has happened to religion?
27347What is it?
27347What is the sun?"
27347What is this?
27347What is this?
27347What is this?
27347What manner of man, then, was this Sri Ramakrishna?
27347What matters the form of the struggle, whether it be in arms or commerce, whether the victory go to the sword, or to shoddy, advertisement, and fraud?
27347What messages were they, I wondered, that were passing across the mountains?
27347What now is Sri Ramakrishna''s view of this matter?
27347What of it?
27347What of the honesty of the West?
27347What people are braver?
27347What really makes this difference?
27347What then?
27347What?
27347What_ do_ foreigners want?
27347When men worship the mountain, do they worship a rock, or the spirit of the place, or the spirit that has no place?
27347Where could I change?
27347Where, in all the country, that charming mythology which once in Greece and Italy, as now in China, was the outward expression of the love of nature?
27347Where, outside the East, is found such solidarity as in Japan?
27347Who is more industrious?
27347Why did it spring?
27347Why is it then, that She has bound us hand and foot with the chains of the world?
27347Why then should I reason?
27347Why, in this respect, is America, as undoubtedly she is, so sterile?
27347Why?
27347will it please Theophilus P. Polk or vex Harriman Q. Kunz?
45859''And Dolores?"
45859''And if I turn back to- night, I shall find him of whom you speak in my cottage?"
45859''Are you sure-- certain sure?"
45859''Can you?'' 45859 ''Did n''t I tell á su mercé[ 66] that she was a jewel?''
45859''Oh, aunt, what shall we do? 45859 ''Sweet child, you are right, and I was hasty,''answered the bridegroom;''but how did you come to know them?''
45859''Then why did n''t you say that I could spin, and scour, and dig?'' 45859 ''Well, I mean-- I mean, only that she is a little-- a little-- what shall I say?--a little homely for your wife----''"''Homely, is it?
45859''Why did you tell the gentleman I knew how to make lace, when I do n''t, aunt?'' 45859 A-- a-- funeral service?
45859Abate something for charity? 45859 Agreed,"said the demon, for cards being invented by his crew, he thought himself safe to win;"but how shall we manage about the stakes?
45859And all these wheat crops that they are just garnering in, vaquerita; tell me in truth, whose are they?
45859And now,she continued,"did I not tell you that time would reveal to you all about my history?
45859And pray, sir, why should I not find Don Leonardo and Don Gaspar Contreras in their noble palacio at Valencia?
45859And pray,replied his father,"how did your honourable friend discover what was in my strong- box?
45859And the parral and the cottage, what of them?
45859And who are you?
45859And whose are all those sheep, vaquerita, all with their little lambs gathered round them so tenderly?
45859And whose are those horses, vaquerita, which I hear neighing in the stall?
45859And whose is that fair dame, vaquerita, who stands so near that knight?
45859And whose these gardens and this royal- seeming palace, vaquerita? 45859 And why do you come hither?"
45859At what price do ye put it, friend?
45859Attached? 45859 But how am I to know yours is any better?"
45859But we have come out to fetch it, and how shall we return to the king without it?
45859But what am I to do?
45859But why all this haste? 45859 But why all this sudden grief now?"
45859But why this sudden haste, brother?
45859But, father, will not the good be known by their good deeds and maxims, and the bad by their evil lives and counsels?
45859Do you give up following me any farther?
45859Do you know this ear?
45859Father dear, do not all the wise people live in great cities? 45859 How can we ever get into a place like this?"
45859If you were so clever at smelling the sprat, How came it you could n''t, too, smell out the brat?
45859Is it possible,he said,"that this man has been deluding all the people into the idea that what he sings is like my songs?
45859My sisters-- eh? 45859 Oh, do n''t you like it, Ana?
45859Tell me, Conde,said the wife of Conde Sol,"how many years will you be absent in this campaign?"
45859Tell me, Don Villano[ 101],she cried, as she came near him,"what wondrous kind of stuff, is that you are weaving?
45859Tell me, I pray you, vaquerita[ 4], and tell me now in truth, whose are the kine grazing in these pastures?
45859Then the neighbours were not in time to part the men after all?
45859What ails thee, daughter dear? 45859 What ails thee?
45859What does that signify, if my hearing reaches as far?
45859What does this trifling mean?
45859What is the matter, Blanca?
45859What say you to staking my soul, which is on its way to glory, against this escribano''s soul, of which at best you are only three parts sure?
45859What''s the matter, Andres, my boy?
45859Where are you going to- night, so finely arrayed?
45859Why do you remind me of them? 45859 Will you come away with me?
45859Wo n''t they be pleased to see me? 45859 Yes, you I know,"replied St. Peter;"but you do n''t come alone-- who is that black soul with you?"
45859You speak of Don Pablo, of course?
45859''You do n''t mean you do n''t like him?
45859And Alfonso the Fifth, what became of him?
45859And how can I prevent his going on keeping them under this error?"
45859But Cayocupil, shaking his heavy spear, cleared a free space around him, and roared,"Who will dispute my right to be first?
45859But a daughter''s love-- what can compare with it?"
45859But pray tell me, what can have happened to bring this about?
45859But when the appointed day came, what was his astonishment to find only Diego in his place?
45859But who would marry a poor penniless orphan- girl, who can do nothing?
45859Did n''t your strength fail first, and then your hair, and then your teeth, and then your limbs; have n''t they all been crumbling away?"
45859Does n''t''Where one can dine, two can dine,''hold good here also?"
45859Had he preferred his own love for her to his father''s honour, would she have smiled on him then?
45859Had his arms grown so stiff they could not move?
45859Have I not a right to avenge the blood of Don Pedro Valenzuela?"
45859Have they done more than I?"
45859How was Juanillo himself to fight the battle for them without an army?
45859I suppose?''
45859Is it a heavenly or an earthly texture?"
45859John cried after her--"your worship wo n''t visit me again for a long time to come, eh?"
45859Might it not be Blanca coming out for a walk?
45859My son, my dear son, what can I do for you?"
45859Of what use would life be to me if Xiména will not be mine?
45859Oh, why was n''t I by to assist him in his last moments?"
45859Or was the earth so hard he could not break it?
45859See-- will you spend it so?"
45859Señores de Contreras, again I ask, Do you know me?"
45859So tell me now, what is it I have to do to set you free?"
45859So the knight asked,"Then who are you?"
45859So the knight said,"What are you listening for?"
45859The envoys came back to Spain in no very cheerful mood; for they said,"How shall we find this man?"
45859The youth who stood nearest me made answer,''Did you not observe, Señora, how the brave Mareguano has won the victory over every other combatant?
45859Their life is sad enough, shall we not try to make them glad for once, on our own happy day?''
45859Then the knight said,"Will you come along with me and seek fortune?"
45859Then the knight said,"Will you come out with me to seek fortune?"
45859Then the knight said,"Will you come out with me to seek fortune?"
45859Then the knight said,"Will you come out with me to seek fortune?"
45859Then, after blessing solemnly, both her and her betrothed, he exclaimed,"Did I not choose rightly from among the three gifts?"
45859They will be no ornament to it, I know; but still, will you let them come?''
45859What could he have seen to turn his flushed cheeks so deadly pale?
45859What does it say about this ruined cottage?"
45859What flower, with carnations, I pray[ 36]?
45859What maid can compete with my Anna?
45859What must I do to find Floreta?
45859What say you, are you content to marry me now?"
45859What shall we do?''
45859What was that?
45859What were now to become of all the hopes of his young life?
45859When he finds I can do none of the things he has fancied I am so clever at, what will he think of me?
45859When the Count came by, he bent down over his saddle- bow, and gave her an alms, and asked her,--"Good stranger woman, whence are you?"
45859When the woodman arrived at the gate of Paradise, accompanied by the soul of the escribano, St. Peter called out,"Who goes there?"
45859Where art thou mourning over my grief, as I mourn over thine?"
45859Who are you?"
45859Who could be proof against so much constancy?
45859Why are thy eyes ever filled with tears?"
45859Why do you seek to take it?"
45859Why should he come back to do what he might just as well have done at once?
45859Will he ever respect me again?''
45859With what face can I meet him?
45859Would she not have spurned him with contempt?
45859You are not such a goose as to think I go and come because they hiss me or call me, are you?
45859You see you''ve had to leave your pocket behind you, so how will you pay me?"
45859and how could they transfer the command of the army to him without betraying all?
45859and who are you?"
45859and who are you?"
45859answered Death,"is n''t your body your house-- and has n''t that been crumbling to pieces?
45859answered Mrs. Death;"you do n''t suppose any of this is necessary?
45859but, Juanita, what do you hang back for?"
45859exclaimed the bridegroom, as they made their approach,''how on earth did these three scarecrows get in?
45859exclaimed the provoked beggar;"why did n''t you take better care where you led me?"
45859fellow, what do you do there?"
45859fellow, what do you there?
45859fellow, what do you there?
45859he cried, choking with fury,"what have you brought to mock me?
45859he exclaimed,"where is your patience?"
45859is it too late?"
45859rejoined Don Pablo;"how can that possibly be?"
45859repeated poor Juanita, mechanically;"what would be the use of that?"
45859she said, as soon as they had advanced within hearing,"know ye, who I am?"
45859she said, at last,"tell me, I pray, the tissue you are weaving, who taught you to weave it?"
45859shouted the baffled knight,"and what is this beautiful princess to you?"
45859they cried, as he came near:"whence ride ye, so fast and so early?"
45859warily ejaculated the first voice;"who knows who may overhear you?"
45859what can you mean?"
45859what ever is the matter with you?''
45859what is all this,"fell in the old man,"about hair and the Corregidora, and Juanita the-- the Bald!--eh?"
45859what''s this?"
45859where art thou?
45859while I have gold enough to last for ever?
45859you will perhaps exclaim;"what have Saints got to do with drunkards?"
23449Ah, certainement,he said,"monsieur desires a fantasy, une fantaisie, is it not?"
23449Ah, monsieur, three days?
23449Allemand?
23449And he is gone?
23449And now tell me-- for remember that the reputation of our magazine is at stake-- does this story make a decided impression on you? 23449 And there is, I trust, nothing of what one would call a humorous nature in it?
23449And where''s Pete?
23449And you find it all right-- punctuation good, spelling all correct?
23449And you,he says,"you will think of me sometimes in Balla Walla?"
23449And you? 23449 And you?
23449Any one else?
23449Been out of town?
23449But this woman-- can you not deal with her-- persuade her-- beg her for my sake-- bribe her to leave my boy?
23449Can you get him heah?
23449Did he know him?
23449Do you ever go back to the old place?
23449Do you remember, Jack, when first you came, in Italy, that night, at Amalfi, when we sat on the piazza of the palazzo?
23449Do you see that big stretch of empty ground out there past that last fence?
23449Does Mr. Harding know?
23449Does she know?
23449Fine,I said,"but surely my eyebrows are not like that?"
23449Going away?
23449Going?
23449Has any one been here?
23449Has her ladyship come home?
23449Have you ever taken gas from a dentist?
23449Have you ever taken gas?
23449Here in London?
23449How did she find you?
23449Is he a gentleman or a contributor?
23449Is he here?
23449Is it me?
23449Is this Mr. Harding''s apartment?
23449Is this a fantaisie?
23449Is-- any one-- here?
23449Is_ that_ a fantaisie?
23449Jones,I said,"can you read?"
23449Know what?
23449Madame will not await monsieur? 23449 Madame will not eat?"
23449Madame will not first eat, nor drink-- no? 23449 Madame will not first rest?"
23449Massage?
23449Monsieur Arrding?
23449My darling, what is it?
23449Nor the battle pictures?
23449Nor the fountains in the gardens?
23449Now, sir,says the guide briskly to the gentleman who has engaged his services,"where would you like to go?"
23449Now,I said,"when will this''complete''be ready?"
23449Of her?
23449Oh, you do n''t, do n''t you?
23449Shampoo the scalp?
23449She has never written you?
23449Singe the hair?
23449That was long ago, was n''t it?
23449That you-- knew his mother?
23449This?
23449To Kafoonistan?
23449Tuesday?
23449Was she married then?
23449Well, Jones,I said as he entered,"have you read that manuscript?"
23449Well,I said,"how long do you want?"
23449What about the mouth?
23449What does it mean, Jack, tell me what does it mean?
23449What have you done? 23449 What is it?"
23449What razor do you use?
23449What,I said,"do you mean to say that I could have had all that beautiful grass and those mullin stalks for fifty thousand dollars?"
23449What?
23449When are you going to do it?
23449When?
23449Where is she? 23449 Who''s been doing your work?"
23449Why?
23449Yes?
23449Yes?
23449Yes?
23449You are going alone?
23449You have news, I know,says Mrs. Harding,"you have seen him?"
23449You have seen her since?
23449You knew Mr. Harding''s mother very well?
23449You mean that when I was a student at college, feeding on four dollars a week, this opportunity was knocking at the door and I missed it?
23449( Did you hear that?
23449A bath, monsieur?
23449A pass- word is given--"Stranger, who cometh here?"
23449After looking through the house the visitor says in a furtive way,"I was just wondering if I could get a drink anywhere in this part of the town?"
23449After they have looked at it the guide says,"What would you like to see next, sir?"
23449All day from the dewy hour of breakfast till late at night they meet you in the street and sidle up with the enquiry,"Guide, sir?"
23449And he answers:"Yes, sir, roast pork, sir, and a little bacon on the side?"
23449And if so, how much?
23449And why had I lost it?
23449But enough of this weakness,--will you take ten cents?"
23449But why not speak it right away?"
23449Ca n''t you understand?
23449Can you beat it?
23449Can you get a guide?
23449Can you imagine any more agreeable way of earning five dollars in three hours than that?
23449Can you keep away from them?
23449Do n''t you see that she is dressed in deeper black than ever, and do you notice that look on her face-- that third- act air-- that resignation?
23449Do n''t you see that the play is really all over?
23449Do you ever hear anything of Billy now?"
23449Do you see this patent motor- car with pneumatic cushions, and the full- page description of its properties?
23449Do you take me for a dragon- fly, or what?
23449Do you think we''ve nothing better to do than to print your idiotic ravings?
23449Does Mrs. Harding start to talk about Lady Cicely and Jack, and Paris?
23449Have you any idea, you idiot, of the expense we''re put to in setting up our fifty pages of illustrated advertising?
23449He keeps muttering,"What can I do?"
23449He says for example--"I remember a rather queer thing that happened to me in a train one day----"And if you say--"When was that Juggins?"
23449He says,"Did you ring, Sir John?"
23449How on earth would he get home?
23449I asked;"right away?"
23449I knew that they were Hungarians the night I saw them, because I distinctly heard one of them say,"what t''ell do we play next boys?"
23449I said bitingly,--"features, eh?
23449I said with a bitterness that was lost on the photographer;"is that mine?"
23449I said,"where''s Billy?
23449I want a suit, un soot, un complete, complet, comprenez- vous, veston, gilet, une pair de panteloon-- everything-- do you get it?"
23449I want you to answer me quite frankly, Jones,--there is nothing in it that would raise a smile, or even a laugh, is there?"
23449Is n''t that simple?
23449Kind?
23449Lady Cicely speaks, very quietly,"Are you taking Mr. Harding with you?"
23449Lady Cicely, more quietly,"Jack, tell me, did my-- did Sir John Trevor ever talk to you about your father?"
23449MY DARLING BOY: I have found you at last-- why have you sought to avoid me?
23449Madame will not sleep?"
23449Mr. Harding, aghast,"Tell her?"
23449My own opinion is that before he goes to bed he takes whiskey: why call it Thucydides?
23449Now what is all this about?
23449Oh, that was it, was it?
23449Or suppose you stop a man on the street and you say to him:"Musshoo, s''il vous plait, which is la direction pour aller à le Palais Royal?"
23449Presently Mrs. Harding says:"You will think of me sometimes?"
23449Say, porter,"he called out into the alleyway,"how long do we stop here?"
23449Sir John says to Lady Cicely,"Shall I ring for tea?"
23449Sir John( dazed and trying to collect himself),"What?"
23449That was it, was it?
23449Then Lady Cicely says to Sir John,"You are going out?"
23449Then presently----"Tea?"
23449They come out splendidly, do n''t they?"
23449True to my usual principle of ignoring the French language, I said to the head man:"You speak English?"
23449Was it money?
23449What better end could you want?
23449What can I do?"
23449What does she do?
23449What had I lost?
23449What has this to do with the play?
23449What is happening?
23449What right had you to her, you devil?
23449What right have you to deny it me?
23449What sort of a place do you think this is?"
23449What was the use?
23449What''s your business?"
23449Where else could he go to?
23449Why did n''t my father buy them for me, as pets, for my birthday and let me keep them till I grew up?
23449Why go all the way downtown for such a mere nothing?
23449Why had I never happened to walk out this way with fifty thousand dollars in my pocket and buy all this beautiful mud?
23449Why have you driven her away?
23449Why, do n''t you see that it is the symbol of philanthropy, of gentleness, of melancholy sadness?
23449Would you believe it?
23449You did n''t think I could animate them, I suppose?
23449You will settle down here in London?"
23449You will take up your work here again?"
23449[ Illustration:"Is it me?"]
23449_ V.--Under the Barber''s Knife_"WAS you to the Arena the other night?"
23449he said, shaking hands vigorously,"who would have thought of seeing you?"
23449said the man from Kansas, looking up from his asparagus,"do you mean to say that you have never seen the Palace of Versailles?"
23449says Mrs. Harding,"shall I ring?"
23449speak that?"
28546''How,''it was said,''did the King wish to raise taxes that had never been voted?
28546''I nourish,''she exclaims,''the viper that poisons me;--to save her they would have taken my life: am I to offer myself as a prey to every villain?
28546''Quid putas-- per talia machinamenta quaeri?
28546And besides, was not the Pope able to do away with the obligation of which he disapproved?
28546And could the policy of James ever have prevailed?
28546And how could Somerset''s plans and enterprises fail to meet with resistance in England itself?
28546And how if the Queen of Scots, when recognised as heir to England, afterwards gave her hand to a Catholic prince hostile to Elizabeth?
28546And how would it be, if a son sprung from the marriage, to inherit both the French and the English throne?
28546And must not satisfaction be given to the Association which was pledged to pursue a new attempt against the Queen''s life even to death?
28546And that too at a moment when the opposition of factions was constantly becoming more active?
28546And was she not a Queen, raised above the law?
28546And yet how can we help recognising manifold coincidences with that conflict of opinions and tendencies in which we are involved at the present day?
28546But had she not herself uttered the decisive word?
28546But how could such comprehensive concessions be expected from the proud Queen?
28546But how then if the same fate befell him?
28546But in all this did King James fall in with the spirit of the English constitution?
28546But must not some means be also thought of, to prevent similar acts of violence for the future?
28546But now how if this were dissolved?
28546But on the other side, was he to return without fulfilling his purpose, and to burden himself with the reproach of not having told the truth?
28546But on whose side would Spain then be found?
28546But to whom could they apply for it if not to their neighbour, just now rising in power, Elizabeth Queen of England?
28546But was it possible for the Roman court to yield in this and to revoke a dispensation, which involved the very substance of its spiritual omnipotence?
28546But was not this a proof of his irresistible authority?
28546But was the man a traitor, who had recommended a policy to which they had been forced to have recourse after such repeated efforts?
28546But were they quietly to acquiesce in their fate?
28546But what a contradiction was involved in the ascendancy which these ideas obtained?
28546But what means did he possess of bestowing help either on the former or on the latter?
28546But what was his decision to be?
28546But what would then have become of the grant of money, which was every day more urgently needed?
28546But where were they to effect a junction with each other and with the Spaniards?
28546But who could advise her to begin her government with a civil war?
28546But would he ever have proceeded to action?
28546But would he, a boy of eleven, be able to take the helm of the proud ship?
28546But, it may be said, was not the Queen in collusion with him?
28546Can the date be right?
28546Could it be the mission of the English to help in consolidating it in his hands?
28546Could men feel astonished that the Danish war was not carried on with the energy which the cause seemed to demand?
28546Could she fail to remark the agitation as to her successor, which occupied all men''s minds, while the reins were slipping from her hands?
28546Did he not know, she asked, that the religion of the rebels was only a cloak for treason?
28546Did he not rather at this point intrude into it the sharpness of his Scottish prejudices?
28546Did he then really, as was imputed to him, try to gain a party among the clergy, and move the Pope to pronounce excommunication against the King?
28546Even among the dependents of the royal house many almost gave up the Prince as lost; for who, they said, could trust the word of the Spaniards?
28546For how could anything else be expected but that the judicial proceedings prepared several years before would now be put in force?
28546For how could he delude himself with the hope that a transitory alliance would prevail over a dynastic antipathy?
28546For how could they let the King of England share in Juana''s immense claims of inheritance?
28546For what could follow from it but open war between the King of England and the Emperor?
28546For why should he be refused what had been secured to his predecessors during a century and a half?
28546Had he deserved his fate at her hands?
28546Had the Pope the right to dispense with the laws of Scripture or had he not?
28546How could her counsellors, who always preferred direct negociation with Spain, have accepted them?
28546How could men have helped thinking that King James would resolutely take the inheritance of his grandsons under his protection?
28546How could the rise of popular elements fail to call forth a kindred effort also among the lower classes?
28546How could they ever become fused into one nation if the one was always plotting the destruction of the other?
28546How could they fail, with some effort, in occupying the Isthmus of Panama?
28546How could they make laws who were themselves beyond the pale of law?
28546How should one power really seek the permanent advantage of another?
28546How were they to accept its resolutions?
28546If he accepted the petition of the Commons, did he surrender for ever the right of ordering imprisonment without assigning a cause?
28546It may be that her grief was lightened by a secret satisfaction: who would absolutely deny it?
28546It was reported that Innocent IV was heard to say,''Is not the King of England my vassal, my servant?
28546Might he not annul unjust sentences of excommunication?
28546Might not the King, as a religious and pious magistrate, have the power of summoning General Assemblies?
28546On the contrary he had additional revenues from Scotland; for what reason did he require extraordinary subsidies?
28546Or could any one, they asked, grant what he did not possess?
28546So it stands written in her letters: it is undeniable: but was that really her last and well- considered word?
28546The Queen inquires for instance, What is friendship?
28546The answer of the Spaniards was evasive: how could it have been otherwise?
28546They argued that their government did not allow this even to all its own subjects; how then could foreigners be admitted to a share in it?
28546This time too Elizabeth dismissed the hostile ambassador; but how could she flatter herself with having thus exorcised the threatening elements?
28546To the peaceful Provincials, if they could indeed gird on the sword, or to the old companions in arms of the Romans?
28546Was Elizabeth to join Mary in combating them?
28546Was he to accept the proposal of the Commons, and to content himself with a general reservation of his prerogative?
28546Was he to allow it to be again endangered by the ceaseless ebb and flow of popular opinion?
28546Was it from weakness and connivance, or was it from policy?
28546Was it not in its own nature already a failure?
28546Was it not to be expected that demands should call forth counter- demands?
28546Was it to be dropped in England alone?
28546Was not her legitimacy dependent on the invalidity of her father''s marriage with his brother''s widow?
28546Was not this altogether contrary to the form of government of the country?
28546Was there really any foundation for what men then said, that the King thought it better that his foe should be in the country rather than out of it?
28546Was what had been always held for heresy no longer to merit this name because it was avowed by the ruling powers?
28546Were the Catholic- Spanish tendencies of Elizabeth''s predecessor, Queen Mary Tudor, so completely reproduced in her?
28546Were the men equal to the emergency, or were not circumstances stronger than they?
28546Were they now to submit themselves to a King who like her was a schismatic?
28546Were they, like the laity, virtually to recognise him as their Head?
28546What could the Emperor do with an English minister who was not in a condition to support warlike enterprises properly?
28546What importance could be attached to such an insignificant sum in prospect of so tremendous an undertaking as a war against Spain?
28546What might have come of it, if a prince of this house should now obtain rule over a part of the island itself?
28546What was likely to happen if they opposed the forces which Ralegh landed to search for the gold mines which he had formerly seen there?
28546What was the reason of this?
28546What would happen if France lent her aid in such an enterprise?
28546What would there have been at all to fear at other times from a princess under strong custody and cut off from all the world?
28546When now the Roman rule over the island and the surrounding seas came to an end, to whom could it pass?
28546While preparing to attack the Emperor and the League did he intend to do anything more than make a demonstration against Spain?
28546Who could avoid seeing its decisive significance for the age?
28546Who could cleanse them from the stain that clove to them?
28546Who could have said, so long as things remained in the path thus once entered upon, whither this would lead?
28546Who does not know the sonnets and the love- intoxicated letters she is believed to have addressed to him?
28546Who does not, in reading this, feel himself in a sphere of wild romance?
28546Who will hold women of this character strictly to what stands in their letters?
28546Who would not have been sensible of this?
28546Who would not have felt himself distressed and threatened?
28546Who would take it on himself to attack her?
28546Why should it not be possible for something similar to happen in England also?
28546Would he trust men who had so often betrayed him?
28546Would not the Queen''s chapel, they asked, now serve to unite the Catholics of England; or would they be forbidden to hear mass there?
28546Would not the nobles, some from reverence for the supreme Pontiff''s authority, others from a sense of religious obligation, yield to this alliance?
28546Would that power pledge itself to fight to the end against every one, even against the Emperor, in behalf of the treaty when concluded?
28546[ 157] And if the affair had been undertaken in this manner, who could say that it might not have succeeded?
28546[ 192] How then if a defeat was sustained in the open field?
28546[ 430] And how was even as much as this to be obtained from the court of Vienna?
28546[ 478] His opponents thought that he was at the root of all previous misfortunes; and what might they not still expect from him?
28546[ 485] And who shall say that success would have been impossible?
28546[ 494] But must it not have been irritating to Parliament that the very men were promoted about whom it had complained?
28546was England to be ruled by a viceroy?
28546what could the English do with an ally who appropriated to himself exclusively the advantages of the victory they had won?
2577-Would you know the story, in brief, of almost all our wretchedness?
2577Are not all the advantages of society for the rich and for the powerful? 2577 As a friend and a citoyenne could any news be more agreeable to me than that of peace and the health of my dear little one?
2577I should like to know what troubled you most in getting accustomed to your new profession? 2577 Is France[4235] a mild and representative monarchy or a government of the Turkish stamp?
2577Was any one old in those days? 2577 What is the Third- Estate?"
2577What is the result of so much and such profound research? 2577 What is the result?
2577When a man has been admiring the noble feats in the fables what more is expected of him? 2577 Where is justice rendered?
2577Who are you?
2577Will Madame la Maréchale have the kindness to recall my definition?
2577Would you obtain an idea of public education? 2577 [ 2221] Where would be the pleasure if these people were reasonable?
2577[ 4226] When a maid appears and says to her mistress,Madame la Duchesse, the Host( le bon Dieu) is outside, will you allow him to enter?
2577[ 5309] How could things be otherwise? 2577 ''Tell me, now, who is the fortunate mortal enjoying this prerogative?'' 2577 ''What has all this in common with philosophy and the reign of reason?'' 2577 --And I have been philosophical?"
2577--"What injury have they done you?"
2577--''And when will all this happen?''
2577--''Are there not two beds there?''
2577--''But then we shall have been overcome by Turks or Tartars?''
2577--''Very well, did n''t they come together?
2577--''Well, these are miracles,''exclaims La Harpe,''and you leave me out?''
2577--Could there be a more just and delicate sentiment of rank, position, and circumstance, and could a duel be surrounded with more graces?
2577--Of what use are the fine arts?
2577--On hearing this name a fine- looking man advanced, bowing, and replied,"Madame?"
2577A governor delivers a course of lectures on economical bread- making.--What possible danger is there for shepherds of this kind amidst their flocks?
2577After paying homage to virtue is he not discharged from all that he owes to it?
2577And how can one foresee strife at the first turn of the road on which they have just fraternally entered hand in hand?
2577And how can the exquisite be reached if one grudges money?
2577And how could they picture to themselves the misery of this forlorn being?
2577And what is it after the introduction of the germ?
2577And what reader can abstain from a book containing all human knowledge summed up in piquant witticisms?
2577And, moreover, how prevent people who live on alms from demanding alms?
2577Are we still ruled by the corrupt oligarchs or have we reached the stage where the people has become used to be fed on the property of others?
2577Are we subject to the will of an absolute master, or are we governed by a limited and regulated power?.
2577Are you on familiar terms with him, and of the small private circle in which he freely unbends himself, with closed doors?
2577But how can we of to day imagine people for whom life was wholly operatic?
2577But how could he maintain himself in such destitution?
2577But is it really essential to draw this portrait, and are not the details of their mental condition we have just presented sufficient?
2577But they never see him; does it ever occur to them to fancy what it is like under the awkward and complimentary phrases of their agent?
2577By what special merit, through what recognized capacity are they to secure respect of a member of the Third- Estate?
2577Dare I confess it?
2577Do you feel your veins throbbing with inward fires at the sight of a charming creature?
2577Do you know who the philosophers are, or what the term means here?
2577Doing nothing for the soil, how could they do anything for men?
2577Finding one of the dishes to her taste she returned to it, and then, running her eye around the circle, she said"Monsieur de Lowenthal?"
2577For who has ever considered himself lacking in common sense?
2577He gets something to eat, but what kind of food?
2577How can ameliorations be looked for from those who even refuse to keep things up and make indispensable repairs?"
2577How can he withdraw himself from his guests and not do the honors of his house?
2577How can the nobles, who pass their lives in talking, refrain from the society of people who talk so well?
2577How could there be one?
2577How could they dispense with the fifth and the fifth of the fifth( du quint et du requint) when this is the only coin they obtain?
2577How could they do this living as they did?
2577How could they remit dues in grain and in wine when these constitute their bread and wine for the entire year?
2577How did Rousseau himself account for it?
2577How do they manage to live until the next crop?
2577How explain such a contrast?
2577Human culture, accordingly, is in itself bad, while the fruit it produces is merely excrescence or poison.--Of what use are the sciences?
2577I cried to myself, do all these wastes, moors, and deserts, that I have passed for 300 miles lead to this spectacle?.
2577INTRODUCTION Why should we fetch Taine''s work up from its dusty box in the basement of the national library?
2577If a man of position robs his creditors or commits other offenses is he not certain of impunity?
2577In short, what is the occupation of a well- qualified master of a house?
2577Is not the public authority wholly in their interest?
2577It is estimated that one- quarter of the working- days of the year go to the corvées, the laborers feeding themselves, and with what?.
2577It is obvious that should ask ourselves the question of where, in the political evolution we are now?
2577Marcel receives it and at once flings it on the floor:"Mademoiselle, did I teach you to offer an object in that manner?
2577May men nourish themselves on their fallen creatures?
2577Moreover, do they know what hunger is?
2577Must he practice it himself?
2577Of what avail are studies of ancient France?
2577Of what use are such persons if we must have such cares?
2577Of what use, in an unique and compact state, are those feudal compartments separating orders, corporations and provinces?
2577On witnessing such effusions how can one avoid believing in concord?
2577One can very well understand this kind of pleasure in a summary way, but how is it to be made apparent?
2577Ought not all land to pay taxes, and should one piece pay more than its net product?
2577Outside of fashionable elegance and a few points of breeding, in what respect they differ from him?
2577Should not each pay according to his ability?
2577The valet of the Marshal de Noaillles says to him one night on closing his curtains,"At what hour will Monseigneur be awakened?"
2577Their society is that in which, before fully admiring a great general, the question is asked,"is he amiable?"
2577Unemployed, bored, what could he now do on his domain, where he no longer reigns, and where dullness overpowers him?
2577What are their relations with the peasant?
2577What circle is that in which serious political problems and profound criticism are not admitted?
2577What constitutes the material and limits of taxation?
2577What could be more fascinating for the man of the Third- Estate?
2577What could they do for self- support, obliged, as they are, to pay over again after having already paid?
2577What could they have done with their graces, without their valets to supply the place of hands and feet?"
2577What does it demand?
2577What heart can refuse to cherish them, and what intelligence can foretell their innumerable applications?
2577What is contemporary France?
2577What is this egg?
2577What kind of a seignior is he who studies the price of things?
2577What makes bread dear?
2577What matter is it, so long as they perform their duties?
2577What more would they have him do?
2577What motive but that of self- interest could lead a man to perform a generous action?
2577What must it be in our wretched provinces in the interior of the kingdom?.
2577What must it have been then when it gushed forth alive and vibrant from the lips of Voltaire and Diderot?
2577What then are the beginnings I speak of and what is the first origin of political societies?
2577What would be done with them if they were arrested?
2577What, then, do we do?
2577What, thus far, is it in the political body?
2577What?
2577When the dessert comes on what is to prevent the gravest of subjects from being put into witticisms?
2577Where do they come from?
2577Where find resistance in characters formed by the habits we have just described?
2577Where, accordingly, would conversation be if people abstained from philosophy?
2577Who amongst them has had any rural experiences?
2577Who has brought them out of their obscure hiding places?.
2577Who marked it out for him, one might ask, and how do you come to be paid for labor which was never imposed on you?
2577Why are the latter so impoverished; and by what misfortune, on a soil as rich as that of France, do those lack bread who grow the grain?
2577Why are the poor alone subject to militia draft?
2577Why be astonished if we look upon the sovereign in the manner of the day, that is to say, as a lord of the manor enjoying of his hereditary property?
2577Why do the rich pay the least and the poor the most?
2577Why does it suffice to be the servant of a privileged person to escape this service?
2577Why does"the subdelegate cause only the defenseless and the unprotected to be drafted?"
2577Why is the laborer so miserable?
2577Why should the Third- Estate alone pay for roads on which the nobles and the clergy drive in their carriages?
2577Why, being needy should they not be exacting?
2577Would you rally them to the support of the government?
2577Would you see him happy and free?
2577[ 1443] The king is reproached for his parsimony; why should he be sparing of his purse?
2577[ 3340] Do they not absorb to themselves all lucrative positions?
2577[ Footnote 3336: Does it not read like a declaration of intent for forming a Kibbutz?
2577[ Footnote 4344: Sieyès,"Qu''est ce que le Tiers?"
14384''Are they all gone?'' 14384 ''Eathen?''
14384''How many people were there in your day?'' 14384 ''What, you an American citizen?''
14384''Where was she born?'' 14384 A man lives only a little while,_ hein_?
14384And Climber of Trees Who Was Killed and Eaten?
14384And the procession, was it successful?
14384And what will you do with that ten minutes?
14384And_ popoi_ and pigs?
14384Another god on the altar then?
14384Are they Marquesans?
14384Are we afraid of that ugly beast? 14384 Beaten to Death perished by the club?
14384Ben Santos,inquired the judge, with a critical glance at Daughter of the Pigeon,"What return did you make to this woman for keeping your house?"
14384But Beaten to Death--?
14384But Tufetu, the grandfather of my friend Mouth of God?
14384But if that stone broke your head, why did you not die?
14384But there are not many whites here?
14384But why two packs?
14384But with whom can I see that world?
14384Did you not lie in wait for those murderers?
14384Do we go near her home?
14384Do you have trouble over women in your island? 14384 Do you think the eating of men began by the_ ave one_, the famine?"
14384He will play ze bloff?
14384Honi?
14384How do they make that cloth?
14384How many men to a rope?
14384It is beautiful in your islands, is it not?
14384It is n''t bad,_ hein_?
14384It was she who rode the white horse, and bore the armor of Joan in the great parade?
14384Kahuiti, is it not good that the eating of men is stopped?
14384Of what are you thinking?
14384Of what good is that? 14384 Oo can say wot the blooming wind will do?"
14384Paul Gauguin lived here?
14384She some pumkin, eh? 14384 So it was all as you had planned?"
14384So the slaying of Beaten to Death was unavenged?
14384The pig men climb?
14384There were signs at the commemoration?
14384They had guns?
14384This man, whose name was Honi--"Honi?
14384Was Great Night Moth the real son of Male Package?
14384What I do?
14384What caused that war?
14384What do you do here all alone?
14384What does the_ Menike_ seek?
14384What for?
14384What if the good sisters heard me? 14384 What is the manner of their fishing?"
14384Where are you going?
14384Where do you go with the_ mei_?
14384Why, sure I do? 14384 Why?
14384Why?
14384Will you drink_ kava_?
14384Write to me when you are in Tahiti, and tell me if you think I would be happy there?
14384Yes?
14384You came by the_ Fatueki?_.
14384You do not doubt her miraculous intercession?
14384You have never seen a man fight the_ mako_? 14384 You knew Hemeury Francois when he was young?"
14384You know what that signifies? 14384 You mean Jones?"
14384You returned to that ship when the boat picked you up?
14384You_ Menike_ like him?
14384Your name?
14384_ I hea?_ Where do you go?
14384_ I hea?_ Where do you go?
14384_ Kisskisskissa? 14384 _ Namu?_ Have they rum?"
14384_ Namu?_ Have they rum?
14384_ Vraiment?_"_ Absolument_,answered Père Simeon.
14384''Born in my own state, and painted up like Sitting Bull on the warpath?
14384''Could there by chance be a woman living there named Manu?
14384Ai n''t that so, Gedge?"
14384Also, would Satan have been able to tempt Eve if God had not made the tree of knowledge_ tapu_?
14384Am I not here over thirty years, and have I met a man like Gauguin?
14384And all his twelve children by that Henriette?
14384And at length he rose and came down to the oven, saying,''What''s up?''
14384And strike-- where?
14384And the wicked?
14384And what, when the same shark had been killed and eaten by other Marquesans?
14384And would I tell her of the women of my people in the strange islands of the_ Memke?_ They were very far away, were they not, those islands?
14384And would I tell her of the women of my people in the strange islands of the_ Memke?_ They were very far away, were they not, those islands?
14384And you know that Polonaise, with the one eye- glass, that lives in Papeite, that Krajewsky?
14384And''ow about''ell?"
14384Are the girls of your valleys very lovely, and do they all sleep in golden beds?"
14384Are you ready for the ovens of our valley?''
14384As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go?
14384As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go?
14384As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go?
14384But if, as the priests said was most probable, Adam and Eve had received pardon and were in heaven, why had their guilt stained all mankind?
14384But who knows the human heart, or understands the soul?
14384But why was it forbidden for her son to live with Jeanette, being not married to her?
14384Ca n''t I live here an''be Your Dog again?''
14384Come and have a drink?"
14384Could he mean Rozinante, the steed to whom T''yonny had entrusted me, and who had so basely deserted his trust over a cliff?
14384Did God do that?
14384Did I bestride a metempsychosized man- eater, a revenant from the bloody days of Nuka- hiva?
14384Did I know this woman?
14384Did n''t I know her before you?
14384Did not Scallamera become a leper and die of it horribly?
14384Did they still fight in Bottle Meyers, and was his friend Tasset on the police force yet?
14384Do n''t you think it wise to segregate them?"
14384Do those grim warriors who survive the new régime ever relapse?
14384Do you know an officer of the_ Zelee_, with hair like a ripe banana?
14384Do you know why it is called rose- wood?
14384Do you not remember your sister?"
14384Do you want the_ mako_ to eat them?
14384Does not Socrates, in the dialogues of Plato, often speak of"going to the world below,"where he hopes to find real wisdom?
14384Does not that word_ hantu_, meaning in Malay an evil spirit, have some obscure connection with our American negro"hant,"a goblin or ghost?
14384Ducat, very pale, an inscrutable look on his face, his black eyes narrowed, said quietly,"Monsieur, do you mean that?"
14384Farther even than Tahiti?
14384Forty?
14384Had I not tasted the_ chicha_ beer of the Andes, and found it good?
14384Had he known matches in his youth?
14384He demanded brusquely,"What are you_ oui- oui_-ing for?"
14384He must go to Huapu with the chief, who was again at the door,"And did the fête help the parish?"
14384He was a regular-- what do you call''em?
14384How compare such names with John Smith or Henry Wilson?
14384How could I know the devil behind her eyes when she came wooing me again?
14384How could one explain his benign, open- souled deportment and his cheery laugh, with such damnable appetites and actions?
14384How deep beneath the sea could their women dive?
14384How do you know what God likes?
14384How is Teddy and Gotali?"
14384How long ago?
14384How many years--?
14384I was sure that, with her wealth, she would have many suitors,--but what of a tender heart?
14384If shocked further it opened its leaflets as if to say,"What''s the use?
14384In one house, under one roof?
14384Is cannibalism in the Marquesas a thing of the past?
14384Is that so?"
14384Is there no more rum?
14384It would be pleasant to be called"Blue Sky"or"Killer of Sharks,"but how about"Drowned in the Sea"or"Noise Inside"?
14384Kivi laughed, and dimly I heard his inquiry:"_ Veavea?_ Is it hot?"
14384Kivi laughed, and dimly I heard his inquiry:"_ Veavea?_ Is it hot?"
14384McHenry said,"Say, how''s your kanaka woman?"
14384Of the people that once were here?
14384Please, will you give me now the note to Ah You?"
14384Said the soldier to the sailor,''Will you give me a chew?''
14384Shall I tell you the tale of how he escaped death at the hands of his father?
14384She said,''Is there no pig?''
14384She was made different by her mother, by the prayers of Père Simeon, and by something strange in her_ kuhane_--what do you say?
14384Since when have Marquesan women said no to the command of the_ adminstrateur_?''
14384Suppose I give them rum?
14384Tari a rutu mai i hea?
14384The New York hotel in which her poor son lived?
14384The same as that of the girls in your own island, is it not?"
14384Then he said,''Where is the pig?''
14384Then how did it get into heaven?
14384Then, speaking English and very precisely, he asked,"Do you mean my wife?"
14384These dogs that go after things for you?
14384To Calvary?"
14384Was all that tender care of his whiskers to be wasted on scenery?
14384Was it cocoanut land?
14384Was it not good land?
14384Was not knowledge a good thing?
14384Was the Bella Union Theater still there in Frisco?
14384We must all be from the same valley, or at least from the same island, they thought, for were we not all Americans?
14384Were the women of that island, Chile, white?
14384Were these two peoples once one race, living on that long- sunken continent in which Darwin believed?
14384What am I saying?
14384What could a hotel be?
14384What could he mean?
14384What do I need from the great cities?"
14384What do you say?"
14384What does it matter?
14384What have I to do with a man I hate?''"
14384What is money compared to life?
14384What is that?"
14384What made the angels fall?
14384What motive had led the Maker and Knower of all things to do this deed?
14384What of matches before the French came?
14384What shall I do?
14384What was her name?
14384What will become of them, I wonder?"
14384What would God do in cases where sharks had eaten a Marquesan?
14384What would she do?
14384What''s this wife business?"
14384When I was goin''to bed he''d say,''McHenry, Your Dog is goin''now, but ca n''t Your Dog sleep here?''
14384Where had she gained these fashions and desires of the women of cities, of Europe?
14384Who can come from France and live here without money?
14384Who can say?
14384Who of us but dreads to pass a graveyard at night, though even to ourselves we deny the fear?
14384Why could not this idyllic, fierce, laughter- loving people have stayed savage and strong, wicked and clean?
14384Why does she not die?
14384Why should n''t I mean it?
14384Why would the_ mutoi_ take hold of her son, as he feared?
14384Why?"
14384Would I accompany her thither?
14384Would I not give her matches-- the packets of matches that were under the Golden Bed?
14384Would she be happy in Tahiti?
14384Would you like to meet my wife''s father- in- law, Kahuiti?
14384Wretched as I felt, I returned his glance, and said"_ Tiatohoa?_"which means,"Is that so?"
14384Wretched as I felt, I returned his glance, and said"_ Tiatohoa?_"which means,"Is that so?"
14384Yet why cavil at the vehicle by which one arrives at Nirvana?
14384You have seen there a stone foundation that supports the wild vanilla vines?
14384You know how he suffered?
14384You know how the drums speak?"
14384You know_ le droit du mari_?
14384You will not forget to deign to speak to the governor concerning the matter of the gun?"
14384_ Aoe?_ Then I will tell you."
14384_ E mea tiatohu hoi!_ Do you not know of the Piina of Fiti- nui?
14384_ Je ne sais pas._ Twenty years?
14384of the twelve- foot drums?
30610(_ a_) Where are they located?
30610(_ b_) How many children in school?
30610509{ 3}_ PART I_ CIVILIZATION AND PROGRESS HISTORY OF HUMAN SOCIETY CHAPTER I WHAT IS CIVILIZATION?
30610And in considering the nature of pure being they asked:"How many angels can dance at once on the point of a needle?"
30610Are great organizations of business necessary to progress?
30610Are people of civilized races happier now than are the uncivilized races?
30610Are the ideals and habits of thought of the people living along the Atlantic Coast different from those of the Middle West?
30610Are there evidences of groups without the beginning of social organization?
30610At least, as all races have had the same earth, why, if they are so equal in the beginning, would they not achieve?
30610Believing that war should be abolished, how may it be done?
30610Biology?
30610But how can these be obtained in{ 15} modern life without social progress?
30610But how could this philosophical speculation affect civilization?
30610But what did this civilization leave to the world?
30610But what of the gain to humanity?
30610But what would the American Indian have contributed to civilization?
30610Chemistry?
30610Civilization(?).
30610Could there be any greater miracle than evolving nature and developing life?
30610Did they use the right means to gain possession?
30610Do railroads create wealth?
30610Does increased knowledge alone insure an advanced civilization?
30610Does it lessen the dignity of creation if this is done according to law?
30610Does language always originate the same way in different localities?
30610Does language develop from a common centre or from many centres?
30610Does not the world need a baptism of common sense?
30610Does the character of the people in Central America depend more on climate than on race?
30610Does the introduction of machinery benefit the wage- earner?
30610Electricity?
30610For how could Jehovah favor Jews and also their enemies at the same time?
30610For what do men strive?
30610Give an outline of the chief characteristics of Egyptian civilization?
30610Had they no inventive power?
30610Has man individual traits, physical and mental, sufficiently strong to stand the strain of a highly complex social order?
30610He was asked:"What did they think?"
30610How can there be freedom of action for the development of the individual powers without social expansion?
30610How did feudal lords obtain titles to their land?
30610How did feudalism determine the character of monarchy in modern nations?
30610How did the Revival of Learning prepare the way for modern science?
30610How did the World War make opportunity for democracy?
30610How did the church conserve learning and at the same time suppress freedom of thought?
30610How did the crusades stimulate commerce?
30610How did the fall of Rome contribute to the power of the church?
30610How did their religion differ from the Christian religion in principle and in practice?
30610How did they differ from modern universities?
30610How do you discriminate between Christianity as a religious culture and the church as an institution?
30610How does rapid ocean- steamship transportation help the United States?
30610How does scientific knowledge tend to banish fear?
30610How does the use of electricity benefit industry?
30610How has the study of science changed the attitude of the mind toward life?
30610How is every- day life of the ordinary man affected by science?
30610How many Indians are there in the United States?
30610How may our ideals of democracy be put to effective practice?
30610How shall we determine what people shall do in group activity and what shall be left to private initiative?
30610How were the Greeks and Romans related racially?
30610How, then, could there be intellectual development based upon freedom of action?
30610If England should decline in wealth and commerce, would the United States be benefited thereby?
30610If so, in what respect?
30610If the Europeans made a better use of the territory than did the Indians, had the Europeans the right to dispossess them?
30610In what other ways than those named in this chapter may we estimate the progress of man?
30610In what ways did the suffering caused by the Great War indicate an increase in world ethics?
30610In what ways do you think man is better off than he was one hundred years ago?
30610In what ways does the use of land determine the character of social order?
30610In what ways has science contributed to the growth of democracy?
30610In what ways may social inequality be diminished?
30610In what ways was the Christian religion antagonistic to other religions?
30610In what ways was the idea of popular government perpetuated in Europe?
30610Is Industrial Democracy possible?
30610Is it a dispensation from heaven?
30610Is it not worth while to inquire what the man at the other end of the line is going to do by having his mail four days ahead?
30610Is science antagonistic to true Christianity?
30610Is the attitude toward life of the people of the Dakota wheat belt different from those of New York City?
30610Is the institution they are supporting merely serving itself, or has it a working power and a margin of profit in actual service?
30610Is the mental capacity of the average American greater than the average of the Greeks at the time of their highest culture?
30610Is there any limit to the amount of money that may be wisely expended for education?
30610Medicine?
30610Of what use to England were her American colonies?
30610One thousand years ago?
30610Philosophy?
30610Physics?
30610Religion?
30610Should all children in the United States be compelled to attend the public schools?
30610Should people who can not read and write be permitted to vote?
30610Then he says:"But what shall I do?
30610There was no value placed upon a human life; why, then, should there be upon the masses of individuals?
30610They asked seriously whether"angels had stomachs,"and"if a starving ass were placed exactly midway between two stacks of hay would he ever move?"
30610They asked the church authorities why the sacramental wine and bread turned into blood and flesh, and what was the necessity of the atonement?
30610To what extent and in what manner did the patriarchal family take the place of the state?
30610To what extent do you think the government should control or manage industry?
30610To what extent does future progress of the race depend upon science?
30610True, he has power to achieve in many directions, but is he any happier or better?
30610WHAT IS CIVILIZATION?
30610Was the little scrubby stock of our forefathers replaced by large, sleek, well- bred cattle through accident?
30610Were there humanitarian and democratic elements of progress in the crusades?
30610What advancement did the Romans make in architecture?
30610What are some needed political reforms?
30610What are the chief physical and mental traits of the Indian?
30610What are the dangers of extreme radicalism regarding government and social order?
30610What are the evidences in favor of the descent of man from a single progenitor?
30610What are the evidences of civilization discovered in Tut- Ankh- Amen''s tomb?
30610What are the evidences that man will not advance in physical and mental capacity?
30610What are the great discoveries of the last twenty- five years in Astronomy?
30610What are the material evidences of civilization in the neighborhood in which you live?
30610What are the primary social groups?
30610What bearing has the development of language upon the culture of religion, music, poetry, and art?
30610What caused the decline in Greek philosophy?
30610What caused the decline of Egyptian civilization?
30610What contributions did the American Indians make to European civilization?
30610What contributions to art and architecture did the Arab- Moors make in Spain?
30610What contributions to progress were made by Petrarch, Boccaccio, Michael Angelo, Justinian, Galileo, Copernicus, Columbus?
30610What contributions to science and learning came from the Arabian civilization?
30610What did Egypt and Babylon contribute of lasting value to civilization?
30610What did Oriental civilization contribute to the subsequent welfare of the world?
30610What elements of feudalism were Roman and what Teutonic?
30610What else but investigation, discovery, and adaptation wrought the change?
30610What has been the effect of the study of prehistoric man on modern thought as shown in the interpretation of History?
30610What has been the influence of Plato''s teaching on modern life?
30610What historical significance have Thermopylae, Marathon, Alexandria, Crete, and Delphi?
30610What influence had systematic labor on individual development?
30610What intellectual benefit were the crusades to Europe?
30610What is meant by Renaissance, Revival of Learning, Revival of Progress and Humanism, as applied to the mediaeval period?
30610What is meant by the statement that"Without vision the people perish"?
30610What is meant by"freedom of the seas"?
30610What is the best for which humanity can live?
30610What is the goal of civilized man?
30610What is the good influence of science on religious belief and practice?
30610What is the relation of morals to religion?
30610What is the relation of the individual to society?
30610What is the relation of"enlightened absolutism"to social progress?
30610What is the result of education of the Indian?
30610What is the secret of this great and marvellous change?
30610What is the ultimate of life?
30610What its results?
30610What measures are being taken to conserve the natural resources?
30610What mechanical inventions take the place of the stone hammer and the stone knife?
30610What new elements did it add to human progress?
30610What part do newspapers and periodicals play in education?
30610What particular service did the church contribute to social order during the decline of the Roman Empire?
30610What per cent of the voters of your town take a vital interest in government?
30610What phases of popular government are to be noted in the Italian cities?
30610What plan would you suggest for settling the labor problem so as to avoid strikes?
30610What recent inventions are dependent upon science?
30610What service did feudalism render civilization?
30610What survivals of feudalism may be observed in modern governments?
30610What the secondary?
30610What was the Hebrew contribution?
30610What was the basis of feudal society?
30610What was the effect of the crusades on the power of the church?
30610What was the general influence of the crusades on civilization?
30610What was the importance of Socrates''teaching?
30610What was the influence of the Arabs on European civilization?
30610What was the influence of the library at Alexandria?
30610What was the influence on civilization of the Greek attitudes of mind toward nature?
30610What was the nature of the quarrels of Henry IV and Gregory VII, of Innocent III and John of England, of Boniface and Philip the Fair?
30610What was the social effect of the exchange of economic products?
30610What was the state of organized society and what was the"common man"doing?
30610What were its causes?
30610What were the achievements of the Age of Pericles?
30610What were the causes of liberal government in the Netherlands?
30610What were the characteristics of the Genevan system instituted by John Calvin?
30610What were the chief causes of aggregation of people?
30610What were the economic and political results?
30610What were the great Greek masterpieces of(_ a_) Literature,(_ b_) Sculpture,(_ c_) Architecture,(_ d_) Art,(_ e_) Philosophy?
30610What were the internal causes of the decline of Rome?
30610What were the land reforms of the Gracchi?
30610What were the lasting effects of the English Commonwealth?
30610What were the racial relations of Romans, Greeks, Germans, Celts, and English?
30610What were the results of the first( 1899) and the second( 1907) Hague Conference?
30610What, then, can be relied upon as accurate in determining knowledge?
30610When King John of England wrote after his signature"King of_ England_,"what was its significance?
30610When did the Industrial Revolution begin?
30610Whence comes the improvement of live- stock in this country?
30610Whence comes this power to restore health?
30610Where?
30610Which are more important to civilization, Greek ideals or Greek practice?
30610Which were the more important impulses, clothing for protection or for adornment?
30610Who were the humanists?
30610Who, then, has the right to oppose the king?
30610Why and by whom were the Arab- Moors driven from Spain?
30610Why did Oriental nations go to war?
30610Why did religion occupy such an important place in primitive society?
30610Why did the Celts and the Germans invade Rome?
30610Why did the Egyptian religion fail to improve the lot of the common man?
30610Why did the French Revolution fail to establish liberty?
30610Why did the Greeks fail to make a strong central nation?
30610Why did the civilization of America fail?
30610Why did these ancient empires decline and disappear?
30610Why do some races progress and others deteriorate?
30610Why do we not find a high state of civilization among the African negroes?
30610Why is Aristotle considered the greatest of the Greeks?
30610Why is the family called the unit of social organization?
30610Why was he put to death?
30610Why were the guilds discontinued?
30610Will the opportunities they furnish improve the moral and intellectual character of the people-- a necessary condition to real progress?
30610Would a law compelling the reading of the Bible in public schools make people more religious?
30610Would a law forbidding the teaching of science in schools advance the cause of Christianity?
30610Would modern civilization have been as far advanced as now, had the Europeans found no human life at all on the American continent?
30610Would the American Indians in time have developed a high state of civilization?
30610_ Industry and Civilization_.--But what does this mean so far as human progress is concerned?
30610_ What Is the Goal of Civilized Man?_--And it may be well to ask, as civilization is progressive: What is our aim in life from our own standpoint?
30610and"In moving from point to point, do angels pass through{ 355} intervening space?"
6839Professing ignorance, he put perhaps this question-- What is law? 6839 What will it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul?"
6839And if these did not arrest corruption, how could art, when perverted, save a falling empire?
6839And what if there was suffering on the earth?
6839And when were wars more unfortunate, more unsuccessful?
6839And why did art degenerate?
6839Athens fell when her arts and schools were in the zenith of their glory, how could Rome stand when arts and schools undermined the moral health?
6839But how can we reconcile such a fact with the progress of a religion which is the mainspring of all virtue, and the destruction of all vice?
6839But what are we to think of laws when they are either evaded or perverted, when there is not wisdom to feel their justice or virtue to execute them?
6839But what avail the energy and talents of rulers when a nation is doomed to destruction?
6839But what if particular cities suffered?
6839But where were her one hundred and fifty thousand warriors?
6839But"what heathen,"says Tertullian,"will suffer his wife to go about from one street to another to the houses of strangers?
6839But, while Christianity conquered Rome, why did she fail to arrest its ruin?
6839Can vitality in states be preserved by mechanical inventions?
6839Can we afford to reject all the examples of the past in our sanguine hopes for the future?
6839Could nothing arrest the stupendous downfall?
6839Did art make the Medici at Florence more susceptible to religious impressions?
6839Did they create a lofty public sentiment which scorned baseness and lies?
6839Did they infuse life into the decaying mass?
6839Did they lead to self- restraint?
6839Did they produce valor and moral force among the masses?
6839Did they prolong political existence?
6839Did they raise a bulwark capable of resisting human degeneracy or barbaric violence?
6839Do the boasted triumphs of civilization create those holy certitudes on which happiness is based?
6839Do we arrive at any clearer conceptions of it by definitions?
6839Does a sentimental novel prompt to duty?
6839Does art sanctify Dresden or Florence?
6839Does moral worth necessarily keep pace with aesthetic culture, or intellectual triumphs, or material strength?
6839Does society expand from inherent laws of development, or from influences altogether foreign to man?
6839Especially were not such bright examples needed for the ages which were to come?
6839Even amid all the excitements attending the change of government, who have had power on the people like a Lacordaire or Monod?
6839Has civilization nothing to do with Christianity?
6839How could Christianity have subverted these monstrous evils without producing revolutions more blasting than even barbaric violence?
6839How could it save when its ends were destructive of all those sentiments on which true greatness rests?
6839How could people of no political or social position, who were objects of ridicule and contempt, have effected great social or political changes?
6839How could she, thus prostituted, elevate the people, or arrest degeneracy, or consecrate the ancient superstitions?
6839How could they reach the ear of those who disdained, repelled, and persecuted them?
6839How far did literature, art, science, laws, philosophy, prove conservative forces?
6839How far has its civilization perished, and how far has it entered into new combinations?
6839How long before slavery would have been destroyed in the United States by any moral means?
6839How many acres does he own?
6839How many slaves does he keep?
6839If Christianity is what its converts claim, why did it accomplish so little?
6839If Plato or Aristotle had been contemporaries with Thales, would they have matured so wonderful a system of dialectics?
6839If aristocratic institutions keep their ground in the best country of Europe, what must have been the grasp of nobles in the Roman world?
6839If intellectual strength will not keep men from vices, what can be expected when intellect panders to passions and interests?
6839If it prospered by means of its truths, why was its progress so slow when it was comparatively pure and elevated?
6839If knowledge did not restrain the passions of philosophers, how could passions be restrained when every influence tended to excite them?
6839If moral elevation kept pace with art, why the memorable decline in morals when the genius of the Romans soared to its utmost height?
6839If vice, selfishness, and pride were not overruled, what would become of our world?
6839In what does beauty consist?
6839Is Emerson superior to Epictetus, in an ethical point of view?
6839Is it nothing, in such an age, to have given an impulse to the most exalted sentiments that men can cherish?
6839Is it possible that civilization, the triumph of human genius and will, may fade away as Christianity, which gives vitality to society, advances?
6839Is it the settled destiny of nations to rise to a certain height in wisdom and power, and then pass away in ignominy and gloom?
6839Is the tendency of society to democratic, or aristocratic, or despotic governments?
6839Is there permanence in any human institutions?
6839May there not be the greatest practical infidelity, with the most artistic beauty and native reach of thought?
6839May there not be the highest triumphs of art, literature, and science, where the mainsprings of society are sensuality and egotism?
6839Military genius, united with patriotism, might have delayed the fall, but where was the glory of the legions in those last days?
6839On what did Luther and Cranmer build the hopes of regeneration?
6839Oui bono?_--"who shall show us any good?"
6839Shall we seek a connection between their martyrdoms and civilization?
6839Socrates died for his own opinions; but who was ever willing to die for the opinions of Socrates?
6839The Peripatetic inquired, sneeringly,"What_ is_ truth?"
6839The dinner is small, who can deny it?
6839The question is,_ Did_ these arts and sciences produce an influence sufficiently strong to conserve society?
6839There is a material growth; but does the moral correspond, with all our immense machinery for the elevation of society?
6839This melancholy state of affairs, so desperate and so general, demanded a deliverer and a hero; but where was a hero to be found?
6839Was Franklin a great philosopher, or Jefferson a great statesman, because they were surrounded by Christian examples?
6839Was Leo X. a wiser Pope because he delighted in pictures?
6839Was its strength material, or moral, or intellectual?
6839Were not such needed at the close of the fourth century?
6839What European monarch ever possessed such a sum?
6839What a poor basis for the hopes of man to rest upon is furnished by such guides as the Comtes, the Buckles, and the Mills?
6839What are human plans?
6839What are laws if judges are corrupt?
6839What are the true conservative forces of our world?
6839What are they really worth?
6839What chance has the bar, in a large city, compared with the pulpit, for the display of eloquence?
6839What conservative influence can result from the Venus of Titian?
6839What could be done?
6839What could be expected from such a system?
6839What could be expected when it was coarse, feeble, and frivolous?
6839What could be hoped of an empire when people were unwilling to enlist, and when troops had lost the prestige of victory?
6839What could besieged cities do, when treachery opened the gates?
6839What did not the Christian clergy guard and perpetuate?
6839What do operas and theatres for the elevation of society?
6839What does humanity care for the perpetuation of Roman pride?
6839What had_ they_ to fear?
6839What have the fashionable court religions of Europe done towards the real regeneration of society?
6839What heathen would allow her to steal away into the dungeon to kiss the chain of the martyr?"
6839What hope can there be for Rome, when barbarians are more chaste and temperate than they?"
6839What is the charge to call for such a punishment?
6839What is the explanation of this grand mystery?
6839What is the great first cause of all things?
6839What keeps alive the"Provincial Letters"?
6839What more harmless, and even praiseworthy, to all appearance, than was this earnest attempt to reconcile reason with faith?
6839What more immortal than the artistic delineations of man and of nature which the poets and historians wrought out with so much labor and genius?
6839What more important or vital than water?
6839What must have been the court when such women as Messalina and Agrippina controlled its councils?
6839What must, have been the government when even Seneca accumulated one of the largest fortunes of antiquity as minister?
6839What orator has Germany given birth to equal in fame to Luther?
6839What orator in France has reached the celebrity of Bossuet, or Bourdaloue, or Massillon?
6839What poor man''s name appears in any will?
6839What renovating influence has the nominal Christianity of South America, or Spain, or Italy?
6839What renovation in such a cold, barren, negative faith, without hope, without God in the world?
6839What survives of Carthage or Antioch or Tyre that society now cherishes?
6839What uninstructed reason can?
6839What witness can you present?
6839What would Caesar have thought of the soldiers of Valentinian siding with the clergy of Milan, when Ambrose was threatened with imperial vengeance?
6839What would Tiberius have thought of the seditions of Constantinople, when the most trusted soldiers demanded the head of a minister they detested?
6839What, then, could be hoped from the laws when they were made the channel of extortion and oppression?
6839When did men, uninspired by Christianity, utter sentiments more tender, or thoughts more profound, or aspirations more lofty?
6839When is one summoned to a consultation even by an aedile?"
6839When it was a pageant, a ritualism, an arm of the state, a vain philosophy, a superstition, a formula, how could it save, if ever so dominant?
6839When the laws practically add to the evils they were intended to cure, what hope is there in their conservative influence?
6839Whence comes religious life?
6839Whence did he derive his opinions?
6839Where did Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, those eastern herdsmen and shepherds, get their moral wisdom?
6839Where was the power of mechanism, without genius to direct it?
6839Where were even the three armies drawn out in battle array, that had confronted the Carthaginian leader?
6839Wherein were they weak or strong, vital or mechanical, permanent or transient?
6839Which were better?
6839Who can doubt the benefit to mankind by the conquests of Britain, of Gaul, and of Spain?
6839Who can estimate the influence of hymns which have been sung for fifty successive generations?
6839Who can estimate the power of spiritual agencies?
6839Who can improve upon the Doric columns of the Parthenon, or the Corinthian capitals of the Temple of Jupiter?
6839Who can tell wherein true and permanent influence abides?
6839Who can wonder at the fall of Roman society?
6839Who erects an edifice after the style of the Thermae?
6839Who gave the information?
6839Who has surpassed Pindar in artistic skill?
6839Who shall say which is greater to the eye of the Infinite-- the battle of Leipsic, or the fight on Bunker Hill?
6839Who should succeed to the vacant throne of Valens?
6839Who was ever allowed at Rome to become a son- in- law if his estate was inferior, and not a match for the portion of the young lady?
6839Why bring our passions to the immortal''s shrine?"
6839Why did Christianity fail to arrest so total an eclipse of the glory of man?
6839Why did a magnificent civilization prove so feeble a barrier against corruption and decay?
6839Why did it not keep its own?
6839Why did not art reform morals, as morals elevated art?
6839Why did not military organizations save the empire in the hour of trial?
6839Why did not the arts maintain the severity of the Grecian models?
6839Why did philosophy degenerate to Epicureanism?
6839Why did poetry condescend to such trivial subjects as hunting and fishing?
6839Why did the full- armed and well- trained legions yield to barbaric foes, without discipline and without the most effective weapons?
6839Why did they not remain barbarians, like the natives of Central Africa?
6839Why did they offer no more stubborn resistance?
6839Why did, the light of truth become dim?
6839Why has New England produced so many educators?
6839Why is it that money can not create a college, and is useless unless there is a vitality among its professors and students?
6839Why is it that so few eminent men of genius and learning have arisen out of the turmoil and vanity of prosperous cities?
6839Why should we grieve that it failed to perpetuate such an organization or government as that wielded by the emperors?
6839Why the discrepancy between the laws and the execution of them?
6839Why was every triumph of genius perverted?
6839Why was so bright a glory followed by so dismal a shame?
6839Why was such an empire permitted to rise over the bleeding surface of the world, and what was its influence on the general destiny of the race?
6839Why was the world to be involved in such universal gloom and wretchedness as followed the great catastrophe?
6839Why were the great principles of beauty lost sight of?
6839Will society move round in perpetual circles, incapable of progression and incapable of rest, or will it indefinitely improve?
6839Would slaves decrease when worldly men became the overseers of the church, and emperors presided at councils?
6839Yet who has copied the Flavian amphitheatre?
6839Yet who have been greater ornaments and lights than these distinguished Greeks?
6839what is courage?
6839what is temperance?
6839what is the just and the unjust?
41768A mortal fiddlestick-- where''s Leonard Fairfield, I say?
41768And are you all taken from me-- you for whom I toiled with so much pleasure-- you for whom I even sinned? 41768 And does that happen often?"
41768And how much is that?
41768And may I ask who you be?
41768And the rest?
41768And what do you do, lolloping there on them blessed stocks?
41768And you,said the Spirit to the priests and teachers,"what may_ your_ time be?"
41768Are not you?
41768Are you not going out?
41768Augh,said the tinker, staring,"you fit with a young gentleman, did you?
41768But how on earth did you get into my new Stocks?
41768But where is the Parson to find you?
41768But, every man, as I understand you, one and all,said the Spirit,"has his time?"
41768Could we offer it as security?
41768Dear, dear Walter, say you do not despise me?
41768Did he, and what for?
41768Do n''t you know I mean to make my Kate a lady?
41768Do you think that these ills can fall on you alone, Paul? 41768 Done?"
41768Has the medical officer attended to her?
41768Have you made any provision for the garrison of this town, Colonel?
41768Hollo, you sir,said he, as Lenny now came in hearing,"where be you going at that rate?"
41768Hollo,said Mr. Stirn,"what is all this?--what''s the matter, Lenny, you blockhead?"
41768How can I help the wind?
41768How can a jewel like that do all you say?
41768How did he make his money?
41768How do you know?
41768How know I, being blind, I am on Earth? 41768 Is not ruin disgrace?
41768Is this the patriotism we have heard so much of? 41768 My dear Hazeldean, what has happened?
41768My dear love, how can you say such cruel things?
41768My poor child,said she,"you are lonely and unhappy; what ails you?"
41768My wife-- my children?
41768Not when my debts are unpaid, and my wife keeps her fortune?
41768Of course,said the lad,"and ai n''t the folks just a goin''to come out of chapel?"
41768Oh, Marian, where have you been all this time?
41768Oh, early Rain, oh passion of strong crying, Say dost thou weep, oh Rain, for him or me? 41768 On_ Christmas_ Day, sir?"
41768Out? 41768 Please, sir, have you done with the tea- things?
41768Please, sir, missis''s compliments, and p''raps you''d accept this bit of Christmas puddin''?
41768Pshaw,said the Parson;"but what''s to be done?"
41768Then why expose yourself to this blame?
41768Then you will go?
41768Thomas Colooney-- are you the man?
41768Was it a soldier,asked the judge,"who has so wounded you with his sabre?"
41768What at, sir?
41768What does he want? 41768 What is the matter?"
41768What is this?
41768What is''t you say?
41768What''s your name, pray, and what''s your bizness?
41768When do they leave?
41768Where is Jemima? 41768 Where?
41768Which is best?
41768Whither away, Brother Merry?
41768Who gave you them leggins? 41768 Who hissed?"
41768Who is that woman with a book in her hand?
41768Who said I was in a passion?
41768Why did you not ask me to do this,says he,"when I was young and supple, and could have acquitted myself with credit?"
41768Why do you bring them home to me, Barbara? 41768 Why is not glass malleable?"
41768Why should I be sad?
41768Why should I not allow him to enjoy this one short pleasure?
41768You are an Englishman?
41768You do n''t mean to say that you or any one likes being here?
41768You have not done wrong? 41768 You pallid flowers, why do ye watch the dust And tremble?
41768You''ve come here, Colooney, to offer yourself as a volunteer in the cause of your country?
41768--and the irony of the tone vanished--"what is this, my poor boy?
41768After I had dined she came to ask me if there was any thing she could do for me?
41768After all, what do we collect for?
41768Ah me, What shall not seize the dark hand of the blind?
41768Ah, that maniac, white as a leper with flakes of cotton, can I ever forget him, that ran so far in advance of his party?
41768All round How know I but the burning pit doth yawn?
41768Am I not your wife?
41768And Leicestershire, where I''ve generally spent my holidays, did I take jaw from_ her_?
41768And now my story is told, and you, young folks, must guess my riddle-- What was the talisman?
41768And where does it go?
41768And why at the jetty?
41768Are these the people that would welcome us as deliverers?
41768Are you used to fire- arms?"
41768Are you willing to accept it, and to do your best to guard such an invaluable treasure?"
41768Ask Stirn:"( then bursting out)"Stirn, you infernal rascal, do n''t you hear?--what on earth has come to us all?"
41768Author, what is the title?"
41768Ay, I''d ha''ta''en my davy on that: and cos vy?"
41768But how can such a man as I am lower his diet, who has been accustomed for years to live upon vegetables and water, a little bread and a little tea?
41768But is it always so?"
41768But vy should you fit cos he trespassed on the Stocks?
41768But was ever any worn- out being more lonely?
41768But were these defects of doubting and desponding really mine?
41768But what are they all, as to their chances of remembrance among men, to that little bark_ Mayflower_?
41768But what should she do with the heavy contents of the casket?
41768But what then?
41768But when do our parents and friends, when do we ourselves dream of what our lot is really to turn out?
41768But where do I, the Woodstream, originate?
41768But where to find that happiest spot below, Who can direct, when all pretend to know?
41768But who would not swallow a pill to live to a hundred and fifty- two?"
41768But, in that case, had I not reason to apprehend being sawed in two?
41768Ca n''t you speak, lad?"
41768Can it never be rendered subservient to the ordinary purposes of human life?
41768Can, then, nothing more important be brought out of it?
41768Certainly, why_ should_ he?
41768Could he really think she distrusted him?
41768Dear, dear a- me, what shall I do?
41768Do I not know that my decision will be canvassed by all, blamed by the many?"
41768Do you know my origin?
41768Have we not seen, at pleasure''s lordly call, The smiling, long frequented village fall?
41768Have we not seen, round Britain''s peopled shore, Her useful sons exchang''d for useless ore?
41768Have you really thought of a title to My Novel?"
41768He said it was a shame that any body should die in a workhouse; he appealed to his neighbor Smith, who was warming his broth, whether it was not so?
41768How could they be otherwise?
41768How, then, could she rejoice in the announcement that gave such pleasure to all the rest?
41768I asked him if he had not been frightened?
41768I had been taken in arms-- in arms, against whom?
41768I have been his bane through life: will the curse follow him to the other world?"
41768I started from my bed, flung open my door, and shouted,"Who''s there?"
41768I want to stop''em all if I can, from going into the village; but how?"
41768I was going to ask him to join us: do you think he would, Mary?"
41768If Michelet had entered the Imperial Printing Office, what would have become of him?
41768If disgrace be your portion, must not I share it?
41768If it could speak, what would it say, Leonard Fairfield?
41768If the immortal Bacon-- the"wisest, greatest,_ meanest_(?)
41768In that same town we have just quitted-- a miserable hole, too, was it-- what was the first sight that greeted us?
41768Is a man to be kicked upon hypothesis?
41768Is it the first time that I have thrust myself into a hobble?--and if in a hobble of mine own choosing, why should I blame the gods?"
41768MY MOTHER, with more animation than usual.--"Ay, Sisty-- the title?"
41768MY MOTHER.--"''_Says she to her Neighbor, What?_''"THE CAPTAIN.--"''_The Unknown, or the Northern Gallery_''--"MR.
41768Mary obeyed the summons; and the following dialogue was whispered in the passage:"Did he eat the pudding?"
41768Maybe they wo n''t get a drubbin?
41768Neither, again, did Louth ever dream of giving me any of_ her_ jaw; then why should I stand it from Lancashire?"
41768Now pray what is the matter with Lenny Fairfield?
41768Oh, tell me, you can not fear disgrace?"
41768Oh, what is this?
41768Oh, ye lords of creation, which of ye can master yourself?
41768PISISTRATUS, eagerly.--"Well, sir?"
41768R.?"
41768SQUILLS.--"If it be not too great a liberty, pray who or what is Camarina?"
41768STIRN.--"I dare say she was, considering what she pays for the premishes:( insinuatingly), you does not know who did it-- eh, Lenny?"
41768Say, should the philosophic mind disdain That good which makes each humbler bosom vain?
41768Seen all her triumphs but destruction haste, Like flaring tapers brightening as they waste?
41768Serazin, is all ready?
41768The boy, then, was a stranger; but what was his rank?
41768The fountains of sympathy, of gratitude, of love, were opened; might not these waters prove sufficient to fertilize a life?
41768The servant once more invaded my seclusion-- what could she want now?
41768Then it said, beginning with the minister of state,"Of what duration is_ your_ time?"
41768They had self- respect and contentment to bless them, what cared they for the world?
41768Things were now desperate with Chepstowe, but when will not a drowning man cling to a straw?
41768This seems to you a strange place to look for jewels?"
41768To whom has it not appeared as a holy Sabbath for the young flowers that dwell there?
41768WHY IS NOT GLASS MALLEABLE?
41768Was he not her husband?
41768Was he of that grade in society in which the natural offenses are or are not consonant to, or harmonious with outrages upon Stocks?
41768Was this audacious Unknown taking an inventory of the church and the Hall for the purposes of conflagration?
41768We freely gave up to your control my share in his property; have we ever sought to advise you even with respect to that?
41768What can I do for you?"
41768What could they have done to me, said my brother, on account of my recusancy?
41768What good will it ever do the children?
41768What hast thou to do with Hell?
41768What indeed?
41768What is she now?
41768What is this?"
41768What monstrous punishments was I dreaming of, from the days of giants and ogres?
41768What more could they desire?
41768What on earth has come to you all?"
41768What passion, but jealousy, could have sustained him in so hot a chase?
41768What say you, Roland?
41768What shall we do to stay it?"
41768What was it to which war, and the assumption of warlike functions, pledged a man?
41768What was the meaning of_ that_?
41768What was the poor wife''s suffering meanwhile?
41768What will the Parson say?
41768What will you ask?"
41768When thus Creation''s charms around combine, Amid the store should thankless pride repine?
41768Where have you been for some weeks-- we have lost you from Paris?"
41768Which of ye is not hag- ridden by some pet passion?
41768Who could wonder at it?
41768Who does not know it?
41768Who knows but that, when she is called on for sympathy and action, she may prove all we could wish?"
41768Whose burial did they speak of in the skies?
41768Why have I stray''d from pleasure and repose, To seek a good each government bestows?
41768Why, do n''t you know this is Sunday?"
41768Would it attract you in a catalogue?"
41768Would she change her quarters?
41768Would she prefer the children''s department of the house?
41768Would the future bring with it companionship and love, or estrangement and indifference?
41768You do n''t mean to say that good Lenny Fairfield( who was absent from church by- the- by) can have done any thing to get into disgrace?"
41768You pale flowers Why do you quake and hang the head like me?
41768[ 17] But is not this condition of mine, voluntarily and experimentally incurred, a type of my life?
41768[ Illustration:_ Sharp( but vulgar) little Boy._"HALLO, MISSUS, WOT ARE THOSE?"
41768_ Voila une vraie infamie!_""And at what sum, sir,"replied Le Kain, placidly,"do you estimate the privilege of thus addressing me?"
41768and for what?
41768and how much have you earned?"
41768exclaimed Tryon, breathlessly,"who was the Kafir that has so bereft me?"
41768exclaimed the general, twirling his mustache with a truculent frown,"What''s this I hear?
41768rather bald-- and curt, eh?"
41768she answered;"being here, or on a common, or the sea- sands?
41768she shrieked;"my husband dead?--dead?
41768the French is comin'', What''ll now the red coats do?
41768was she acting rightly?
41768well for it, it was no baby, or sharp would have been its cries under the hands of its mantua- maker?
41768what do you mean?"
41768what does the fellow say?"
41768what has us here?"
41768what is that?
41768who will bring me comfort for this hard inequality?"
41401Am I to regard the matter simply as one of duty, sir? 41401 And any children you may have?"
41401And how is the wind blowing, Andrew?
41401And if that beat were stilled, what then? 41401 And my child, then?"
41401And now, children,said Perrault,"how do you like my last fairy tale?"
41401And where is the Signorina?
41401And where''s your father now?
41401And where,he gasped,"is it hid-- where will I find it?"
41401And yet why not?
41401And you commission me, then, to speak to our dear Jemima?
41401And your mother-- what did she do?
41401Are these suns more serene than ours, or the soil more fertile? 41401 Are you ill?"
41401Are you quite sure,he returned, in a low voice,"that it does not affect you as deeply?"
41401Arrah, why would I, woman? 41401 Ask him if it was by his orders that the guard was assailed?"
41401Ay, ay, to be sure I will-- why not? 41401 But how can poor Madeline ever pay the debt she owes?"
41401But wo n''t you promise me, Bobby darlin''--won''t you, alanna?
41401Can you bear to suffer?
41401Confound you,cried the man of skulls and shovels, almost beside himself with rage and horror,"what is it you want of me?"
41401Did not the people say so, and they would not have wanted to kill her unless she was wicked?
41401Did you ever hear was there gold or silver there?
41401Do n''t be alarmed; I am not alone; we have come to--"Who?
41401Does the man know where_ he_ is? 41401 Eh, sir?"
41401Gertrude, how do you feel this evening?
41401God?
41401Grandpapa,said she,"why do n''t you make beautiful stories for us as you used to do for papa and my uncles?"
41401Have you courage?
41401How could I be so silly as to suppose that a woman, or even a man, would hide in vaults and passages that had not been opened for hundreds of years? 41401 How do you know that?"
41401How now, old fellow?
41401I made thee a promise,said the unknown--"didst thou doubt my power, that thou hast never invoked my aid?"
41401I mean what maladies, what diseases?
41401Is it the Commandant- de- Place himself is at the head?
41401Is she liked in the village, think you?
41401Is yon man there, on the kitchen floor?
41401Miss Jemima? 41401 Never-- devil a bit-- why would you?"
41401No low fevers? 41401 Put what?"
41401Since when?
41401Tell me what she says, will you?
41401That may protect the Stocks, certainly; but will it keep those detestable tracts out of the beer- house?
41401That poor wanderer in the house- place is Richard Jackson, is it not?
41401The Army of the North?
41401Then where were you born?
41401Well, children,said he,"what do you think of this first part of my story, and of your great- grandmother''s adventures?
41401Well, divil carry me if I drink a drop till I come back again,said the sexton, angrily;"will that do you?
41401Well, who''s going to be married now?
41401What am I here for? 41401 What do I not owe to your heroic devotedness and presence of mind?
41401What have you got, pray, that you seem so anxious to preserve? 41401 What is it you want with me?"
41401What is it, Forrester?
41401What is it?--what has happened?--what can it be?
41401What is the matter?
41401What makes you afraid of this wood?
41401What on airth is the mainin''of all this? 41401 What shall I say to this Merochamp?"
41401What the plague has the House of Tudor got to do with my Stocks?
41401What''s the matter, Terry?
41401When?
41401Whence do you come?
41401Where''s the Commandant?
41401Who gave him his commission?--who appointed him?
41401Who got a bloody nob for playing spy to Nick Stirn? 41401 Who is come?
41401Who is he-- what is he?
41401Who is there?
41401Who knows him? 41401 Who says this?"
41401Who wants him?
41401Why need I speak? 41401 Why not tell him frankly how he stands?"
41401Why, what can they complain of?
41401Yet it is higher ground, more exposed?
41401You think so, Colonel?
41401You wo n''t be throwing up the little finger, Bobby, acushla?
41401You''ll not refuse General Serazin''s invitation to confer with your Commandant, I hope?
41401''Did you say God bless me?''
41401A letter was now handed to her; and, hastily breaking the seal, she read,"Madeline, hast thou still a wish?
41401A question is asked,"Who kill''d Cock Robin?"
41401Am not I right, grandpapa?"
41401And how were such as my father to come honestly by game?
41401And how, we may ask, can it be otherwise?
41401And the beak of the Ibis points it not to Syene, Nubia, and a world unknown?
41401And the plain ox, That harmless, honest, guileless animal, In what has he offended?
41401And_ now_ will you give me my hat?"
41401Are we not all living men talking upon equal terms, and in the best possible humor, about the dead?
41401As she was passing through the cloisters on her way back, she was startled by a voice suddenly demanding,"Art thou not Madeline Perrault?"
41401At last I said,"What made mother say this?
41401At last, when Charost was fairly answered by the Bishop on every point, he asked:"But what say you to the Army of the North?"
41401But how can we two rough- bearded men provide for all the nameless wants and cares of a frail female child?
41401But the reader may ask, what have these wine- cellars to do with the Queen''s Pipe?
41401But what is there too hard for a mother who has heard her children ask for food which she had not to give them?
41401But where was I to seek it?
41401But who can hold the shade, while Heaven descends In universal bounty, shedding herbs, And fruits, and flowers, on Nature''s ample lap?
41401But who can paint Like Nature?
41401But who their virtues can declare?
41401But who was the other?
41401But who will credit me, I said, when I narrate such things?
41401But why so far excursive?
41401But, meanwhile, what was to become of Nelly?
41401But, tundher- an- ouns, what''s gone wid Fitzpatrick''s shop across the way?"
41401Ca n''t he come home every night after work?"
41401Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creation, hues like hers?
41401Could I keep my purpose there?
41401Did I, boys?"
41401Did he mean to fortify the Stocks?
41401Did you see much of Miss Hazeldean?"
41401Do you intend to run off with my horse?
41401Does he know who_ I_ am?"
41401Does it only prove that rats, as well as men, may be ungrateful?
41401During the struggle, he got one of the fingers of his new master into his mouth, and-- did he bite it off?
41401Fated, shall I say, or favored?
41401Had she come there only to mock me?
41401Had she melted into air?
41401Had you, my dear children, been in your great- grandmother''s place, should you not have been very much excited and very curious?
41401Have you any certificate of birth or baptism, Tiernay?"
41401He draws terrible pictures; but what are his materials?
41401How came she to send you out?"
41401How could she know of a place of concealment of which the inhabitants of the house were ignorant?
41401How dared he come near my Nelly?
41401How many will bring back to our dear France the memory of this unhappy struggle?
41401How many, thought I, are destined to leave it?
41401How then can I expect others to accept as true a narration which contradicts their experience and convictions, and which I can not elucidate myself?
41401I ask you to satisfy me at once whether it is so, or not?"
41401I demanded;"or assume to know it?"
41401I had heard of Second Sight, and other visual deceptions-- was this one of them?
41401I wished to ask you about your family, Tiernay; was not your father Irish?"
41401If I hated him before, what think ye I did now?
41401If fancy, then, Unequal fails beneath the pleasing task, Ah, what shall language do?
41401If it is not them, I simply ask who the div--, I mane who on airth are they, for such sogers as them I never seen before in my born days?"
41401If there was no Army of the North, was I quite sure that there was any expedition at all?
41401In the bower of Kushuk, nargileh- clouded, coffee- scented, are eyes to be strictly trusted?
41401Is it a hairbreadth too short to cover the scratch for which you want it?
41401Is she fond of children, do you think?"
41401Is the land of the stranger a better refuge than the home of peace in her native clime?"
41401It is very true, neighbors, that I owe her a good many acres, and ought to speak well of her; but what then?
41401May I ask what you advise me to do, General?"
41401Must I tell it?
41401Or can it mix them with that matchless skill, And lose them in each other, as appears In every bud that blows?
41401Or is it a little illustration of the wise and merciful arrangement, that the world must go on, die who will?
41401Pardin for what, I should like to know?
41401Say what else lies near thine heart?"
41401Shall we have ghost stories?"
41401She is well?"
41401She must earn her living; was it to be as a farm- servant, or by working at the mill?
41401The beast of prey, Blood- stain''d deserves to bleed; but you, ye flocks, What have you done?
41401The meaning of the phrase is,"do you want to taste the wines?"
41401Then the question arose, what was to become of her?
41401Then, after a long whiff,"Did you ever see her play with the little children?
41401These vaults are faintly lit with lamps, but on going in, you are at the entrance accosted with the singular demand--"Do you want a cooper?"
41401Waits not the one- eyed first officer below, with a linen lantern, to pilot as to the boat?
41401Was I the victim of a self- delusion?
41401Was Irish Independence a mere phantom?
41401Was it a remembering refrain of Palestine, whose daughter you are?
41401Was it possible that one, untaught and unlettered as he was, could think national freedom cheap at such a cost?
41401Was she thinking of the sorrow that would come upon him soon?
41401Was this the end of it all?
41401Was this, then, patriotism?
41401Well-- but you will say,''What''s the Squire driving at?''
41401Were the generals mere freebooters, the chiefs of a marauding venture?
41401Were the patriots any thing but a disorderly rabble, eager for robbery and bloodshed?
41401What are the principal complaints in these parts?"
41401What can be the matter?
41401What conjectures have you formed as to the mysterious lady?"
41401What could I imagine they were doing there?
41401What could the Squire be about?--what new mischief did he meditate?
41401What is it that you know?"
41401What is that little?"
41401What is that which you said, nay, pledged yourself I should soon learn?"
41401What mischief are you after?"
41401What think you?
41401What were the vanities of life to him?
41401What''s to be done now?
41401What, but God?
41401What, then, was this form I had beheld?
41401Where are you bound for, with this magnificent equipage of yours?"
41401Where had I seen those features before?
41401Where must I go?''
41401Where that high- souled patriotism, content to risk fortune, station-- all, in the conflict for national independence?
41401Where the thousands gathering around a national standard?
41401Where were the chivalrous chieftains with their clans behind them?
41401Who but a child so careless would dream that these placid ripples of youth will rock you stormless to El Dorado?
41401Who could think of the Stocks at such a season?
41401Who could this woman be, pursued by the populace, and accused of being a sorceress, and an enemy to the people?
41401Who has any business with_ me_?"
41401Who wears sweet smiles, and looks erect on heaven, E''er stoop to mingle with the prowling herd, And dip his tongue in gore?
41401Who would dare to be?
41401Why did he leave his own country?
41401Why did not you go and talk to that brute of a boy, and that dolt of a woman?
41401Why do n''t Sir Godfrey tackle me?
41401Why do you ask?"
41401Why do you suspect me?"
41401Why is it that adults, as well as children, are impressed with a certain uneasiness in the dark?
41401Why is that, think you?"
41401Why should that affect me more than any body else?"
41401Why was he not allowed to pursue his destiny?
41401You look well, my child; this air agrees with you as well as that of Hazeldean?"
41401[ Illustration: A startling Fact]_ Oxford Swell._"DO YOU MAKE MANY OF THESE MONKEY- JACKETS NOW?"
41401_ Slender._ I love the sport well; but I shall as soon quarrel at it as any man in England: you are afraid if you see the bear loose, are you not?
41401_ Slender._ Why do your dogs bark so?
41401and that, perhaps, To swell the riot of the autumnal feast, Won by his labor?
41401and who cares?
41401and you would have me give up the Stocks?"
41401be there bears i''the town?
41401because you are virtuous, shall there be no more cakes and ale?
41401can fierce passions vex his breast, While every gale is peace, and every grove Is melody?
41401exclaimed the robber;"what seek you in these parts?
41401in a haunted house?"
41401is it the French that''s landed at last to give us a hand and help us in airnest to this blessed repale?
41401man or demon?
41401muttered Peter,"is it deaf I''m growing?"
41401no consumption?"
41401or as an opportunity of consulting my personal safety?"
41401said I,"what have I to betray?"
41401said Riccabocca, mournfully;"what can I give her in the world?
41401said he,"art thou turning back to the old trade?
41401there, give me my hat, will you?"
41401to be sure I do, and you?"
41401what was the spectacle before him?
41401where on earth did you pick up that idea?"
41401who can identify him?"
41401who pierce, With vision pure, into these secret stores Of health, and life, and joy?
41401would you have slept a bit better than Madeline did?
41401ye peaceful people, what, To merit death?
41401you, who have given us milk In luscious streams, and lent us your own coat Against the Winter''s cold?
40612''By whom?'' 40612 ''Sir, why do you pursue me here with petitions?
40612''Where is your master, Bevis? 40612 And if there were, what could be the object?
40612And the pictures in the hall?
40612And trying to be happy, Westbourne? 40612 Are we going far, Maurice?"
40612Be you going there?
40612Believed what?
40612But the farmers want work here as well as elsewhere, I suppose?
40612But, dear me, what is the matter?
40612But, my dear Mrs. Wharton, what else can I say?
40612But, still, though L''Estrange is, doubtless, all you say, do n''t you think he rather wastes his life-- living abroad?
40612Can I offer you a glass of wine-- it is pure, of our own making?
40612Captain?
40612Captain?
40612Dear me,cried Mrs. Leslie,"who can that possibly be?
40612Do you call this common sense? 40612 Do you hear it come and go?"
40612Do you not love me, Ursula?
40612Do you really think so?
40612Do you think, when Wolsey and Thomas à- Becket became priests, they were fond of telling their beads and pattering Aves? 40612 Does it frighten my Ursula to think of seeing distant countries?
40612Eh?
40612For me?
40612Good; but what can I do in your old Starosty?
40612Have you missed any property?
40612How shall I sign it, Mr. Randolph? 40612 How, kill?"
40612I do not know,he replied;"doctor, do you think I could take some more clams?"
40612I?
40612If you had any foresight, or a head for the commonest arrangements, would you not have a barrel of ale on wheels outside here?
40612Is he as amusing as ever?
40612Is it Emma Leveson you are going to marry?
40612Is that queer fellow ever coming back to England?
40612Is this the village of Rood?
40612Lieutenant, perhaps?
40612Lieutenant- colonel?
40612Lieutenant- colonel?
40612Lieutenant?
40612Major, I presume?
40612Major?
40612May I ask your permission?
40612Might I be permitted most respectfully to inquire whereabout this same old Starosty may be located?
40612Monsieur,said he, addressing me,"will you have the kindness to take my dog?"
40612Mr. Hazeldean has company staying with him?
40612My friend, can you tell me which of these roads will bring me to----?
40612Now, Snoady,was my next remark,"what do you deduce from this?"
40612Oh, pray what was it?
40612Oh, yes, I likes them well eno''; mayhap you are at school with the young gentleman?
40612Oh-- I-- no; but they are well done, arn''t they, sir?
40612On Saturday, then?
40612Shall I write it on this card?
40612Shall we try, Mary,said the husband,"to please the child?"
40612Taken from nature-- eh?
40612Tell me, my worthy friend,I asked, as we waded side by side through the mud,"do you know Mr. Tax- collector Burkhardt?"
40612That poor fellow, sir? 40612 Then it appears to me that your Highness is Field- Marshal?"
40612Those are very funny,said he:"they seem capitally done-- who did''em?"
40612To have you--"What?
40612To see what turtle, waiter?
40612Was the woman''s name Grace Greenside?
40612Well, Mr. Mayor,said Audley, pointing to a seat,"what else would you suggest?"
40612What am I to do with the card?
40612What are you about, Randal?
40612What do you here again?
40612What do you mean by die?
40612What do you mean by dying then?
40612What do you want to know?
40612What exile from his country can fly himself as well?
40612What have you lost, my good woman?
40612What is the meaning of this, and what do you seek here?
40612What is? 40612 What of her now?"
40612What paper is that, doctor?
40612What pardon do you require?
40612What possible consequence can the accidental stuffing of a Scotch banker be to you, milor?
40612What sort of face is it?
40612What, Randal?
40612When night comes-- this very night? 40612 Who is that for?
40612Who is that man?
40612Why does not he go to them?
40612Why, what have I done?
40612Will you permit me to ask you another question?
40612Will you pull me down that bough, Oliver?
40612Without compliment?
40612You do n''t seem very well off in this village, my man?
40612You do not think she would?
40612You have nothing to purchase breakfast with to- morrow, have you, Mary?
40612You will go, Randal?
40612Your Excellency is then Lieutenant- general?
40612''Now,''said he,''what do you wish to say to me?''
406121851; Please, Sir, shall I hold your Horse?
40612A tiger may feed to repletion, or be disarmed by drowsiness; but who could hope to appease the_ ghost of a tiger_, did such walk?
40612After a few observations on the last debate, this gentleman said:"By the way, can you dine with me next Saturday, to meet Lansmere?
40612After supper, Colonel Carlis asked the king,"What meat he would like for his Sunday''s dinner?"
40612And Kate, what of her?
40612And how have their places been filled?
40612And running toward her mother, she cried,"Mother, do you hear it?
40612And you, madam-- are you happy?"
40612Are there any that have never watched for his coming?
40612Are you sure it is not we who waste our lives?
40612BLANCHE.--"But pray whom do you mean for a hero?--and is Miss Jemima your heroine?"
40612Beautiful, broad- winged bird of Jove, why didst thou light on such a quarry?
40612But Milton or Shakspeare, could they have had colds?
40612But are they, therefore, without a common sympathy for one another?
40612But as to breakfast?
40612But what is all this to abstract thought, to learning and science, to poetic raptures, and picturesque ease?
40612But what mattered that to one of my imaginative powers?
40612But where was the evidence of the constraint?
40612But wherefore?
40612Can one imagine Homer with a cold, or Dante?
40612Can these not utter''d be, and can The day- spring of immortal man?
40612Charles, I hope you will allow there is some probability of her being rewarded?"
40612Did not that blundering Peter betray the secret of the intended massacre?
40612Do n''t you know the captain is married, though he passes for a bachelor here?
40612Do n''t you remember, Mr. Thornley, how you called her the heroine of Daisy Dell?"
40612Do we wish to banish all music from the busy haunts of men?
40612Do you think you are acting with any more reason than a dog possesses, to treat the public in this way?
40612Does not even the popular mind regard virtue with honor, and vice with contempt?
40612During the long midnight hours who can tell what passed in the poor girl''s mind?
40612Go into one of the rooms at any of these places, and whom do you see?
40612Has success or ill fortune attended the speculations by which they set such store?
40612Has the love been forgotten?
40612Have some of them passed to the land whose inhabitants send back no letters?
40612Have the friends become strange or enemies?
40612He asks if Her Majesty be aware of the position of a British subject named Sutherland?
40612He quickly asked,"Captain West of the Packet?"
40612He was rolling his head; and there was a working about his mouth before he asked--"What time did you sup that night?"
40612He would be asked where he sat at the supper?
40612How could I tell but that one of the ruffians might not fancy taking a shot at me through the windows?
40612How could compliments or insinuations be conveyed by such an autograph?
40612How d''ye think the Premier would take it?"
40612How far were they fulfilled?"
40612How has the world without and within been altered to the correspondents since they were written?
40612How many marriages may not have been prevented by colds?
40612How should an old bachelor, indeed, get such knowledge?
40612I asked myself, with a shudder, can there be''death- fires?''
40612I asked who was there?
40612I sometimes ask myself,"What has been her fate?
40612If I went to the Clarendon I could get nothing in bed but sleep; could I?
40612If he clogs that intellect by too good a breakfast, how can he properly exert that intellect in meditation, during the day upon his dinner?
40612Is it an inferior article, as compared with the Clarendon sleep, or is it of the same quality?
40612Is not my presence a comfort to you?
40612Is she dead?"
40612Is there not great sweetness in imparting joy to one who would otherwise pass a life of tears?"
40612Is this meant to guard against too sanguine notions of inheritance, which his generosity may have excited?
40612Is this your duty to the public who pays you?
40612Leslie''s?"
40612Mr. Gurney was very gentle; but, as he said, what_ could_ he suggest but indigestion, or some such cause of nervous disturbance?
40612Out leaped Sir Valentine, and demanded of the first person he met how far it was to Seaford?
40612PISISTRATUS.--"Agreed; have you any thing to say against the infant hitherto?"
40612PISISTRATUS.--"Do you remember any of his reasons, sir?"
40612Randolph?"
40612Rickeybockey?"
40612Said I to him,"Mr. Groggles, the best turtle is where?"
40612Said he to me, as he brushed the crumbs off the table,"Would you like to see the turtle, sir?"
40612Shaft from heaven''s inmost quiver, why wert thou spent upon such a work?
40612Skim''s when I could go to the Clarendon, you may ask?
40612Some one would earn it, why should not she?''
40612Surely there is, even in this world, an unslumbering Providence, which, eventually rewards the good and punishes the wicked?"
40612That''s speaking fair and manful, is n''t it?"
40612The low bow of the emperor made the man with the pipe conclude he was speaking to an inferior, so, without much ceremony, he said,"Pray, who are you?
40612The negro is a man and a brother-- should I hold myself accountable for my position in life,_ to him_?
40612The price of blood!--what then?
40612The young wife hastened to Richard Penderel, showed him the paper, and whispered--"''What is the king to us?
40612Then why should I go to the Clarendon?
40612These changes did not improve Kate''s good looks, but when did true love ever think of beauty?
40612These leaders of fashion when the old century went out on the young Republic of France, whose Master was already found-- who were they?
40612This pheasant and hare had doubtless been poached by Tom Stares, a notorious offender against the game- laws; but what was to be done?
40612True, he is very little in town; but why do n''t you go and see him in the country?
40612Two votes for a free and independent town like ours-- that''s something, is n''t it?"
40612Was he soon enough to observe what was on the table?
40612Was it not a trial to part?
40612Was the dead alive?
40612Were n''t they talking of her at Lady Annette''s to- night?
40612What brings you here but the public service?
40612What could it be that made her suddenly so silent and grave?
40612What does it signify whether a thing be English or French, provided it be a benefit?
40612What does your daughter say to it?"
40612What have been their effects on outward circumstances, and through that certain channel, on the men?
40612What if the dunder- headed fellow had meant to convey a warning to me?
40612What is it?"
40612What on earth was to become of me now?
40612What sort of visitation?"
40612What treatment do you call this?
40612What was I to do, where lay my head, or how find the lodgings engaged for me by the dear departed?
40612What was now to be done?
40612What would you have me do?"
40612What would you like to take?"
40612Where is Sir Arthur?''
40612Who has not had a cold?
40612Who has not seen at some time an empty house which has struck them as the picture of desolation?
40612Who is your master?
40612Who knows but more cliff may be coming down?
40612Who shall estimate the complacency of the good clergyman at this complete solution of the greatest mystery he had ever encountered?
40612Who will not honor the courage and fortitude of the ladies, and rejoice that their dwelling escaped the evil reputation of being a Haunted House?
40612Who would not have trembled for such a country?
40612Why not have ranged over Europe, in search of more potent and pernicious tyrants, or, at least, have run thy beak into the dark heart of Robespierre?
40612Why should I make the wretch the confidant of my timidity?
40612Why should you conceal any thing from me?
40612Why so?"
40612Why, what do you mean?"
40612Would you not grieve to part with me, my mother?"
40612You see you were member for Lansmere once, and I think you came in but by two majority, eh?"
40612You would not injure my prospects?
40612[ Illustration: Here, while the courtier glitters in brocade] If to the city sped-- what waits him there?
40612could not all Reprieve the tottering mansion from its fall?
40612couldst thou not have spared them to me a little longer?"
40612cried Ursula,"what hast Thou done for me this day?
40612did she love Thomas Winthorpe, too?
40612do you know that I have left St. Petersburg to be free from such annoyances?''
40612or rather, who has not had many colds?
40612said Mr. Gurney,"What did you see?"
40612sign it John Randolph of Roanoke?"
40612thine, the loveliest train, Do thy fair tribes participate her pain?
40612to what have I exposed myself?"
40612where shall poverty reside, To''scape the pressure of contiguous pride?
40612who reads Pope or Dryden now?
40612you are not so dull a fellow as you would make yourself out to be; and, even if an author did thrust himself forward, what objection is there to that?
40612you love me; do you not?
40612you painted them?"
39190Ah,said a bed- ridden old Hebrew woman to me, as I visited the mission hospital in Jerusalem,"what can the doctors do for me?
39190And abandon his profession? 39190 And pray, sir, what times do you call the good old times?"
39190And she-- where is_ she_? 39190 And what did you do?"
39190And what did your neighbors say of the transaction? 39190 And when will ours come?"
39190And why were your sufferings as nothing in comparison with poor Myra''s?
39190And you travel alone by railway? 39190 Are not the people sovereign?--whose will have we sworn to obey, but theirs?"
39190Are there so many men''s daughters in the list, that you forget her name?
39190Are you made whole?
39190But can not the divine wrath be appeased?
39190But how came you to London?
39190But what have you got for yourself?
39190But why should she be vexed? 39190 Call me Catherine, wo n''t you?
39190Could she speak? 39190 Did she know it was Lizzie''s child?
39190Did she?
39190Did you tell her about Lizzie, then?
39190Do come and sit down,she said, encouraged by Mrs. Danvers''s invitation,"and tell us, have you breakfasted?
39190Do n''t you think so? 39190 Does she play backgammon tolerably?
39190E a Frosinone, e a Valomontone?
39190For that God you have just spoken about-- for His sake-- tell me are you Susan Palmer? 39190 Han ye known Susan Palmer long?"
39190Has the old Mr. Palmer thou telled me on a daughter?
39190Has the workwoman brought her bill with her, Reynolds?
39190Have you any idea when, sir?
39190How could I? 39190 How do you know that I am called Maurice?"
39190How so?
39190Is it come at last?
39190Is it not true, dear,said his mother,"that the pleasures we prepare for others are the best of all?"
39190Is my sword a wreath of rushes, Or an idle plume my pen, That they dare to lay a finger On the meanest of my men? 39190 Is she cocket at all?"
39190It is so fearfully cold,was the reply;"and when_ will_ you have done, and come to bed?"
39190It would be inhospitable to permit you to depart,he said, addressing the legates,"without some refreshment; choose-- will you eat or drink?"
39190May I look at the pattern? 39190 Mother, shall Tom read you a chapter?
39190Mother,then said Will,"why will you keep on thinking she''s alive?
39190My father was ill the last time you were in Nottinghamshire, do you not recollect, Miss Melwyn? 39190 Nay, my dears,"said Mrs. Danvers, kindly;"why this?
39190Not so,he exclaimed, with a terrible oath;"you shall not leave my city without some remembrance of me; say, will you eat or drink?"
39190Oh, a man ca n''t be cross with a reader? 39190 One o''clock striking, and you hav''n''t done yet, Lettice?
39190Shall I do it for you?
39190That was not the lodging I found you in?
39190Those the good old old times? 39190 Was it in the good old times that Harold fell at Hastings, and William the Conqueror enslaved England?
39190Well but,rejoined Catherine,"do pray tell us how you came to this cruel pass?
39190Well then,resumed the Statue,"my dear sir, shall we take the two or three reigns preceding?
39190Well, then,said Catherine, now quite relieved, and looking round the room,"where shall we begin?
39190Well, what times do you mean by the good old times?
39190Well; and your mother? 39190 Well?"...
39190Were Charles the Second''s the good old times?
39190What are you?
39190What is your opinion of James the First''s reign? 39190 Whatten sort of a lass is she, for I ha''never seen her?"
39190Where have they taken her to?
39190Where is the order for this woman''s execution?
39190Why did not she take better care of her child?
39190Why is not the Père Michel with you now?
39190Why should''st thou not tell her thou lov''s her? 39190 Why, madam, what am I to expect?
39190Will you hold the child for me one instant?
39190Would''st like to go back to Upclose Farm?
39190_ Miss Melwyn!_ What does that mean? 39190 Alderman Carden-- If I send you for a month to Bridewell, and from thence into an industrial school, will you stick honestly to labor? 39190 And then a light comed into her face, trembling and quivering with some new, glad thought; and what dost thou think it was, Will, lad? 39190 And then, who''s to read to you, papa, when I am gone, and play backgammon? 39190 And you, dear, dear Lettice, how can you, how have you come to this?
39190Are we not in one box?
39190Are you enamored of the good old times of the Gunpowder Plot?
39190Are you not sure?
39190As a mere matter of policy, the state ought to educate the people; and why did he say so?
39190At last she said:"Where is she now?"
39190At what point of this series of bloody and cruel annals will you place the times which you praise?
39190At what stage of King Charles the First''s career did the good old times exist, Mr. Alderman?
39190Blenkinsop?"
39190Blenkinsop?"
39190But Mrs. Price, your aunt, who was so fond of Myra, what is become of her?"
39190But after all it was natural in this case, for who could look at Susan without loving her?
39190But all he could say was,"Oh, Susan, how can I comfort you?
39190But do you think, poor dear girl, I could have a moment''s peace, and know you were here alone?
39190But he only said,"How was she looking, mother?"
39190But how?
39190But if she took the shawl, had she not better light the fire before she went out?
39190But what are_ you_?
39190But where can she be?"
39190By ALBERT SMITH 198 Globes, and how they are Made 165 Greenwich Weather- wisdom 265 Habits of the African Lion 480 Have great Poets become impossible?
39190By LEIGH HUNT 400 What becomes of all the clever Children?
39190By the good old times, do you mean the reign of George the Third?"
39190By whom was Burns neglected?
39190Can I, dear Mrs. Danvers?
39190Can he undo the knowledge which men then attained of each other, and their suppressed ideas?
39190Can not we think of poets without thinking of pensions?
39190Catherine went on in a tone of the most affectionate kindness,"have you come all through the streets and alone this most miserable morning?
39190Could this be the source of the Père''s sorrow?
39190Dear Lettice, how has all this come about?"
39190Did she do nothing?"
39190Did they not think this rich man an arrant rogue?"
39190Did you ever notice how things went on at home, my dear friend?"
39190Do n''t you know that we statues are apt to speak when spoken to, at these hours?
39190Do n''t you see it?"
39190Do n''t you think so, too, ma''am?"
39190Do they call this a bed?
39190Do you like it strong?"
39190Do you regard this wig and pigtail period as constituting the good old times, respected friend?"
39190Does nature present insurmountable engineering difficulties to the Panama scheme?
39190Does not this appear incredible?
39190Does your worship fancy these were the good old times?"
39190Faut- il être s''il chérissait l''image Do nt il est la réalité?"
39190Had the maid a confederate-- perhaps her fellow- servant on the box-- to whom she might have given the signal?
39190Had you not better settle it before she leaves?"
39190Have we not troubles enough?
39190Have you breakfasted?"
39190Have you encountered cannon- balls and death in all shapes, and now want the strength and courage to meet the curse of idleness?"
39190He asked again,"Will you, mother, agree to this?"
39190He may come and see thee, may n''t he?"
39190Her hair was dingy and disordered; to be sure there was but a broken comb to straighten it with, and who could do any thing with_ such_ a comb?
39190How could you exist?"
39190How have you lived through it?
39190How old is this thing you''re trying to put upon us, did you say?"
39190How should_ she_ ever get through the debates, with her breath so short, and her voice so indistinct and low?
39190I am very sorry-- won''t you forgive me?"
39190I am very thankful, deeply thankful, for this offer, which I should gladly accept, only what is to become of you?"
39190I ca n''t go, indeed, Mrs. Danvers, I ca n''t go;"with a pleading look,"may I stay one day longer?"
39190I pay tithes enough to the black coated gentlemen, without being bothered with their children, and who ever pays tithes to us, I wonder?
39190If I can not bear a few disagreeable things, what do I go there for?
39190In vain they dipped their hands in the red life- blood, and, holding up their dripping fingers, asked,"How did it differ from that of the canaille?"
39190Is it my child that lies a- dying?"
39190Is it not all the same to us both?
39190Is this our time, when we have lost those who gave us bread, and got in their place only those who would feed us with carnage?"
39190Lamb in thanking the poet for his strange but clever poem, asked"Where was''The Wagoner?''"
39190Lomax?"
39190Melwyn''s?"
39190Nay( and she smiled as the idea presented itself), was it not possible that she might be supposed to have a better bonnet at home?
39190Nay, her romantic imagination traveled still farther-- gentlemen sometimes come up with ladies to show- rooms,--who could tell?
39190No amount of circumcision can annul the Briton''s right-- Are they mad, these lords of Athens, for I know they can not fight?
39190Of British subjugation by the Romans?
39190Of Danish ravage and slaughter?
39190Of John''s declaring himself the Pope''s vassal, and performing dental operations on the Jews?
39190Of Richard the Second''s assassination?
39190Of the Forest Laws and Curfew under the Norman kings?
39190Of the advent of Hengist and Horsa?
39190Of the battles, burnings, massacres, cruel tormentings, and atrocities, which form the sum of the Plantagenet reigns?
39190On consideration, should you fix the good old times any where thereabouts?"
39190One hundred and ten pounds a year, was that all?
39190Or were they those of the Saxon Heptarchy, and the worship of Thor and Odin?
39190Pauvre petite, what had you to do with politics?"
39190Pray come to the fire, and sit down and warm yourself; and have you breakfasted?"
39190Presently Lettice, for Lettice it was, awakened a little, and said,"What is it, love?
39190Rather than part from her what would he not do?
39190Said his sister''s angel to the leader,"Is my brother come?"
39190Said his sister''s angel to the leader:"Is my brother come?"
39190Said his sister''s angel to the leader:"Is my brother come?"
39190She spoke to me in a kind voice, asked me my name?
39190Should she borrow it?
39190Should you think ninepence an unreasonable charge?
39190So, at least, it seems to me-- but who knows?
39190That''s what humble friends are expected to do, I believe; what else are they hired for?"
39190The alderman, moved by his manner, asked him if he had parents?
39190The back of the fire?
39190The rajah returns to- morrow from his hunting-- what can I say?
39190Then he said,"What took you there, mother?"
39190Then what will you say to those of James the Second?
39190They used to say to one another, sometimes, Supposing all the children upon earth were to die, would the flowers, and the water, and the sky be sorry?
39190This era of inhumanity, shamelessness, brigandage, brutality, and personal and political insecurity, what say you of it, Mr. Blenkinsop?
39190Thou''lt not be harder than thy father, Will?
39190WHY IS HARD WATER UNFIT FOR DOMESTIC PURPOSES?
39190Was not that beautiful?"
39190Was this all that you had to say, my dear?"
39190Were the good old times those of Northumberland''s rebellion?
39190Were they the good old times when Judge Jefferies sat on the bench?
39190Were those blissful years the ages of monkery; of Odo and Dunstan, bearding monarchs and branding queens?
39190Were those the good old times when Sanguinary Mary roasted bishops, and lighted the fires of Smithfield?
39190What Spectre, gliding tow''rd the rays Of rising sun, meets Russian gaze, And is it fright, amaze, or awe, Distends each eye and hangs each jaw?
39190What do you want most?
39190What has been the condition of the countries under consideration?
39190What has made thy heart so sore as to come and cry a- this- ons?
39190What is your charge, my dear?
39190What must I do with thee?
39190What shall I do without her?"
39190What think you of the then existing state of prisons and prison discipline?
39190What was I to do?
39190What will you have?
39190What would Everybody have thought of the murder of Mary Queen of Scots?
39190What''s come o''er the woman?"
39190What, then, would have been the use of cutting a canal, through which there would not have passed five ships in a twelvemonth?
39190When Henry the Eighth, the British Bluebeard, cut his wives heads off, and burnt Catholic and Protestant at the same stake?
39190When Jack Cade marched upon London?
39190When Richard the Third smothered his nephews in the Tower?
39190When so spoken to, she answered only,"You do n''t know a poor girl they call Lizzie Leigh, do you?"
39190When the Wars of the Roses deluged the land with blood?
39190When we were disgracefully driven out of France under Henry the Sixth, or, as disgracefully, went marauding there, under Henry the Fifth?
39190When you_ have_ work, you wo n''t forget me, will you, dear?"
39190Where is your father?
39190Wherefore did ye lay a finger on the carpets of the Jew?
39190While he was away, the tongue of Rome was let loose, and can he make the ear of Rome forget what it heard in those days of license?
39190While we were looking at the half- finished buildings, my maid said,''Was it not in this neighborhood that M. de S---- died?''
39190Who can it be?
39190Who can prove his own personal identity?
39190Who taught thee that famous canticle?"
39190Why could he not feel this for his wife and children?
39190Why did you not come last night?
39190Why did you not put up your umbrella?"
39190Why were they needed?
39190Would you like to see your mother?"
39190Yet a child appreciates at once the divine necessity for truth; never asks,"What harm is there in saying the thing there is not?"
39190You hear me, child?"
39190Your mother?
39190Your sister?"
39190_ Are_ they such poor creatures, that they can not earn an honest living?
39190and can she read without drawling or galloping?"
39190and when does the next go?
39190and whether it was for the interest of Britain to maintain the balance of Europe?
39190cried she, piteously,"poor dear things, how could you sleep at all?
39190how has all this come about?"
39190my children, who will care for them?
39190or did not his affliction seem too great for such a cause?
39190or if knowledge could be too much disseminated among the lower ranks of the people?
39190or when Sir Walter Raleigh was beheaded?
39190said Lettice,"can you really be so naughty?
39190stammered the officer, with a painful air;"How dare you to step between me and death?"
39190those two wandered away together?
39190what crime did my father commit that I should thus be disgraced?"
39190what''s come o''er thee?"
39190what''s this about going to Manchester?"
39190where are they all?
39190where we were going?
39190who were my parents?
39190why should I be a domestic slave?
39190wo n''t you love it?"
39190ye shades Of Pope and Dryden, are we come to this?
13831Are there no peculiar features of an Oriental, mental and moral, which infallibly and always distinguish him from an Occidental?
13831Did not the Greeks transform Christianity before they accepted it? 13831 How can such a mushroom- growth, necessarily without deep roots in the past, be real and strong and permanent?
13831ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL?
13831ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS?
13831Again, are they competent judges who say the Japanese are non- religious?
13831And can we then remember our present life?
13831And did not the Romans, and finally the Germans, do the same?
13831And do we become new- created when we awake?
13831And does impersonality mean the lack of such an effect?
13831And how explain these unæsthetic phenomena?
13831And how far, as a matter of fact, has this assimilation gone?
13831And how has it come to pass that, ruled by this ideal until less than fifty years ago, Japan is now facing quite the other way?
13831And if so, is this due to their nature, or may it be attributed to their family life as molded by the social order?
13831And if the verbs in large numbers are impersonal, does not that clinch the matter?
13831And in what land has the apotheosizing imagination been more active than in Japan?
13831And is there not an unblushing prostitution in the larger cities of England and America which would put to shame the licensed prostitution of Japan?
13831And what has been the relation of these world- views to the social order?
13831And what is the true criterion for its measurement?
13831Are Japanese cruel or humane?
13831Are Orientals and their civilization universally esteemed and considerately treated in the Occident?
13831Are naturalists and scientists"impersonal,"and are philosophers and psychologists"personal"in nature?
13831Are not these ends incompatible?
13831Are our facts correct?
13831Are our theories wrong?
13831Are the Japanese any less courageous now than they were thirty years ago?
13831Are the Japanese conspicuously deficient in imagination, in the sense of the definition given above?
13831Are the Japanese really better off without these implements of Western civilization?
13831Are the assumptions wholly groundless?
13831Are the destinies of the Oriental races already unalterably determined?
13831Are the traits of Japanese character considered in this chapter inherent and necessary?
13831Are there not here the most powerful representations possible of human emotions, both active and passive?
13831Are these, properly speaking, Japanese works of art-- or Korean or Chinese?
13831Are they inherent traits of the race?
13831Are we to believe that these are individuals who have an excessive amount of"personality"?
13831Are we to say that the Japanese are more courageous than other peoples?
13831As a result conspicuous manifestations of the revengeful spirit have disappeared, and, may we not rightly say, even the spirit itself?
13831As a truth, how is it to be explained?
13831Beneath this light alliterative style, which delights the literary reader, do we find the truth?
13831But did she develop nothing new and independent?
13831But does not this introduce us to new confusion?
13831But granting that this word is used with a legitimate meaning, we ask, is altruism in this sense an inherent quality of the Japanese race?
13831But has this characteristic become congenital, or is it still only social?
13831But have we not now traced one root of this seeming characteristic of New Japan?
13831But in that case how can he help the poor man or even continue to think of him?
13831But is jealousy a characteristic limited to women?
13831But is not this an impossible condition to satisfy?
13831But supposing them to be true, are they the differentiating characteristics of the Orient?
13831But then arises the difficulty of understanding how the same individuals can be both profusely polite and morbidly sensitive at one and the same time?
13831But what are the facts?
13831But what shall we say in regard to the assumption made by young Japan in its attitude to foreigners?
13831But why do they not so express it?
13831Can a nation fully possessed by one type of civilization reject it, and adopt one radically different?
13831Can a people change its character?
13831Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots?
13831Can they live together?
13831Consider for a moment what was the position of woman in ancient times in the Occident, and what was the moral character of Occidental men?
13831Did it not serve to maintain, if not actually to produce, a system of dissimulation and deception which could but injure the national character?
13831Did the primitive Occidental man produce them outright from the moment that he discovered himself?
13831Directly he feels, and directly does he respond.... Is not this the divinity of Heaven and Earth?
13831Do Japanese husbands love their wives and wives their husbands?
13831Do not the questions still remain-- Why did the Japanese so suddenly abandon Oriental for Occidental civilization?
13831Do not these phenomena refute assertions to the effect that the Japanese are so impersonal as not to know what it is to"fall in love"?
13831Do races have"souls"which are fixed and incapable of radical transformations?
13831Do the Japanese excel in philosophy, or are they conspicuously deficient?
13831Do we then cease to be, when we sleep?
13831Does acquired personality react on intrinsic personality?
13831Does moral or even national authority really reside in the Emperor?
13831Does not that"bundle of ideas"become broken into as many wholly independent fragments as there are intervals between our sleepings?
13831Does this not mean that appeal has been made from the communal sanctions of might to the supra- communal sanctions of right?
13831Does"impersonality"then follow personality, as a matter of historical development?
13831For in what land has not the prime interest in metaphysics been ethical?
13831Has, then, any religion secured such a dual development as we have just seen to be necessary?
13831He also asked the question who made God?
13831How about the passionate features of the Ni- o, the placid faces of the Buddhas and other religious imagery?
13831How about the pictures and the statues of warriors?
13831How are we to account for the wide æsthetic development of all classes of the Japanese?
13831How can it be otherwise if consciousness constitutes existence?
13831How can it escape being chiefly superficial?"
13831How can they be zealous for them or recognize any authority in them?
13831How could the same social order produce two moral ideals?
13831How explain the multiplied original ways in which bamboo and straw are used?
13831How have these characteristics arisen?
13831How long is it since fiendish mobs have burned or lynched the objects of their rage?
13831How long is it since slaves were feeling the lash throughout the Southern States of our"land of freedom"?
13831How long is it since societies for preventing cruelty to animals and to children were established in England and America?
13831How long is it since the Inquisition was enforced in Europe?
13831How long is it since witches were burned, not only in Europe by the thousand, but in enlightened and Christian New England?
13831How much affection can be expressed by low formal bows?
13831How say you that none will know it?"
13831How shall he fall into error?
13831How shall he forget it?
13831How shall we explain this paradox?
13831How was this to be explained?
13831IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL?
13831If it is a fact, what is the interpretation?
13831If not, how can we think at all?
13831If not, why is it so widespread a belief?
13831If so, which will be victor?
13831If the psychic characteristics are equally distinct, why do not they who assert this distinctness describe and catalogue these differences?
13831If their social intercourse is due only to the accident of business or of social functions, what true intimacy can possibly arise?
13831If"impersonality"were an inherent characteristic of Japanese race nature, would it be possible for strong personalities to arise?
13831In adopting Western methods of life and thought, is Japan advancing or receding?
13831In either case, is the characteristic due to essential race nature or to some other cause?
13831In other words, is her new civilization only external, formal, nominal, unreal?
13831In other words, is there to be a new civilization-- a Japanese, an Occidento- Oriental civilization?
13831In taking up our various illustrations regarding personality in Japan, three points demand our attention; what are the facts?
13831In view of her protracted separation from the languages of other peoples, should we not expect marked deficiency in this respect?
13831In what land have the ideal and practice of loyalty been higher?
13831In what nation has there ever been such a setting aside of parental teaching and ancestral authority?
13831Is Japan an exception?
13831Is it a matter of inherent nature, or of civilization?
13831Is it a quality, then, of the other person?
13831Is it due to deep- lying race nature, to the quality of the race brain?
13831Is it due to difference of race soul, and thus to racial antipathy, as some maintain?
13831Is it due to the"impersonality"of the Orient, as urged by some?
13831Is it more general?
13831Is it not a fact that the studied evasion of first personal pronouns by cultured people in the West is due to their developed consciousness of self?
13831Is it not a suggestive fact that it was needful to establish them and that it is still needful to maintain them?
13831Is it now clear why Buddhism failed to reach the idea of the worth of the individual self?
13831Is it possible for one who has no consciousness of self to conceive as impolite the excessive use of egoistic forms of speech?
13831Is not prostitution licensed to- day in the leading cities of Europe?
13831Is not"self- consciousness"here identified with"consciousness"in the preceding sentence?
13831Is the change real or superficial?
13831Is the self- confidence unjustified?
13831Is the æsthetic sense more highly developed in Japan than in the West?
13831Is there, then, no difference between consciousness and self- consciousness?
13831Is this a fact?
13831Is this from lack of emotion?
13831It remains to be asked why the Japanese are more emotional than other races?
13831Judging from the pre- Elizabethan literature, who would have expected the brilliancy of the Elizabethan period?
13831Let us then ask: what does Heaven hate, and what does Heaven love?
13831Looked at closely, and studied in its implications, what is this but a developing form of communal religion?
13831Must we not say that the element of affection in the present social order is deficient because the Japanese themselves are naturally deficient?
13831Now has Japan imported only the tools of civilization?
13831Now is it not evident that such a method of introspection deprives the conception of self of all possible value?
13831Now what is the cause of this characteristic of the Japanese?
13831Old Japan was not accustomed to ask"Why?"
13831Once when Confucius was asked about the doctrine of Lao- Tse that one should return good for evil, he replied,"With what then should one reward good?
13831Or are they the product of the times?
13831Or is it not rather the social and intellectual and ethical state of a people?
13831Or is one going to drive out and annihilate the other?
13831Or is there to be modification of both?
13831Or may these characteristics change with the social order?
13831Or rather is not each fragment a whole in itself, and is not the idea of self- continuity from day to day and from week to week a self- delusion?
13831Rules of etiquette are the products of the æsthetic imagination, and in what land has etiquette been more developed than in feudal Japan?
13831Said a professor of Harvard University to the writer some years ago:"Do you in Japan find it difficult to become truly acquainted with the Japanese?
13831Shall we argue from this that the Japanese people have no sense of relation?
13831Should we expect an immediate change of character when the social order has been suddenly changed?
13831So they argue;"and who so fit to do it as we?"
13831The Japanese think they have; and what foreigner can say that, under the circumstances and in view of the conditions of the people, they have not?
13831The publicity of the private(?)
13831The question of importance, however, is whether they have it in a marked degree, more, for instance, than Americans?
13831The unity that pervades the Orient, if it is not due to the inheritance of a common psychic nature, to what is it due?
13831Then, again, when we stop to think of it, is it not a pretty fine line that we draw between legitimate and illegitimate profits?
13831This seems plain and straightforward, but is it really so?
13831Though she does not work hard at any one time( and is it to be wondered at?)
13831Toward the latter part of our conversation, referring to one idea expressed, he said,"That is about what Hegel held, is it not?"
13831Under such conditions how was progress possible?
13831We may suggest our line of thought by asking what is the fundamental element of civilization?
13831Were the Japanese mere imitators, how could we explain their architecture, so different from that of China and Korea?
13831Were these same tests applied to any European people, what would be the result?
13831What are the steps by which she has effected this apparent national reversal of attitude?
13831What are to be the final consequences of this wide intercourse?
13831What as to the relation of mankind to that Ultimate Reality?
13831What does this mean?
13831What does this show?
13831What foreigner ever decorated a little lapdog with a red- green- yellow- blue- and purple crocheted collar, four or five inches wide?
13831What has taken place in Japan, a profound, or only a superficial change in psychical character?
13831What have been their views as to the nature of the ultimate reality lying behind all phenomena?
13831What is it that makes the Occidental longer- lived than the Japanese?
13831What is the bond of connection that binds into one the successive consciousnesses of the successive days?
13831What is the charm in these distortions?
13831What is the nature of personal heredity?
13831What is the origin of the characteristic?
13831What more convincing evidence of powerful, though distorted, wills could be asked than that furnished by Oriental asceticism?
13831What nation, for example, ever voluntarily set itself to learn the ways and thoughts and languages of foreign nations as persistently as Japan?
13831What now is the sociological interpretation of the foregoing facts?
13831What would be the psychic characteristics of that child when grown to manhood?
13831What, then, did the new government do?
13831What, then, is the meaning when applied to them?
13831Whence is fortune?
13831Which principle is to succeed, apotheosis and absolute Imperial sovereignty, or individualism with democratic sovereignty?
13831Who can read of the tortures there inflicted without shuddering with horror?
13831Who can say that no originality was required to develop such a system, so opposed at vital points to the prevalent Buddhism of the day?
13831Who has done?
13831Why are his children more energetic?
13831Why are the young so prominent?
13831Why has Japanese art made so little of man as man?
13831Why has she so easily turned from the customs of centuries?
13831Why is he a more developed personality?
13831Why is he healthier?
13831Why is he more intelligent?
13831Why is the number of the blind steadily diminishing?
13831Why is the rising generation so free from pockmarks?
13831With this in mind, we naturally ask whether they show any unusual proficiency or deficiency in the acquisition of foreign languages?
13831XXV ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS?
13831XXX ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL?
13831XXXII IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL?
13831XXXVI WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT?
13831Yet I would not lay much stress on this argument, for oftentimes( or is it always true?)
13831Yet how is this consistent with the cheerful disposition which seems so characteristic of Japan?
13831[ AM] What, then, are the facts?
13831[ B] III THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS What constitutes progress?
13831and are the facts sufficiently accounted for by the communal theory of the Japanese social order?
13831are they due to, and do they prove, the asserted"impersonality"of the people?
13831or I?
13831or he?
13831or is it not also a characteristic of men?
13831or when absorbed in thought or action?
13831you?
61572A great number of questions may be raised on this fact: it may be asked, indeed it has been asked, whether it is for good or evil?
61572An inquiry necessarily arises, What was the Christian church at that epoch?
61572And can it be otherwise?
61572And how can you destroy such men?
61572And how do you repress it?
61572And if there is really danger in any part of our frontiers, do you believe it to be caused by the presence of a few obscure and impoverished exiles?
61572And in what case, and under what conditions?
61572And not only did they miscarry, but what were the means they were constrained to employ?
61572And what fear have you then inspired?
61572And what is more natural?
61572And when we speak of the responsibility which must supply the place of independence, is the question of that alone?
61572And why?
61572Are these not also the objects of truly philosophic legislation?
61572Are they inclined to imagine it justice which condemns a man to death for a political offence?
61572As for sovereigns, more than one in Europe believes himself menaced; but is it by a rival or a pretender?
61572Besides, what do you call impunity?
61572Besides, whose is the necessity for the blow?
61572But do they contain the feudal family?
61572But is it quite certain that society is really so often in danger as power believes it to be?
61572But is it to be concluded from this that government has not subsisted, that, in fact, there has been no government?
61572But now what are ministers when their power has left them?
61572But was the scaffold the only strength of the Convention?
61572But what do I wish?
61572But what risk did you run?
61572But when did it end?
61572But will Divine justice consider only the intention?
61572But will that suffice?
61572By its justice?
61572Did M. Cuquet de Montarlot give you serious cause of alarm?
61572Do they suppose this rigour wholesome, and does it appear necessary to their common sense?
61572Do we ask of ministers to make the responsibility of the ministry they undertake a reality?
61572Do we not discover at the dissolution of the Roman Empire almost all the elements which meet in the progressive development of our civilisation?
61572Do we recognise the society we have just beheld in the twelfth?
61572Do you not see that similar commutations are in absolute harmony with the present state of morals and the nature of political dangers?
61572Does it act more powerfully through fear?
61572Does it desire then to act as if it were so?
61572Does it exercise even unconsciously an influence over their conduct?
61572Does it not veil from, or rather does it not reveal to man, an origin and a destiny which is not of this world?
61572Does power show itself so eager for, and so prodigal of, capital punishment?
61572Does the fact of civilisation contain nothing more?
61572For what reason?
61572Has the association in view some skilful investigation or enterprise?
61572Has the nature of this right been well examined?
61572Has this officer the right to do so, and would the ministers allow it?
61572Have governments any instinctive knowledge of this fact?
61572Have the revolutions of Spain, Portugal, Naples, Piedmont, been the fruit of a litigation for the throne, the work of an ambitious subject?
61572Have we exhausted all that its natural and prevailing meaning conveys?
61572How are they so largely compensated, in the opinion of mankind, for what they are so deficient in on other grounds?
61572How came it to pass that the Reformation, so fierce and stubborn in many respects, thus showed itself so accommodating and supple?
61572How came its introduction into European civilisation?
61572How can it be thought that crimes of this kind call for capital punishment as clearly or loudly as they formerly did?
61572How can so evident an analogy be mistaken?
61572How come these countries, then, thus styled civilised, to possess their exclusive right?
61572How could it be otherwise than that both, philosophers and nations, should believe in the veritable existence of a sovereign right?
61572How could the citizens or peasants conceive the idea of changing the government and seizing the authority?
61572How did it discover, and draw out from the obscurity of the mass, those legitimately superior spirits entitled to take part in the government?
61572How does it not see that, if these were less frequent and less solemn, they would have less power?
61572How does this wrong affect individual unconsciousness of error?
61572How is it possible to escape their power?
61572How moves the world?
61572How must power act upon them?
61572How strive against that which has destroyed such a man?
61572How to escape this danger?
61572How to realise the social responsibility of removable magistrates?
61572How was the church, thus admitting all men to power, assured as to the justness of their claims?
61572I am ashamed to insist upon these commonplaces of common sense; but what is to be done?
61572I ask the same question as before-- Is this a people advancing in civilisation?
61572I ask, what impression would such a phrase produce on the mind of this man?
61572I know it; but revolutions are not permanent; and do governments think themselves of a like transitory nature?
61572I, who am the interpreter of justice and truth, shall I be debarred from regulating earthly matters according to justice and truth?''
61572If capital punishment is of little efficacy, and I think I have proved the fact, how can it be necessary?
61572If the insurrection is suppressed, what is the first act of the conqueror?
61572If the punishment of death is politically useless, inefficacious, and even dangerous, wherefore not say so at once?
61572If you have not this foresight, but hasten to irrecoverable steps, know you what will happen?
61572In a word, is society made to serve the individual, or the individual to serve society?
61572In killing an enemy, it did away with danger; and what could be more natural than to gratify vengeance while insuring safety?
61572Is a warlike expedition contemplated?
61572Is it a civilised condition?
61572Is it a combat of the same nature which now takes place between power and society, or those great portions of society which it considers enemies?
61572Is it banishment, imprisonment, transportation?
61572Is it imagined that punishments alone will prevent conspiracies?
61572Is it necessary for it to provoke the application of capital punishment, or to allow it to be inflicted?
61572Is it not by such spectacles that the Revolution overturned not only society, but habits and ideas?
61572Is it not clear that against such dangers, and against such adversaries, capital punishment is neither powerful nor necessary?
61572Is it not permitted to bring less violent indictments involving lighter punishments?
61572Is it not that each proclaims itself to be solely legitimate?
61572Is it prudent or is it unavoidable to allow the strife to assume this character?
61572Is it quite certain that the dangers which power dreads are indeed those which it is the object of the penal laws to prevent?
61572Is it so difficult to keep some mercy in reserve for days of security?
61572Is it that they have a more serious effect?
61572Is it, indeed, so politically?
61572Is not this a mournful consideration?
61572Is the action of the public ministry in matters of political crimes spontaneous and independent in principle?
61572Is the case urgent?
61572Is the punishment of death more efficacious, and therefore more necessary, against the dangers which spring up lower in society?
61572Is there any one who does not demand the legal abolition of capital punishment as a political engine?
61572Is there anything coercive in all this?
61572Is there nothing necessarily false or dangerous in granting that it is thereby adequately represented?
61572Is this a people in the process of self- civilisation?
61572Is this all?
61572Is this enough?
61572Is this obligation to do good, which subsists by itself, an isolated fact, without an author or an end?
61572It has struck: has it proved its strength or increased its peril?
61572It has succeeded, however: who can at this day gainsay it?
61572It is certain that an offence has been committed against morality, and society put in danger, and upon whom will the punishment fall?
61572It may be asked, perhaps, what I hope from this work?
61572Might not more danger accrue from this spectacle than from the most powerful adversary of government?
61572Now, let us ask, what was the real lot of the inhabitants, how were their lives passed, and what was their share of happiness?
61572Of what consequence was one of the people, a peasant or a petty bourgeois, in the times when such classes were treated in the manner we have seen?
61572Of what, then, do you complain?
61572Once set out in the way where it meets with such difficulties, can it turn back?
61572Or if it persists, and proceeds in employing the means which those necessities command, will it succeed in its design?
61572Power has prosecuted: was it right in provoking this judgment?
61572Shall we obtain them one day, and on what conditions can such a magistracy have a place in our constitutional system?
61572Should this salutary belief be broken down?
61572The danger past, of what use is severity?
61572The imperfection of legal justice will declare itself in all its extent; and, in fact, what is the imperfection of justice but injustice?
61572The question is no longer who governs, but how he governs?
61572This party may not wish what they wish, and may not believe what they believe; but what of that?
61572This was likewise the opinion of the Constituent Assembly; and what resulted from it?
61572To attain this end, it behoves us to enter upon the preliminary investigation, whether religion is, in fact, purely individual?
61572To which category do these causes of action belong which generally urge men to political offences?
61572Under what native laws was the present government placed?
61572Upon what conditions, and under what limitations, is that personification admissible?
61572Upon what head will it let fall its vengeance?
61572Was it taxed with persecution?
61572Was there ever a true faction that was anything else than a union of banditti forced on by their own base interests, and accessible only to fear?
61572Was this because power did not fear such men, or because it thought it could gain little by ridding itself of them?
61572Was this not the situation of Abraham, of all the patriarchs, and of the Arab chiefs who still present the image of the patriarchal life?
61572Were the administration, the police, the gendarmes, the custom- houses, the passports, found to be useless against such paltry designs?
61572Were they wrong in so doing?
61572What are its elements?
61572What are sects and heresies but the fruit of individual opinions?
61572What are the characteristics of supreme right, such as it derives from its very nature?
61572What caused, about the same period, those great invasions of Italy by the Franks established in Gaul, principally of the eastern or Austrasian Franks?
61572What compels it to allow crime to grow, that it may afterwards have to prosecute it?
61572What condemns it to put the judges and juries so often to the alternative of pardon or injustice?
61572What do the men who labour at it usually promise?
61572What do these facts prove, if not the uncertainty which often accompanies the characterisation of political crimes?
61572What do they treat of, unless it be to decide who has the right to govern society?
61572What does every religion lay claim to?
61572What government would now dare to use the punishment of death against the people in a manner which would render it physically efficacious?
61572What had the Restoration to do to defend society and itself from this peril?
61572What hinders it?
61572What is at stake to the governed?
61572What is in such circumstances the character of capital punishment?
61572What is its character?
61572What is needful to men in order to found a society at all durable and regular?
61572What is the effect of this formal repudiation of force by all the systems?
61572What is this progress?
61572What is to be thought, in particular, of the personification of the sovereignty of right under the image of royalty?
61572What must have been, what really was, the effect of political rigour upon a party thus composed?
61572What nation has been more divided, broken up, or varied, than the ecclesiastical nation?
61572What object can the study of philosophy have, if not to lead to that of God, to whom all ought to be referred?
61572What obliges power to remain under the necessity of requiring capital punishment for crimes which really do not merit it?
61572What say the enemies of the change?
61572What was formerly the composition of society?
61572What were its institutions and means of action?
61572What were the reproaches which its adversaries constantly fulminated against the Reformation?
61572What will be the case if we sound the peril itself deeply?
61572What will prevent these facts, for they are facts, from acting upon the public mind?
61572When Rome extended, what were her proceedings?
61572Whence arises this anomaly, and what does it reveal to us of the fate of the party?
61572Whence formerly proceeded the dangers of a sovereign, or even of a minister?
61572Whence, otherwise, could the royal inviolability derive its meaning, or, in other words, its guarantee?
61572Where are now those eminent and avowed chiefs, whom to destroy was to destroy a party?
61572Where could falsehood elsewhere hide itself?
61572Where were its elements of power, and what means of action were fitted to its position and its nature?
61572Where, now, are these enmities, and this personal ambition, which power thus disputed?
61572Which is right, and which wrong?
61572Which of its results did they cast, so to speak, in its teeth to reduce it to silence?
61572Who does not know what prodigious blindness possesses political factions, and with what mad certainty each reckons upon its strength and success?
61572Who flatters himself with seizing or preserving supremacy by the mere destruction of an enemy?
61572Who is not acquainted with the records of Indian literature not long ago disseminated through Europe?
61572Who shall say that all these laws were in the right?
61572Who were the first crusaders who put themselves in motion?
61572Who will hinder it from seeing and taking account of them?
61572Who will say that it abuses its option when it stops crime and punishment in their progress towards each other?
61572Who would even insinuate a doubt?
61572Who would now treat the multitude, composed of students, merchants, master- workmen, and farmers, as it was treated formerly?
61572Who, however, will deny that Christianity, from the first, was a great crisis in civilisation?
61572Why did they precipitate themselves on Switzerland, pass the Alps, and enter Italy?
61572Why did this contest occur in England rather than elsewhere?
61572Why do so many men, in the hope of fortune or glory, face so heedlessly the cannon of battle?
61572Why go in search of kingdoms in Asia, when they had them to conquer at their thresholds?
61572Why is it so, or rather with what intention is it so?
61572Why not reduce it, from the first, to this character?
61572Why not stifle it there?
61572Why should truth be silent till it is proclaimed by facts so terrible?
61572Why were the revolutions of a political character more nearly simultaneous with those of a moral character in that country than on the continent?
61572Why, then, direct such fury against individuals whose death would be attended with more noise than benefit?
61572Why?
61572Why?
61572With whom does he establish himself?
61572Within what limits is this strange epoch contained?
61572Would capital punishments have more virtue?
61572Would he understand it?
61572Would the human race recognise it as such?
61572Would the punishment of death thus employed have the same efficacy?
61572Yet what takes place now in England?
61572and the English people?
61572or that they should not constantly be on the search for it?
61572or will it punish error?
61572should possess the kingdom of Naples?
61572succeed in establishing absolute power in Spain?
61572were not all his riches, his credit, his numerous followers, and his strong places, able to defend him?
61572what this development?
61572whether it provokes, and gives rise to, nothing more than an inward relation between each man and God?
61572with what enemies then do you deal?
61572{ 172} What society has been torn by more civil dissensions, or suffered more disruptions, than the clerical?
61572{ 264} Could this be done in our day?
61572{ 266} And wherefore, it will be asked, should these violent resistances and partial disorders now inspire so much more alarm than formerly?
61572{ 267} But what would be the consequences?
61572{ 280} What was the star of the Restoration?
61572{ 284} It is not merit to succeed by force even at the moment when it is invoked; but what government does not come to the end of its means?
61572{ 288} And what is astonishing in the fact of the condition of government and the disposition of the people having changed?
61572{ 301} But what would society of the present day think of a power which, to maintain order, had recourse to such means?
61572{ 303} And is it now necessary against this mass itself?
42693''Have you understood and well considered this my settled purpose never to be your wife?'' 42693 A great match, is it not, in a worldly point of view?"
42693After all,thought he,"why not?
42693Air you in the maydickle prayfession yourself, sir?
42693Already?
42693Am I right, Esther?
42693And do you know how pretty you are, child?
42693And good character?
42693And how old are you, child? 42693 And how,"he added,"shall we manage respecting the child?
42693And what about him?
42693And what kind of man,my Lady asks,"was this deplorable creature?"
42693And you will see that he takes it?
42693And, my dear,said Mr. Badger,"what do_ I_ always tell you?
42693Any time, sir?
42693Are you sure?
42693Ay? 42693 But do you mean to say, sir, that you live without any income at all-- that you live upon nothing?"
42693But now I have told you, you do n''t think it wrong of me; do you?
42693But what if the grenadiers themselves,Cambaceres rejoined,"should take to hissing, like the rest?"
42693But why,exclaimed he, in words singularly glowing and beautiful, but of melancholy import,"why place the question on this last resort?
42693Ca n''t you wake him?
42693Can you give the person of the house any information about this unfortunate creature, Snagsby?
42693Care? 42693 Did he owe you any rent?"
42693Do n''t you think you can receive his evidence, sir?
42693Do you think he did it on purpose?
42693Do you think my cousin John knows, dear Dame Durden?
42693Do you think,I asked, as I gave it to him,"that any men have really been smothered in that bed, as they tried to smother_ me_?"
42693Does he indeed?
42693Does the man generally sleep like this?
42693From the mountain?
42693Guardian,said I,"you remember the happy night when we first came down to Bleak House?
42693Had n''t you better see,says Mr. Tulkinghorn to Krook,"whether he had any papers that may enlighten you?
42693Have you the packet? 42693 How dare he gang to risk his life, wi''six bairns at hame?
42693How do you do, Mrs. Rouncewell? 42693 How old are you?"
42693I am sent, sir,said Mrs. Arbuthnot''s maid,"to ask if the post has arrived?"
42693I hope I have the honor of welcoming you in good health, Sir Leicester?
42693I saw one of Mr. Tulkinghorn''s long effusions, I think?
42693If you are not to make her happy, why should you pursue her?
42693Indeed?
42693Is there no little object which would recall?--nothing you could bring before her sight? 42693 Lilias, does a passion of such fearful power shock and terrify you, who have only known the placid beating of a gentle, childlike heart?
42693Might not that have made her still more proud, grandmother?
42693Mr. Arbuthnot, of Elm Park?
42693Mrs. Bayham Badger has not the appearance, Miss Summerson, of a lady who has had two former husbands?
42693No one, Rick, I think?
42693No?
42693Not even any one who had attended on him?
42693Not even that?
42693Now, I wonder who it can be about?
42693Of her?--of whom?
42693Shall I try to guess?
42693She is an engaged young lady?
42693That is a charming- looking old gentleman,said we to the gray lady;"is he Annie''s father?"
42693Took the over- dose?
42693Very requisite, no doubt,returned Mr. Kenge"I think this may be easily arranged, Mr. Jarndyce?
42693Walk?
42693Watching for her lover, no doubt?
42693Water, Miss Summerson? 42693 What are you going to do?"
42693What did they call the wretched being?
42693What did you think of the ceremony?
42693What do you mean by''Nil,''sir?
42693What have you done with your candle?
42693What is it, Ada?
42693What is that, doctor?
42693What is that?
42693What is the matter?
42693What lives ever?
42693What, sir, is the meaning of this ill- mannered intrusion?
42693When,exclaimed Napoleon,"will the French exchange their vanity for a little pride?"
42693Where is the servant?
42693Who is little Bessie?
42693Who is that pleasing- looking old gentleman?
42693Why do you make a distinction, Betty?
42693Why, do you know how pretty you are, child?
42693Why,said they,"did you not make peace with France, when the First Consul proposed it before the battle of Marengo?
42693Will you not rest?
42693Without any clew to any thing more?
42693Would n''t you give them a week?
42693Ye''ll be frae the hotel, yonder?
42693You had some?
42693You have an unusual amount of correspondence this morning?
42693You have no inclination in Mr. Kenge''s way?
42693''And how?''
42693***** What is pleasure?
42693*****"Why do n''t you wash and dress yourself when you come into a court of justice?"
42693A knock came to the door,"How is she now?"
42693A smiling gentleman, with an enormous ladle, said insinuatingly:"''Soup, sir?''
42693A touch on the lawyer''s wrinkled hand, as he stands in the dark room, irresolute, makes him start and say,"What''s that?"
42693And did she faint, or fall as one stricken?
42693And did you really take the trouble to find out the writer of that actual thing-- what is it!--Affidavit?"
42693And now, as an ancient grenadier, as an ex- brave of the French army, what remains for me to do?
42693And now, what was there more to do?
42693And what cause had produced in a moment the whole of this strange, complicated, mysterious effect?
42693And what is it, Esther?"
42693Another glass?
42693Begone, do you hear?"
42693But she is proud, is she not?"
42693But what of helpful meaning in such a case could it have?
42693But what were fortitude, philosophy, strength of mind?
42693But wherefore, oh, wherefore would you do so?
42693Call out for Flite, will you?"
42693Could this be the little gray lady seated at the piano, and making it speak?
42693Could words speak plainer?
42693Dandyism?
42693Dead?"
42693Did the man''s strange words give form and significance to some dark, shadowy, indistinct doubt that had previously haunted her at times?
42693Do I know how many of those men entered the same gambling- house that_ you_ entered?
42693Do they not make four?
42693Do you hear; my hero of Austerlitz?
42693Does he ever receive a letter, or take a ride upon the railway, or see any thing but the Dodo?
42693Every night, my Lady casually asks her maid:"Is Mr. Tulkinghorn come?"
42693For who is there that thanks you really for concealing the evil that was already arrived-- for prolonging the happiness that was already gone?
42693Had I made any noise already?
42693Had he been bathing with his clothes on, in a sea of gum- arabic-- that costly article used in the print- works?
42693Had it such eyes?
42693Has he any hope of getting away from here?
42693Have you ever pursued an unseen fugitive through the trees, led on by her fairy laugh; now here, now there-- now lost, now found?
42693He was very poor, I suppose?"
42693How can the reins of government be intrusted to such hands?
42693How comes this?
42693How did he come here?
42693How old do you suppose her to be?"
42693How to find time for this?
42693I ask what?
42693I can answer for him as little as for you; but he_ might_?"
42693I have labored-- oh, let the spirit of that dead father witness-- I have labored according to his will, and what has been the up- shot of it all?
42693I said to myself, If I feel thus, what must be the influence of such impressions upon the popular mind?
42693If I were to send my pint of wine to some famous chemist to be analyzed, what would it turn out to be made of?
42693Immense numbers, therefore, must die every year; but what becomes of the bodies?
42693In place of the hat and feathers, what dusky object was it that now hid his forehead-- his eyes-- his shading hand?
42693Is any body in attendance who knows any thing more?"
42693Is there any one in view at present?"
42693Is there any other witness?
42693Is there any particular feeling on that head?"
42693Jo, is it thou?
42693Ladies of the jury, are there not, then, some subjects of letters that mysteriously assert an effect without any discoverable cause?
42693Looking for what?
42693Need I say more?
42693Now, Mrs. Piper-- what have you got to say about this?
42693Of all the wonderful faculties that help to tell us we are immortal, which speaks the sublime truth more eloquently than memory?
42693Oh, how shall I tell you what followed?
42693Oh, what had she done to you that you should hate her so?
42693Oh, wherefore have you cursed her, my innocent child, my only daughter?''
42693On the publication of this decree, Pasquin appropriately quoted the beautiful passage in Job--"Wilt thou break a leaf driven to and fro?
42693Or was the champagne particularly strong?
42693PROPRIETOR OF THE DOG.--"Has he been a bitin''on you, sir?"
42693Perhaps you would n''t mind Richard''s coming in, Dame Durden?"
42693Richard is outside, is he, my dear?"
42693SQUIRE.--"Did you or did you not tell me or Mrs. Hazeldean, that Frank was in love with Violante Rickeybockey?"
42693Says the Coroner, is that boy here?
42693Shall I die?
42693She is of good family?"
42693Snagsby, why did n''t you give that eight- and- thirty Chancery folio in Jarndyce, to Nimrod?''
42693Spell it?
42693Surely Danby has no means adequate to indulgence in such a game as that?"
42693Tears, did we say?
42693The Mandarin, however, continued to press his bargain:"I give you seven thousand dollar,"said he:"You_ take_''em?"
42693The excesses are really fewer-- far fewer-- in proportion to the number assembled, than if no gathering had taken place How can it be otherwise?
42693The lion did not attack him, but stood still, as though he would have said,"Well, what do you want here in my desert?"
42693Then who are they?
42693They were surely not going to fish at this time of evening?
42693This was the short dialogue which immediately took place:"We want to see the Englishman who is sleeping in this house?"
42693Tulkinghorn?"
42693Was I mad?
42693Was any body present related to him?"
42693Was it for this I took you into my home, and was to you a father?
42693Was it the result of a stimulant acting upon my system when I was in a highly- excited state?
42693Was life there thus proud and joyous, thus unconscious of trouble, care, or death, thus valiant, and without all arrogance?
42693Was my stomach in a particularly disordered condition?
42693Was that so?"
42693Was the bed moving?
42693We should have consented to Violante-- why not to her?
42693Well?
42693Were they then representatives of life there?
42693What am I to do?
42693What can it be?
42693What complaint more repeated, and more touching, than"that it is growing dark?"
42693What could I do?
42693What did it matter how the trace of his little foot, or how the memory of his short life were obliterated from this earth?
42693What did that signify?
42693What do you here?
42693What do you want?"
42693What follows?
42693What have you to say?"
42693What if I write something?
42693What is it you have done?
42693What might that mean?
42693What more frequent than a prayer to open the shutters and let in the sun?
42693What now is to be done?"
42693What say they to that in Paris?"
42693What were they about?
42693What wise man denied that two and two made four?
42693What work of Johnson''s is best known?
42693What would it have availed if I, by my rejection, had punished her unparalleled devotion with unexampled misery?
42693What would our galloping authors say to that?
42693What''s home?
42693When Ada was singing in the dark room?"
42693When she at length left the apartment, he said to the husband, in broken English( worse than broken China):"What you give for that wifey- wife yours?"
42693Where are the people who are bidden with so much cry to this feast of little wool?
42693Where are the people who belong to the High- street?
42693Where are they?
42693Where does the wretch live?
42693Where the feathers; three, white; two green?
42693Where was the conical crown?
42693Where was the waiter born?
42693Wherefore not put an end to the sufferings of humanity?
42693Wherefore risk in this manner the lot of two great nations?
42693Who are they?
42693Who cares for a reprieve when sentence is still to follow?
42693Who would have conjectured the romance of reality that was now divulged?
42693Why High- street?
42693Why did you not consent to peace, when it was again proposed after that battle?
42693Why not rather Low- street, Flat- street, Low- spirited- street, Used- up- street?
42693Will you forgive me now another deception?
42693Would it unman a Spanish exile by reminding him of his native land at all?
42693Would the executioner come into possession of his conical crowned hat, and plume of feathers?
42693Would you allow us humbly to suggest the addition of them to your portrait in our next Quarterly Sheet?
42693Would you have the kindness to bring it me, unobserved-- mind that-- unobserved by any one?"
42693You can read, Guillaume?"
42693You can read?"
42693You never heard tell of her, did you, sir?"
42693You understand me?"
42693You understand?"
42693_ I_ give up?"
42693an''did n''t I hear you say these Weskitts was all the fashion?
42693and how could we have been so stupid as not to have read it at a glance?
42693and might not the fair Annie''s taste incline this way?
42693and were privately thrown into the river, with a letter of explanation written by the murderers and placed in their pocket- books?
42693and wilt thou pursue the dry stubble?"
42693dreaming?
42693drunk?
42693for had we not read and heard of youthful wards falling in love with their guardians?
42693giddy again?
42693how are_ you_?
42693is that indeed so?"
42693sacrà © petit polisson de Napoleon!_ have I found thee at last?
42693said he:"who would have thought of it?
42693said we to our hostess;"and what is the name of the lady in gray, who went away just as you came up?
42693say, beautiful being, will you be mine?"]
42693she added with a renewed burst of hysterical grief,"how could you deceive me so?"
42693she said;"can ye tell me how the puir leddy has rested?
42693slept in it?
42693took that bed as_ you_ took it?
42693we exclaimed;"and what shall we wager?"
42693were smothered in it?
42693what can I ever do for you, dear friend and comforter?
42693what does he mean?"
42693what has she taken?
42693what is that you have on?"
42693wherefore?
42693who have been her curse and mine, will you swear to do so, by any means I may command?''
42693why do n''t they lower that sail?
42693won as_ you_ won?
38399Ah, Randal, Randal, is this the frankness of friendship? 38399 All ready?"
38399And Hosneh?
38399And are you the father of the great general of Egypt?
38399And do you stand here all day?
38399And my own portion? 38399 And perhaps you are a royalist,"cried another,"and do n''t like how matters are going on at home?"
38399And the Emperor consented?
38399And the army, where is it?
38399And what do you know now? 38399 And what made me lose so important though so ineffectual an ally?"
38399And what was the old man''s story?
38399And what,said I, not daring to be silent,"do they pay you for this?"
38399And why should I not?
38399And you would marry Frank, if the dower was secured?
38399Are you a sworn interpreter, young man?
38399Are you not satisfied with trying to take from me my practice, but you must ask me for my child? 38399 At my poor father''s death?
38399Ay, to be sure,he musingly replied;"what would our mothers say-- feel rather-- at witnessing their sons''dishonor?
38399Because she is a foreigner?
38399But do you not overate the value of my aid?
38399But grant that my heart shrunk from the task you imposed on me, would it not have been natural? 38399 But how can I aid this marriage?"
38399But how win that in despite of the father?
38399But still,she said, coldly,"you enjoy one half of those ample revenues-- why talk, then, of suicide and ruin?"
38399But who admitted you?
38399But who can stand against such wealth as Egerton''s-- no doubt, backed, too, by the Treasury purse?
38399But, my dear Miss Walker,continued the young doctor,"what will his patients do?"
38399But, my dear papa, is not this the surest way to destroy the opposition?
38399But, perhaps you will alter your mind?
38399By no means,cried Cocking;"but, how high are we?"
38399Can you doubt it?
38399Did I blush?
38399Do you understand Spanish?
38399Ha, Randal, boy,said Mr. Leslie, looking up lazily,"how d''ye do?
38399Have you served, then?
38399How?
38399I am not permitted to know this, or to do this,is the excuse of the weak and trivial; but the question should be,"_ Can_ I know or do this?"
38399I do n''t care for that,said he, impatiently;"what''s your occupation?--how do you live?--with whom do you associate?"
38399I enjoy them at the pleasure of the crown; and what if it be the pleasure of the crown to recall our cousin, and reinstate him in his possessions?
38399If he be a tyrant he is still my father; and thou, why shouldst thou condemn him?
38399If you wish it, sir--?
38399Is Mr. Walker at home?
38399Is he poor, or is he extravagant?
38399Is it not also, think you, the greater fear of disgrace, dishonor in the eyes of the world, which outweighs the lesser dread?
38399Is there any reason alleged-- is there any charge imputed to him?
38399Maria,exclaimed the father, almost choking with rage,"is this true?"
38399Marry her!--are you serious?
38399Me-- and why? 38399 Mine?
38399My sister,replied the Count,"do I look like a man who saved?
38399Now you upbraid me,said the Count, unruffled by her sudden passion,"because I gave you in marriage to a man young and noble?"
38399Oh, that was all; some affair when I was member for Lansmere?
38399Over the way?
38399Rely on me, sir,said Randal;"but I should think this poor Doctor can scarcely be the person she seeks to discover?"
38399Sacre bleu, man, what are you thinking of? 38399 Six shillings and your board of course?"
38399So the houses are letting?
38399The Riccaboccas? 38399 The earth spins round,"said he,"at a great rate, do n''t it?
38399The father had, then, taken part in some political disaffections, and was proscribed?
38399Then by what chance are you living in this wild spot? 38399 Then why are you here?
38399Then why, in the name of Heaven, do you not make yourself known to the count, stating your object, and asking formally for his daughter''s hand?
38399There is a_ probability_, then, of that pardon? 38399 There is then a dearth of composers, that you come to trouble an old man''s peace?"
38399To do what, sir?
38399Were you? 38399 What have you especially to dread?
38399What is his description?
38399What on earth makes you think so?
38399What rank did he hold?
38399What wouldst thou, youth?
38399What, then, is the meaning of this?
38399When did he die? 38399 When does young Thornhill come of age?"
38399Who are you?
38399Who?
38399Why naturally?
38399Why not allude to them?
38399Why not?
38399Why?
38399You accept, then?
38399You are looking for Nicquard, monsieur?
38399You are not quite certain that he did not command the army of Egypt?
38399You are, I believe, sir, the Mr. Samuel Sparkes for whose presence certain personages in London are just now rather anxious?
38399You saw the Emperor?
38399You will restore my fortune?
38399_ Et tu Brute_,observed some one, on reading a debate in the House of Commons;"I often see these words quoted; what can they mean?"
38399397 What becomes of the Rind?
383993_d._ for such a small Cabbage?
38399A twelvemonth''s wear hath ta''en thy nap from thee, My seedy coat!--_when_ shall I get another?
38399Among the various statements, the grand point is, how much of them is true?
38399An idea struck me:"Do you know any thing of the language of flowers?"
38399And how much good was in them?
38399And how, with forty thousand, can I withstand the whole force of the Austrian monarchy, who will hasten to the relief of Vienna?
38399And now, Frank, what say you-- would it not be well if I run down to Hazeldean to sound your parents?
38399And now, gentlemen smugglers,"I continued,"pray, inform me where I may see your renowned captain?"
38399And now, have we no snarling Cynics, no Pharisee, no Inquisitor?
38399And who prizes the wise man if he fails?"
38399And who, among all your adorers, can offer you a lot so really enviable as the one whom, I see by your blush, you already guess that I refer to?"
38399And whom did you meet at Hazeldean?"
38399And you really believe you could smooth matters?"
38399And your father thinks that the Squire may leave you a legacy?"
38399Any quarrel about tithes?"
38399Are the facts real?
38399Are these things so?
38399Brother, brother-- what, indeed, do I owe to you?
38399But as to the Marchesa''s affections,"continued Frank, with a faltering voice,"do you really and honestly believe that they are to be won by me?"
38399But what Cimon would not be refined by so fair an Iphigenia?
38399But what do we_ know_ of it all?
38399But who else has done so?"
38399But, by George?
38399But, with such self- conquest, how is it that you can not contrive to live within the bounds of a very liberal allowance?"
38399By the way, you have never, by chance, spoken of the Riccaboccas to Madame di Negra?"
38399Can you tell me, Mr. Pettipo, how is this?
38399Certainly she is two or three years older than you; but if you can get over that misfortune, why not marry her?"
38399Cocking?"
38399Covetousness entered his mind, and calling to the youth, he said,"What is the price of thy horse?"
38399Do I_ seem_ crazy?
38399Do they belong to the world without, or to the world within, or to some mysterious and inseparable union of both departments of being?
38399Do we know any thing about these things, further than they are so?
38399Do we not merely see that it is so, and turn aside from the great mystery in despair of ever unraveling it?
38399Do you wish to see that which is really sublime?
38399FRANK.--"What?
38399Fatherless and motherless, whom had my childhood to love and obey but you?"
38399Geology has proved, beyond all doubt, the fact of man''s_ creation_; what then is there hard for faith in the revealed facts of his_ redemption_?
38399Good heavens, can you think so poorly of me?
38399Griff?"
38399H. HARBAUGH, is the title of an interesting religious work on the question,"Shall we know our friends in Heaven?"
38399Has not this war already continued six years?
38399Have we looked into the meaning of the practical lesson which the Master taught when he forgave the adulteress, and sat at meat with the sinners?
38399Have we not inflicted a sufficiency of woes upon suffering humanity?
38399Have we not slain enough of our fellow- men?
38399Have you collected it yet?"
38399Have you considered whether you have troops and ships sufficient to reduce the people of the whole American continent to your devotion?"
38399Have you not sadly failed me in the task I imposed on your regard for my interests?
38399His back was toward me; and as my entrance did not cause him to change his position, I said,"You are Captain Pickard, I am informed?"
38399How can I know it now?
38399How can I thank you?
38399How do we feel all this time?
38399How is that?
38399How thou didst cajole that son of a dog by false promises?"
38399How, in the name of wonder, can you exist here?"
38399How?"
38399I at length exclaimed, for the sudden inrush of painful emotion choked my speech for a time--"can it indeed be you?"
38399I can not say to the man who wooes me,''Will you pay the debts of the daughter of Franzini, and the widow of di Negra?''"
38399I exclaimed:"is it possible?--can this be you?"
38399I have no fear of your success, if it is by his heart that you lead him?"
38399I was passing through the street now-- merely to look up at her windows--""You speak of Madame di Negra?
38399If not-- ah, he is of a character that perplexes me in all but his worldly ambition; and how can we foreigners influence him through_ that_?"
38399In a word have you been in earnest-- or have you not had some womanly pleasure in amusing yourself and abusing my trust?"
38399In this room, do you say?"
38399Is it feasible?"
38399Is it not some years since you first came to England on the mission of discovering these worthy relatives of ours?
38399Is not thy life valuable to thee?
38399Is the Republic still as great and victorious as ever?"
38399Is the Squire not on good terms with his parson?
38399Juliet, have you seen Jenny?
38399MAN OF BUSINESS.--"Well, what is it?"
38399Maria, could not a Romeo and Juliet be found to terminate it?"
38399Meanwhile, if it be not impertinent, pray, where is enlightenment marching to?"
38399My fossil sea- horse?
38399Now what difficulties are there for faith after this?
38399Oh, heavens, what is this?"
38399Pray, do you fish, monsieur?
38399Professor-- is it?"
38399RANDAL.--"Is it possible?
38399Shall, then, a toothless person be forced to live upon spoon- meat, because artificial ivories are denounced as sinful?
38399She remembered him with some little difficulty, smiled, and holding out her alabaster hand, said gently:"Do you see any trace of the soap- suds?"
38399Since then my purse has been open to you?"
38399So Randal looked at him in surprise, and said,"Do you, sir?--why?"
38399So much for what you first feel; and now what is the first thing you do?
38399Surely you know too well the nature of your kinsman?"
38399Tailing on; The John Jones Party; How many Times did the Hedge- pig mew?
38399The body sleeps?
38399The husband was thunderstruck:"But, my dear, I-- a magistrate, conceal contraband goods?"
38399The important inquiry is, Did the hedge- pig_ whine once_, or_ thrice and once_?
38399The little_ Bouquetière_ was becoming proud-- becoming a lady;--but how?
38399The question was immediately proposed to the meeting,"Will you abide by your former resolutions with respect to not suffering the TEA to be landed?"
38399The whole question comes to this: Shall we give up Italy to the Austrians?
38399These words caused the master to smile with benignity, for who is insensible to the praise of his own house?
38399Time and Space-- what are they?
38399True, they are of no use"at present;"but who knows of what use such things may one day be?
38399Were they an ignorant rabble, with no higher motives than the gratification of a mobocratic spirit?
38399What are the_ facts_ of mesmerism?
38399What could have been his offense?
38399What did he say of me?"
38399What do we understand of the causes of such motions?
38399What do you understand about that, Mr. Pettipo, except merely that it is so?
38399What else could his majesty do?
38399What is France about?
38399What is human life, compared to the preservation of the truth?"
38399What matters?
38399What natural divinity lies in fur, which the cotton plant does not possess?
38399What on my part_ could_ be said or suggested?
38399What other than personal reasons procures me the honor of this visit?"
38399What say you, young man, does not this a little disturb your plans?"
38399What then?
38399What would become of Hamlet?
38399What would our sweethearts, sisters, mothers, say if they heard we had turned craven?
38399What would they say in England?
38399What would you?"
38399Where''s Jenny?
38399Wherein consists the holiness of mud, and the ungodliness of alkali?
38399Who could have expected you?
38399Who has not some reminiscences of this kind belonging to his boyish existence?
38399Why are the people of Genoa so changed?
38399Why are you not here?
38399Why not''( continued my friend)''apply to the Emperor for his consent to that alliance for yourself?
38399Why should not Karl have lived like his ancestors?"
38399Why should not thought-- the most wonderful and subtle of known agencies-- manifest itself in equally extraordinary ways?
38399Will the theme ever cease to interest?
38399Will you accept the terms, and gratify Europe?"
38399Will you aid me then-- yes or no?
38399Wo n''t I be_ straight_, and not a cripple, mother, when I_ do_ get to Heaven?"
38399Would a man be powerful, and bid his genius rule his fellow- men?
38399Would he be actively benevolent?
38399Would he picture the life of man or nature?
38399Would he pour golden truth upon the page of life?
38399Would you have me sit down and reply to Goldsmith, Pichon, or the Quarterly Review?
38399You have, however, of course, reserved sufficient for your defense?"
38399You knew Lieutenant----?"
38399You know the Austrian policy is proverbially so jealous and tyrannical?"
38399[ Illustration: PORTRAIT OF DAVID KINNISON] It may be asked, Who were the men actively engaged in this high- handed measure?
38399and above all-- where?
38399are you a Frenchman, then?"
38399cried I, indignantly,"what do I know of it?"
38399dead?"
38399do n''t you think it would be the best way?
38399exclaimed he, at last,"how came you here?"
38399friends and brothers-- is not the necessity of cruelty the warrantry of falsehood?
38399indeed; do you take me for a child?"
38399is it that I then read but books, and now my knowledge has passed onward, and men contaminate more than books?
38399it was replied,"do you thus stigmatize those whose tenets inculcate universal benevolence and the moral virtues?"
38399said he;"how about that bill against Mr. Slowpay?
38399said the Count with a visible impatience,"is there any thing in the attainment of your object that should render you indifferent to mine?
38399she promptly replied,"am I not the wife of their general?"
38399tick!--or is it the beat of our own hearts?
38399what can we ever know about them, beyond the facts that such things are so?
38399what do you think of the enterprise?
38399where is Sabrea?"
38399wherein the purity of a matted beard, and the impiety of Metcalfe''s brushes, and Mechi''s magic strop?
38399why?
38399you are a handsome fellow, and your expectations are great-- why do n''t you marry some woman with money?"
38399you, on whom he can depend; you who, if the daughter should die, would be the legal heir to those lands?''
29655''Eh, Tronchon, another bullet in thy old carcass; want a furlough to get strong again, eh?'' 29655 ''Slow work, too,''said he, laughing,''ai n''t it, Charles?''
29655Ah, that''s easily said, but suppose they_ did_?
29655Anan--"Will you give us leave to go in and rest ourselves a little? 29655 And as a swordsman, what are you?"
29655And does thy lord love thee? 29655 And hast heart to go back there, boy,"said the corporal,"and live the same life again?"
29655And have I not?
29655And so thou art going to ask for thy grade, Maurice?
29655And then?
29655And thy father and mother, child-- what will they say to thee on thy return home?
29655And what is to become of him?
29655And what troops are coming to join us?
29655And where may that be, young slip of the galleys?
29655And who was it,she asked,"that wept on the hill- side until the tears dropped through, staining my palace walls?"
29655And why should I not be as fair as she? 29655 And why so, Tronchon?"
29655And you say I must write a petition, Tronchon?
29655Answer me,''Gamin,''where didst find that old tawdry jacket?
29655Any thing else? 29655 Are you quite Sure?
29655Ay, but,said Edgar, shaking his head,"but what is that something?
29655Ay, does n''t he? 29655 But, Mrs. Lawson, dear, have you seen old Mr. Lawson since he came home?"
29655Child, why didst thou linger under the tree?
29655Did n''t I tell you so?
29655Did you ever hear what became of them?
29655Did you hear his name?
29655Did you? 29655 Do I?
29655Do n''t you think it is the duty of all to exert themselves in a family party, to make conversation circulate in an agreeable manner?
29655Do you think they''ll refuse me, Tronchon?
29655Edgar, do you know what was meant by the term, one meets with in old books about manners, of''led captain?'' 29655 Edgar, what can we do for this man?"
29655For my part, I''m glad, indeed, to see serious ways taken up in this house; but how will it suit the rest of you? 29655 He is asking to what corps thou belong''st?"
29655Henry, my son, will you let me have the money?
29655Henry,said the father, abruptly,"I want some money; there is a poor woman whom I wish to relieve-- will you give me some money for her?"
29655How is this-- have I an acquaintance here?
29655How shall I do it?
29655I ask you only this once more-- give me the few shillings?
29655I have experienced more, perhaps, than most girls of my age have done, through my poverty and misfortunes; but what is that?
29655If he asks thee''Canst ride?'' 29655 In the name of wonder, boy,"he exclaimed,"what are you doing there?"
29655In what regiment, boy?
29655Irish? 29655 Is Esbern coming?"
29655Is that their livery, then?
29655Is the boy hurt?
29655Let us hear it, then-- you mean Pichegru, perhaps, or Massena?
29655May we go in, good man, and rest ourselves a little while?
29655My lord, who art thou, and what is thy will with me?
29655No matter, I''ll-- eh-- what? 29655 Nor of''Mons,''either, I''ll be sworn?"
29655Not always here?
29655Papa,she ventured to say,"have you heard all I have been saying?"
29655Really--''What say you, Mrs. Melwyn?
29655Then, what''s to be done, Tronchon? 29655 To be sure,"said the little fellow, who, I now perceived, wore the dress of a"tambour;""and is it a disgrace to be the first to face the enemy?"
29655Well, Thomas, how do_ you_ like these new ways of going on?
29655Well, mamma, suppose he should-- where would be the dreadful harm of that?
29655Well, sister,said Resa,"what art dreaming of now?
29655Well,said the rest,"go on-- is there any more?"
29655Were the dark ages poetical?
29655What ails you, my dear husband?
29655What can we do for this man?
29655What effect? 29655 What have you discovered?"
29655What is the sentence?
29655What is to be done?
29655What is to be done?
29655What operations?
29655What place is this?
29655What regiment?
29655What''s thy mess, boy?
29655Where from?
29655Where hast thou been?
29655Where is Crewe?
29655Where to?
29655Who ever heard,he demanded,"of the wives of a true believer being shown to a stranger, and that stranger an Infidel and a Frank?"
29655Who is he? 29655 Who would like such a stupid old drone?"
29655Why must the pleasure come so soon to an end, Edgar?
29655Why so? 29655 Why so?
29655Why, what would become of you all?
29655Will you give me the money at once, and let me go?
29655You really think so, Tronchon? 29655 You will not give it me?"
29655Your first question, dear girl-- always your first question-- what can be done?
29655About three centuries and a half before the Christian era, the question, Are sponges animal or vegetable?
29655An honorable vocation?
29655And did not the Hyldemoer waft me the wish, so that I came to meet and welcome thee under the hill?"
29655And especially you, my fine young gentleman?"
29655And hast thou young children dancing about thy feet, and a little blue- eyed one to creep dove- like to thy heart at nights, as mine does?
29655And stayest thou here thy lot to deplore?
29655And then what_ would_ become of us all?
29655And then, suppose they got tired of the plan, and longed for a house of their own?"
29655And was she as happy herself as she made others?
29655And was there ever a true mother''s breast, that while life yet throbbed there, was not a refuge for a repentant child?
29655And what is the moral of what we have written concerning Galileo?
29655And what was it all about?
29655Any one attribute that constitutes the citizen?
29655At last the clergyman asked,"What could have induced you to commit such a crime?"
29655But do you mean to say that young man is literally in distressed circumstances?"
29655But that''s not quite generous, is it, to throw the whole burden upon me now I_ am_ come, instead of sharing it?
29655But what are you doing in this place?
29655But what_ could_ we do without Lettice?
29655Camest thou not of thyself in at my door?"
29655Can not we do something for this good creature?"
29655Can you think of nothing?"
29655Come here, boy,"said she, addressing me,"hold the bridle: what''s thy corps, lad?"
29655Could a young being like_ her_ be_ very_ happy, living with two old people, and without one single companion of her own age?
29655Did Galileo yield?
29655Did Galileo yield?
29655Did I ever hint?
29655Did I ever say?
29655Did he ever forget it?
29655Didst thou not of thyself wish for a palace and a lord like me?
29655Directing my followers''attention to the spot, I remarked,"I see the lion;"to which they replied,"Whar?
29655Do I not lead her every Sunday, winter and summer, in storm, sunshine, or snow, to the chapel in the valley?
29655Do you know whether he is so or not?"
29655Do you know, Lettice, I began to wonder what had become of you?"
29655Do you love reading?"
29655Do you recollect what I was talking to you about this very morning?
29655Does he belong to this neighborhood?"
29655Does he cause confusion?
29655Does he enforce moderation?
29655Does he evidence great principles?
29655Does he sit beside thee at eve, and let thee lean thy tired head on his breast, as Esbern does with me?
29655Dost thou not hear them too, little Resa?
29655For what''s he to get of it, but the satisfaction of his merciful and generous spirit, when he sees his poor creatures happy?
29655HAVE GREAT POETS BECOME IMPOSSIBLE?
29655Has any thing happened?
29655Has he the most unerring of judgments?
29655Has the press become less an object of wonder or terror since it was worked by steam?
29655Have I not kept her heart from evil?
29655Have you any friends in the service?"
29655Have you one quality of father, friend, brother, husband, or relative?
29655Have you stumbled upon an unparalleled youth-- by mere accident as I did?
29655He started as if suddenly awakened when she spoke; but he only said,"Will you?
29655How call''st thou the place?"
29655How could she be so ungrateful?
29655How many miles to Brainford?
29655How much the rather if we are not sure to enjoy it one day to an end?"
29655I say, my lad, what''s thy name?"
29655If theology, then, can command such an advantage, on what principle should it be kept back from her?...
29655Is he a popular tribune?
29655Is he earnest?
29655Is there any sense in the young lady''s suggestion, or is there not?
29655Is there nothing else?"
29655It had been open to her even when she came in her pride; how would it be closed against her sorrow and humility?
29655It is no longer,''Where have you served?
29655It was night, and all were housed, Talking long and late; Who is this that blows the horn At the castle- gate?
29655It was the clergyman''s wife, he kissed her as she asked how he had succeeded with the wicked man in the jail?
29655May I tell you of it?"
29655May I venture to ask were you intending to visit that poor bed- ridden creature?
29655Mayhap, thou hast heard of Cambray?"
29655Melwyn?"
29655Mrs. Saunders liked the looks of the young man much-- and who did not?
29655My darling mother would not hear of me relinquishing my happiness upon her account-- and ought Lettice to be allowed to make such a sacrifice?"
29655Mère Madou, hast got curaçoa there?"
29655Next it was,"Nay, rather than that, I will go into the library too; why should I not?"
29655Nor relations, nor connections?"
29655Oh, what must I do?
29655On whom he had wished to bring ruin and perhaps death?
29655Or was no head then covered with the snows of a hundred winters, through one midnight despair?
29655Pert?"
29655Presently a head peered in at the door, inquiring,"All here for the Liverpool line?"
29655Say, dear sister, art thou as happy as I?"
29655She then appeared to say to herself,"Does this fellow know who he is after?"
29655Silence again for a few minutes, then--"Catherine, did you ever know me do a good action in your life?"
29655Suppose Lettice and Mr. St. Leger_ were_ to form an attachment for each other, what should hinder them from marrying?"
29655Suppose he should fall in love with Lettice?"
29655That kind, frank, manly, courageous man of genius, whom no one approached but to find help and comfort?
29655The bounding heart?
29655The elastic frame?
29655Thou art not one of the Municipal Guard, surely?"
29655WHAT BECOMES OF ALL THE CLEVER CHILDREN?
29655Was James Watt an automaton?
29655Was it a snare spread for him to lead to a confession?
29655Was it that able and benevolent man whom the world has so lately lost?
29655Was it the first time you ever heard grace said, you booby?"
29655Was no arm during the dark ages bared aloft in defense of outraged innocence?
29655Was she any the better for it?
29655Was the mighty heart of man-- the throbbing of which is just poetry, then utterly silent?
29655Was the voice of prayer then stifled throughout Europe''s hundred lands?
29655Was this the man whose house he had tried to burn?
29655Well, and did she improve under this good discipline?
29655Well, did any thing come of it?
29655Well, what is he like?
29655What could he do?
29655What could the slim beak of the swallow do against the redoubtable pincers of the sparrow, armed with a double and sharpened point?
29655What do we want with more verse?
29655What had you on?
29655What have I been thinking of?
29655What is Dante''s work but a beautiful incarnation of the spirit of the Middle Ages?
29655What says Miss Arnold?
29655What would be_ done_?"
29655What''s o''clock?"
29655What_ can_ you mean?"
29655What_ would_ become of us all?"
29655When he opened them again it was broad daylight; and his first thought was, had he overslept himself?
29655Where could you be?
29655Where hast thou been, lad, not to hear of places that every child syllables nowadays?"
29655Where hast thou been?"
29655Where shall poetry, if sent forth like Noah''s dove, fail to find a resting- place?
29655Where should''st thou have had thy baptism of blood, boy?
29655Where was I?
29655Where were the high- strung nerves now?
29655Who is this that blows a horn Which none but Wallace hears?
29655Who knows?
29655Who should be sent for?"
29655Who wert thou watching so eagerly?"
29655Who would have thought it would have made such a change?
29655Why all this bustle to- day?
29655Why did America not embark in such enterprise?
29655Why is it, sister?"
29655Why should they not?
29655Why will you not talk now?"
29655Will that do?
29655Will you come, too?
29655Will you excuse me for saying she is in great necessity?"
29655Will you listen to me?"
29655With the utmost coolness, my friend replied,"Certainly not: how could he while His Highness''s wives continued vailed?"
29655Without prospect, without interest in that coming life, which the young imagination paints in such lovely colors?
29655Would he save the nation?
29655Would the magician pay a visit to his house, recover the ring, and expose the delinquent?
29655Would you pull down all her little edifice of happiness, by taking Lettice away from her?"
29655Yet why do I recall it?
29655You are surely ill?"
29655You can ride well, of course?"
29655You hear that?''
29655You think that I shall be something yet?''
29655Your heart, perhaps?"
29655and did he-- did he pick up your hat?"
29655and did you not see the carriage go by?
29655and dost thou not--?"
29655and how does he look?"
29655and what is virtue but a name, if she may be betrayed whenever she demands an effort?
29655and why not?
29655art not thou the artillery- driver I spoke to at the barrack?"
29655but where shall I begin?
29655but,''Can you read glibly?
29655can you write faster than speak?
29655do these Germans need another lesson,"said the cannonier,"I thought Fleurus had taught them what our troops were made of?"
29655does not the holy cross lie on her pure breast day and night?
29655he said:"of what?"
29655how_ can_ you talk so?
29655is n''t this garden yours, and that house, and all the grand things that are in it yours?
29655is there no painter of English history bold enough to immortalize himself by painting this trial?
29655reiterated the woman in surprise;"is n''t it all yours, then?
29655said he, interrupting,"what of that?
29655said she laughing, and pointing at me with ridicule,"or is it a family dress made after thy father''s?"
29655whar?
29655what have I done?
29655what have you seen?''
29655what must I do?"
29655when you wished to play tyrant over us, did we not raise one Washington who chastised you?
29655where is he?
29655where should he go?
29655who would heed these elfin tales on such a lovely day?
29655why not live on here?"
38787''And nobody else?'' 38787 ''And whom have you seen since?''
38787''I have seen you,''said she, laughingly;''what would have been the good of sight to me, if I had not looked upon you? 38787 ''If she sees me, did you say?''
38787''Why should it not be as you wish?'' 38787 ''Would that grieve me so much?
38787''You are hurt, Eulalie?'' 38787 ''You had seen me, and yet you continued to come to me; that is well; but whom did you see first?''
38787Ah, Gervais,exclaimed I, vehemently seizing her at the same time by the arm,"what have you done to him?"
38787Ah-- well, well; where the devil is Nero?
38787Alas, sir,said Marguerite,"have you met with Gervais?"
38787And a dog?
38787And are these all the friends you have?
38787And is it usual for a boy of your years to hold that rank; or was there any thing peculiar in your case that obtained the promotion?
38787And what became of him afterward?
38787And what right have you to interfere now?
38787And when you return from your relations, you will call on me? 38787 And who are you, my good fellow, so ready to impose yourself on the Court?"
38787And why not come, then?
38787And you sold out, I think-- to please the mistress, I suppose, Dutton? 38787 And your mother''s name, what was it?"
38787Are you mad? 38787 Bushe,"said he,"came up to me one day with a very knowing look, and said,''Do you know, Curran, I have just left the pleasantest fellow I ever met?''
38787But am I to take leave of them in this fashion?
38787But if it is his own fault-- if he has been imprudent?
38787But why dost hate y^e priests?
38787But why need I to concern myself about him?
38787But you have a family I hope?
38787Come, come, friend, has he not lost his teeth?
38787Did I tell you, or did I not,said Dick,"that I would not have these horrid disreputable cubs of yours playing just before my lodge gates?"
38787Digby, old fellow, can you lend me £ 100?
38787Do you believe it?
38787Do you glory in_ his_ shame, as well as your own?
38787Do you say so?
38787Do you think so? 38787 Do you think,"retorted the fellow,"that I know his age, as he does his horse''s, by_ the mark of mouth_?"
38787Does the nation take a nap to- night?
38787Gervais,replied I,"where is he?"
38787Guilty or not guilty, sir?
38787Ha, ha-- and what can she do?
38787Had you a good passage?
38787Handsome elevation-- classical, I take it-- eh?
38787Hartley and Simpson you say?
38787Have I no authority?
38787Have you never been able to see?
38787Have you never endeavored to release yourself from this contract?
38787He did, sir, but--"But what? 38787 How came I by it?
38787How came you by it?
38787How hast fared, of late, Gammer?
38787How is it that you appear to know me,said he,"for you do not belong to the valley?
38787How know you that?
38787How long?
38787How much is it?
38787In what have I tried to deceive you?
38787Is it you?
38787Is this the notorious Town- Major Dowall?
38787It is; and I am here to know what your singular advertisement means?
38787May I see this warrant, my lord?
38787Of what dowager do you speak?
38787Perhaps, sir, you or one of the company may have carried it by mistake into the drawing- room?
38787Pleasant companions?
38787Pray sit down, my good friend; you are blind, I fear?
38787Shall I proceed any farther? 38787 She is dead, then?"
38787That''s a bargain, then?
38787Then what are ye talking about two hundred pounds for?
38787Then what new impediment has arisen to our union?
38787Then what''s to become of Tiernay,cried one,"if it be so hard to throw off this''coil of Englishman?''
38787Then why do you stay? 38787 This brooch is yours?"
38787Those men-- those fellows at Rugby-- where did you meet with them?
38787To take me back?
38787Very likely; but what did she make my poor sister- in- law the queen suffer? 38787 Was it an accident which deprived you of your sight?"
38787We demanded five hundred pounds for a Major on the staff; suppose we say two, Colonel, is that sufficient?
38787Well, but what has all this to do with Gervais?
38787Well,cried he, half angrily,"what''s the matter; are you so impatient that you must smash the furniture?"
38787Well,said Richard,"I am not the sort of man you expected, eh?
38787Well?
38787What are you laughing at, friend-- what are you laughing at? 38787 What do I mean?
38787What do you mean?
38787What has happened?
38787What have slippers and hair- brushes to do with attics?
38787What have you to reply to this, Tiernay?
38787What is your name?
38787What matters it,jeeringly returned the hag,"since_ his_ name is not the one you bear?"
38787What name are we to insert in the bond?
38787What shall I have done with them?
38787What''s your rank, sir?
38787What, Maurice, do n''t you know me yet?
38787What?
38787What_ is_ the meaning of this?
38787Where are you going to?
38787Where were you born, then, Tiernay?
38787Where''s George? 38787 Where?"
38787Who is inclined to see Fieschi''s head chopped off?
38787Who?
38787Why are you so lazy?
38787Why not?
38787Why, really, my dear Harley, this man was no great friend of yours-- eh?
38787Will they never come back again?
38787Will you never forget that unlucky beverage?
38787Yes, Astræa, I was conscious of some obstruction; but how could I divine what it was? 38787 Yes; you know my cousin, Sophy Clarke?
38787You know us then?
38787You mean,she replied, coldly, but in a tone that conveyed a feeling of rising scorn,"you mean our marriage?"
38787Your Irish blood, then, had no share in your advancement?
38787Your father was Irish, then?
38787''What were they about there?''
38787''Why not?
38787Algernon Digby, I do not forget you; but it seems England has forgotten?"
38787Alice?"
38787Am I not sufficiently rich to procure you servants and friends?
38787And art thou, Stanley, of that sacred band?
38787And now, can you guess who I am?"
38787And shall the hymn be marr''d by thankless man, Most- favor''d; who with voice articulate Should lead the chorus of this lower world?
38787And while, on the dullest of dull questions, Audley Egerton thus, not too lively himself, enforced attention, where was Harley L''Estrange?
38787And why thy Locke, Who made the whole internal world his own?
38787Answer me this, thou solemn right honorable-- Hast thou climbed to the heights of august contemplation?
38787Apply to your master-- won''t he give you one?"
38787As she perceived me, she exclaimed,"How fares it with my son, José Juan?"
38787At table, discourse flowed soe thicke and faste that I mighte aim in vayn to chronicle it-- and why should I?
38787Benjamin-- who?"
38787But he?
38787But of what avail was the attempt?
38787But the last took his hand, and said, in a voice at once tremulous and soothing,"Is it possible that I see once more an old brother in arms?
38787But what avails this wondrous waste of wealth, This gay profusion of luxurious bliss, This pomp of Nature?
38787But who could argue such questions against convictions based upon individual and exceptional injuries?
38787Can nothing be done?
38787Can you show it me?
38787Come, what has happened to you?--on half- pay?"
38787Could not an animal or a machine do as much?
38787Curran?"
38787Defiance?
38787Do you believe I will suffer this tamely?
38787Do you believe such a thing credible?
38787Do you think I can forget the abominable things she said, the falsehoods she told?
38787Do you think you could thrust him into some small place in the colonies, or make him a king''s messenger, or something of the sort?"
38787Doomed either way, which was I to choose?
38787Examining a country squire who disputed a collier''s bill:"Did he not give you the_ coals_, friend?"
38787For is there aught in sleep can charm the wise?
38787For lofty sense, Creative fancy, and inspection keen Through the deep windings of the human heart, Is not wild Shakspeare thine and Nature''s boast?
38787For me, what does it matter?
38787For what purpose, devil as you are, did you do this?"
38787From which astonish''d thought, recoiling, turns?
38787Hast thou dreamed of a love known to the angels, or sought to seize in the Infinite the mystery of life?"
38787Hast thou gazed on the stars with the rapt eye of song?
38787Have I cured the payn in thy head?"
38787Have you never heard him mentioned?
38787Have you no particle of self- respect left?"
38787Have you not pledged your faith to me?"
38787Have you not seen it darkening every hour of our intercourse?
38787Have you seen a ghost?"
38787He sayth,"What hast thou, Meg?"
38787He was staggered; and asked,"What do you advise?"
38787Her history?
38787His arts were baffled-- his pride turned to dust-- his love rejected?
38787How could I, having experienced nothing but the most constant kindness and indulgence?
38787How could he present himself?
38787How could he speak to the general without risking the reception of some look or word which he could never pardon?
38787How could this have happened, for he would not have been induced to leave his master, even for the most dainty morsel?
38787How couldst find time for soe much labor?
38787How many sympathies has not the following custom excited?
38787I am young, I have much to learn, I love my studdies-- why interrupt them with other and lesse wise thoughts?"
38787I asked myself the question-- was the time approaching when their fame, colonies, and possessions would be among the things that were?
38787I askt,"Of what?"
38787I exclaymed,"Will is very well in his way: why s^d we cross each other''s paths?
38787I have begged without shame for myself; shall I be ashamed, then, to beg for her?"
38787I said,"Why do you come to me?
38787I suppose monsieur has not yet seen_ Little Necker_?"
38787In such a taste may we not trace the old leaven of the first Revolution, and the germ of future ones?
38787In what remote ocean had she met her doom?
38787In what way would he be received?
38787Is not each great, each amiable muse Of classic ages, in thy Milton met?
38787Laying his hand kindly on my shoulder, this morning, he sayd,"Meg, how fares it with thee now?
38787Living in this neighborhood, eh?"
38787Look out of the window-- what do you see?"
38787Not_ pretty_ Mary Kingsford now, then, I suppose?"
38787Now, lean upon me; I see you should be at home-- which way?"
38787Obey you?
38787Oh, Lord L''Estrange?"
38787On your oath, was n''t your payments_ slack_?"
38787Poor wretch, hath this then beene thy toyl?
38787Pride?
38787Robert?"
38787Say shall we wind Along the streams?
38787Shall I remove this bandage, and cause the light of my eyes to be for ever extinguished?
38787Shall little haughty ignorance pronounce His works unwise, of which the smallest part Exceeds the narrow vision of her mind?
38787So lucky for me, is it not, since I must go to service?
38787So you have a long journey before you?"
38787Soon after the officer had departed, he said, suddenly,"This is a great honor, but am I expected to bring my instrument?"
38787The alguazil led him to his own abode, and, on reaching it, what did he behold?
38787The old Indian''s eyes sparkled with fiendish fury as she exclaimed,"And because you are without faith, you deem me without power?
38787The world?--my soul?
38787Their powerful herbs, and Ceres void of pain?
38787Then flam''d thy spirit high; but who can speak The numerous worthies of the maiden- reign?
38787Then laying his hand lightly on his friend''s shoulder, he said,"Is it for you, Audley Egerton, to speak sneeringly of boyish memories?
38787This done, he turned to me once more--"Now for it: who are you, and what has happened to you?"
38787To what port did she belong?
38787Upon Mary replying that she did not comprehend him, his look became absolutely ferocious, and he exclaimed,"Oh, that''s your game, is it?
38787Was there no beauty in this?
38787Waters and Emily quite well?"
38787What all that Afric''s golden rivers roll, Her odorous woods, and shining ivory stores?
38787What does the prosecutor say the brooch is worth?"
38787What else draws your thoughts from blue- books and beer- bills, to waste them on a vagrant like me?
38787What else is it that binds us together?
38787What else warms my heart when I meet you?
38787What had he not seen?
38787What has become of that vehement resolution, that brave self- reliance?
38787What have I to lose?
38787What human idea could be put into hod- carrying, mortar- spreading, and stone- cutting?
38787What is a green ribbon?''
38787What is the impediment that stands in the way of our union?"
38787What is the meaning of these dreadful words?
38787What shall he do?
38787What shall it be?"
38787What their unplanted fruits?
38787What was it?
38787What was left to him out of this ruin of his long cherished scheme?
38787What was left to him?
38787What were Erasmus and I, dost thou suppose, at Will''s age?
38787What!--hesitate?
38787Whence could such an idea have come?
38787Where had he not been?
38787Where was she to find refuge?
38787Wherefore should we choose?
38787Which way, Amanda, shall we bend our course?
38787Who can tell what two centuries may do in the way of giving a historical position to this rising heresy?
38787Who can, unpitying, see the flowery race, Shed by the morn, their new- flush''d bloom resign, Before the parching beam?
38787Why am I here alone with you?"
38787Will the general receive him?
38787Will you find him a place in the Stamp Office?"
38787Without thee, what were unenlighten''d man?
38787Woulde thy mother suit me better, dost thou suppose, if she coulde discuss polemicks like Luther or Melancthon?
38787Ye prudes in virtue, say, Say, ye severest, what would you have done?
38787Yet what do I say?
38787You are happy at any rate, are you not Gervais?''
38787You do not forget my commission, with respect to the exile who has married into your brother''s family?"
38787You have no objection to accompany me to the superintendent?"
38787_ Grandmamma._--"Why what''s the matter with my Pet?"
38787_ Wretch._--"Have we, love?
38787a Frenchman,"exclaimed he,"and in that dress; what can that mean?"
38787and whether a human mind should be bounded by the narrow routine of plodding toil, for the supplying of common wants?
38787are you here?"
38787dwelling as I doe at y^e fountayn head?
38787is that you?
38787just look at_ that_ now-- look at people by scores and thousands, leaving their families, and friends, and homes-- and what for but for gold?
38787may I sing of thee?
38787or ascend, While radiant Summer opens all its pride, Thy hill, delightful Sheen?
38787or walk the smiling mead; Or court the forest glades?
38787or wander wild Among the waving harvests?
38787send no bursting fullness to my temples?
38787take off your bandage, or you may become blind again?''
38787their toiling insects what, Their silky pride, and vegetable robes?
38787vain fellow, who dares set limits to a woman''s curiosity, whose eyes are suddenly opened to the light?''
38787was your dog called Puck, too?"
38787what avail their fatal treasures, hid Deep in the bowels of the pitying earth, Golconda''s gems, and sad Potosi''s mines?
38787what could make you ask such a question?
38787what does that mean?
38787what not met, tried, suffered, sought, found, dared, done, won, lost, said?
38787what the cool draughts, The ambrosial food, rich gums, and spicy health, Their forests yield?
38787what, has he not been home since yesterday?"
38787who is he?''
38787who told you so?"
38787why does not he come to the door?"
38787why how will you see him any sooner by this?
38787you will not return to me; for who is the beautiful girl who would bestow her affection on a blind lover?
41576''And his mind?'' 41576 ''Do you not know me now?''
41576''Had you e''er a wife?'' 41576 ''Look there,''said I;''what difference is there between me and a murderer?''
41576''Speak, Whalley: do you know me?'' 41576 ''The Stuart, father--''"''Who had the Stuart in charge at Hampton Court?
41576''Was not one of them made by your consent the wife of William Goffe?'' 41576 ''What became of him?''
41576''Who is this fallen enemy?'' 41576 ''Who waits there?''
41576''Why did he not make his escape?'' 41576 ''You call it a fruitless journey, then?
41576And how long has she been dead?
41576And pray what use_ does_ he make of it?
41576And she?
41576And that figure-- has she never seen it since?
41576And the little German boy took you to your countryman?
41576And this, I suppose, is your nurse, darling?
41576And what brings you to Europe?
41576And you have not found the Intelligence for which you sought?
41576And you seriously think,I observed, in answer to something she said,"that the story of Hercules and the distaff has a purpose?"
41576And you, sir?
41576And your college?
41576And, when months had passed on swiftly, Canst thou not that hour recall--''Twas a Christmas Sabbath evening-- When we told thy uncle all? 41576 Beauty a moral power?"
41576Burlesque and buffoonery?
41576But why do you jest with me in this way? 41576 But would not increased usefulnesse,"says Erasmus,"make you happier?"
41576By shaming Miss Smart into repentance, or getting him a new sweetheart?
41576Did we know,he urged,"that it was dangerous work?"
41576Did you ever read Sir David Brewster on Optical Delusions? 41576 Do the Avenels keep their old house?"
41576Do you desire me to be serious with you?
41576Do you hear, or do you want me to murder you?
41576Do you know that man?
41576Do you mean that as a compliment?
41576Done, then: but hold, what''s that?
41576Explain yourself?
41576Four bobs-- four shillings? 41576 Going far?"
41576Happier?
41576Have I offended you, Astræa?
41576Have they a god called Bergaz?
41576Have you examined its pockets?
41576How can a mean, wretched- looking man, who stops in the middle of the street to buy a morsel of bread, be rich and powerful?
41576How can you ask such a question? 41576 How did you sleep last night?"
41576How you dare, scum of de earth that you are,cried he,[13]"how you dare make cry the signorina?"
41576I believe the Avenels have only two of their children alive still-- their daughter, who married Mark Fairfield, and a son who went off to America?
41576I han''t Betty, sir; do you want she?
41576I hope you like the wine, sir?
41576I hope,said I, desiring to change the subject,"you have recovered our merriment of last night?"
41576Is it me, sir? 41576 Is my lord at the park?"
41576Jem,says another, to a man just entering,"you''ll stand a top o''reeb?
41576Love you? 41576 May I not keep these verses, mother?
41576Merriment?
41576My sweet wife, my life''s companion, Canst thou not recall the time When we sate beneath the lilacs, Listening to that simple rhyme? 41576 Not I-- what is it about?"
41576Not unnatural,said the Parson indulgently;"but he visits his parents; he is a good son, at all events, then?"
41576Nothing worse than transportation is, I hope, likely to befall any of those interesting clients of yours?
41576Offended me?
41576PLEASE, SIR, SHALL I HOLD YOUR HORSE?]
41576Papa, she says she is to go back; but she is not to go back-- is she?
41576Perhaps we were not aware that we should perspire profusely, and be dead- tired getting up and down the ladders?
41576Perhaps, my dear sir,said I blandly,"you never look?
41576Repentance, Forrester?
41576Satirical, sir? 41576 Shall I call--?"
41576Surely we should n''t like to strip, and put on miners''clothes?
41576The common story of the poor,replied my friend:"a story of hardship, perhaps of hunger: but why do n''t they wake up?"
41576Then you think that my mind ought to prostrate itself before a brawny development of muscles?
41576We could not get mother away, you know, without money-- could we, mother?
41576Well?
41576What do you mean?
41576What does he mean by that? 41576 What followed this?"
41576What have you been about, Lenny? 41576 What is the matter now?"
41576Where are you from, my little lass?
41576Where is Samuel?
41576Wherefore did my angel- mother Thus enforce her dying prayer? 41576 Who is this brother, James Eccles he calls himself, whom you saw at the police- office, and who has twice been here, I understand-- once to- day?"
41576Why do you call it a delusion? 41576 Why not?"
41576Why not?
41576Will you expound it to me?
41576You are, then, become rich?
41576You know Jane Eccles, one of my tenants in Bank Buildings: the embroidress who adopted her sister''s orphan child?
41576You know that, not to mince the matter, you have a frightful squint?
41576''Awake, father, awake!--Dost thou not know that thy son has returned?
41576''Does he steal them?''
41576''They gave you no verbal explanation, you say; but did they leave you no clew otherwise?
41576--Still, still, had my mother known thee, Would she thus have sternly willed?
41576A bottle of wine upon it?"
41576Am I the parent of a Muslin boy, that his yielding surface is to be crimped and small- plaited?
41576And did you hear no tidings of the long- lost son?''
41576And to crown all-- how would he behave himself at court?
41576Any body?
41576Any doctor?
41576Any parent?
41576Are all the faculty afraid of Mrs. Prodgit?
41576Are we not all moulded and made what we are by time and outward influences?
41576Are you hit?--are you hit?
41576Are_ they_ all here?--sure?"
41576Astræa, the haughty beauty-- the intellectual, proud Astræa-- where was her dominant power-- her lofty self- possession now?
41576But I do n''t think you ever read the''Apology of Apuleius?''"
41576But did I not tell thee that he was dead?
41576But how do_ I_ know that she might not have brought them up much better?
41576But seems it such rubbish to the poor man, to whom it promises a paradise on the easy terms of upsetting a world?
41576But tell me now, dear father, is it then a sin to eat fowls?''
41576But these verses are not my father''s-- whose are they?
41576But what was I saying?
41576But who ever saw upon earth a community of men such as sit on the hearth- rugs of Messrs. Owen and Fourier?
41576But why do I talk of natural disposition?
41576But why do you tease yourself with fancies, and think yourself unfortunate?
41576But you look pale-- I am too late-- tell me if he yet lives?''
41576But, those two men, narrowly inspecting every inch of the red hot sheet as the roller approaches it-- is their skin salamandrine?
41576By the way, Desiderius, why shouldst thou not submitt thy subtletie to the rules of a colloquy?
41576Canst thou not that eve recall, When the lilacs were in blossom, And the sunshine lay o''er all?
41576Could any man with the feelings and the education of a gentleman doubt?
41576Could he not let me founder on the breakers, without making mocking signals to me from the shore, where he and his stood in heartless security?
41576DOES HE, MY LITTLE DEAR?
41576Dear MRS. MUFFLE, you that know him best, Shall we believe him?
41576Did I, then, look so old as that?
41576Did he in his cogitations become bewildered in a labyrinth of thought, in endeavoring to account for the why of their being so differently situated?
41576Did he not rehearse his causes before it as before a master in the art?
41576Did he think that fate had dealt hardly with him?
41576Did not Socrates recommend such attention to his disciples-- did he not make a great moral agent of the speculum?
41576Did you wear your present dress yesterday?"
41576Do I describe you truly?
41576Do I wonder that she requires it?
41576Do they dissolve and volatilize, and come back again into the air, so that we are breathing pins without knowing it?
41576Do they melt into the earth, and go to the roots of vegetables, so that every day of our lives we are unconsciously dining on them?
41576Do you remember poor Nora-- the Rose of Lansmere, as they called her?
41576Do you remember under whose charge the Stuart was placed at Hampton Court?''
41576Do you think I am a fit object for burlesque and buffoonery?"
41576Dost think it a sin in the sight of Heaven to stop the breath of a murderer?
41576Dreamed he at that moment or had he dreamed for years?
41576Erasmus smiled quietlie, and sayd,"What coulde I do?
41576FAIRFIELD.--"Who?--child-- who?
41576From Wareham, who ever departed in sorrow?"
41576Had he made in a few hours a journey of eight days?
41576Had he retrograded in the way of existence?
41576Had you ever a daughter?''
41576Hath he inquired after me to- day?''
41576Have you been out much lately?
41576Have you met and slain Edward Randolph?''
41576Have you not given your faith to one another?"
41576Have you, then, been discovered?''
41576He has settled at Lansmere?"
41576He is in England, then?"
41576He wanted a peg to hang his thoughts upon--""A peg?
41576How comes it you never spoke of her before?
41576How could it be otherwise with a criminal code crowded in every line with penalties of death, nothing but-- death?
41576How did you get to her?"
41576How do they get there?
41576How know we what lives a single thought retained from the dust of nameless graves may have lighted to renown?
41576How should that be?"
41576How then could I live, when that which was my life had vanished like a pageant in the sky?
41576I dare say it was all my fault, only I did not understand you: are not these things weeds?"
41576I grant that it is an up- hill work that lies before you; but do n''t you think it is always easier to climb a mountain than it is to level it?
41576I thought so,"replied the other;"and will you accept the invitation?"
41576I wish to be informed why light and air are excluded from Augustus George, like poisons?
41576I wish to know why haste was made to stick those pins all over his innocent form, in every direction?
41576If not, why do n''t they take her in hand and improve her?
41576If the lady''s hallucination was not reasonable, what is his, who believes in such visions as these?"
41576Is Mr. Morgan, the medical man, still here?"
41576Is it because our governments have always taken upon themselves to think for us, to believe for us, and to pray for us?
41576Is my son a Nutmeg, that he is to be grated on the stiff edges of sharp frills?
41576Is the leaf only turned over by the wind, and will the next blast whisk it back again?
41576Just let me look at it, will you?"
41576LEONARD( after a pause).--"But she must have been highly educated?"
41576LEONARD.--"How was that?"
41576LEONARD.--"Why not, mother?
41576M._ Why, really, MISTER M., you''re quite absurd; Have we the means of guidance such as that?
41576Moreover, could the requisite number of miles of brickwork be constructed within the few weeks of time allotted?
41576Nay, do n''t we know you can declaime backward and forwarde on the same argument, as you did on y^e Venetian war?"
41576Need I say that there were days when they scarce tasted food, when the young wanderer had been unsuccessful in the streets?
41576Nobody ever thinks of asking, WHAT BECOMES OF THE PINS?
41576Now tell me, MR. MUFFLE, Do you believe in that?
41576PARSON.--"Halves?"
41576People have been wrongfully accused before to- day, I suppose?"
41576S._ Are you joking Or speaking as a scientific man?
41576So young, could his design be criminal?
41576Still a lieutenant?''
41576TRAVELER.--"In a chaise or fly?
41576Tell me, now,( For your opinion, really, I respect,) Are mackerel- looking clouds a sign of wet?
41576The black cat existed only in her fancy, but the hallucination was natural and reasonable-- eh-- what do you think?"
41576The starch enters his soul; who can wonder that he cries?
41576The traveler peered out at him as he whirled by-- saw Mr. Dale tossed up and down on the saddle, and cried out:"How''s the leather?"
41576Then, why are my poor child''s limbs fettered and tied up?
41576There was such a pretty one about the''Peasant''s Fireside,''Lenny-- have you got hold of that?"
41576Tom, Tom, do tell me what this is?"
41576WHAT BECOMES OF ALL THE PINS?
41576Was Augustus George intended to have limbs, or to be born a Torso?
41576Was Gertrude fading from my memory?--and was Astræa concerned in the change?
41576Was I expected to be the father of a French Roll, that the brushes of All Nations were laid in, to rasp Augustus George?
41576Was glass found out by accident?"
41576Was he my fate?
41576Was he to believe that his own son would refuse to uncover in his presence?
41576Was it my Lord Cromwell?
41576Was it the Lord General?
41576Was not Demosthenes always at his speculum?
41576Was not uncle Jean there, moreover, with his robust form and open features, his kindly smile, and his strong Marseillaise accents?
41576We called her Nora for short--""Leonora-- and I am Leonard-- is that how I came by the name?"
41576Well, what has befallen her?"
41576What are the attractive and repulsive forces to which they are subject after they drop from us?
41576What are the laws that govern their wanderings?
41576What availed the assertion that she had received the handkerchiefs from the captain himself?
41576What does it mean?
41576What does it signify to us how he dresses, or what he eats, if he makes a noble use of his fortune?"
41576What had I with love to do?
41576What is that man doing with a glazed mask before his face?
41576What is the meaning of this?
41576What is to become of us, if I''m not to have my gibes?
41576What of her, but that she is dead, and I desolate?
41576What on earth have you got there?
41576What was he to do?
41576What was he to me, or Astræa to either of us?
41576What was it, then, that troubled and excited me, and blotted out the past?
41576What was the matter?
41576What would my father have said if he had visited the earth that day and seen me?
41576What, indeed, would it, as I have been told and believe, avail, but to cause the death of two deceived, innocent persons, instead of one?
41576When Harry first went to sea, his adopted mother felt, as she expressed it,"very_ dissolute_"( desolate?)
41576Where did you say you were going?"
41576Where do they go to?
41576Where now, boy, is thy energy?
41576Wherefore employ such chicanery with a man like me?
41576Who bestowed on them a magnificent palace?
41576Who called Whalley?
41576Who was it that raised to him a monument worthy of his renown-- calling the chisel of Canova to honor the memory of Copernicus?"
41576Who would take any heed?
41576Why should I prolong a confession which you have already anticipated?
41576Why should he exult in any diversion of my fortunes?
41576Why should he meddle with me?
41576Why should his eyes traverse the great expanse to keep watch on me?
41576Will any one?
41576Will any publication?
41576Would he wear his hat in the royal presence?
41576Y._ What think you, MISTER MUFFLE, will it rain?
41576Y._ Wo n''t you wait, And take some luncheon?
41576You both remember Jane Eccles?"
41576You call upon business?"
41576You saw that the servant who opened the door was in mourning?
41576You seem prepared for a journey?"
41576You take me, sir?"
41576_ Ragged Urchin._--"PLEASE GIVE DAD A SHORT PIPE?"
41576_ Sacre dieu!_ comrade, what would you have?
41576and when hungry, tired, and dejected, he gave current to his grief, as when I found him in the midst of his heart- breaking sorrow?
41576and you two little children crossed the ocean to fetch your mother?"
41576are their eyes fire- proof?
41576did he thus linger amidst the bustle of the crowded pathway to mark where he could successfully seize the spoil?
41576had he been initiated into the craft of pocket- picking?
41576he continued;"what sort of dreams had you?
41576need I say that he was weeping bitterly?
41576or are its fibres riven past recovery?"
41576or was he sent to torture me to some deed of self- abandonment?
41576or, did fancy in his young brain raise some strange speculation on the world and the designs of Him who made it?
41576said Guadet, in a melancholy voice;"and do you then count upon living for another fifteen years, Vergniaud?"
41576says father, somewhat heating;"how can that be compassed in a way so abhorrent to my genius?
41576searching in my box?"
41576was the answer;"am I a king that I should fear the anger of the Republic?"
41576what has become of her?
41576what is all this?"
41576where is she?"
41576where thy spirit, thy resolution?
31187''How could you, sir? 31187 ''Ivan asked why the sender had not taken a receipt?''
31187And are_ you_ afraid of talk?
31187And have you no more to say for yourself than your name?
31187And now, I ask for the last time, do you consent or not?
31187And that is--?
31187And your father-- where is he?
31187And your mother, boy?
31187Are there many members of that Upper Assembly?
31187Arn''t we a long way from hom?
31187Art a_ marmiton_, thou?
31187At what hour, general?
31187But your father is good to you?
31187Ca n''t you look?
31187Can you tell us the way down, mester?
31187Come, Billy,said Gahan, anxious to turn the conversation,"will you come home with me now?
31187Come, Miss Arnold, will you follow me?
31187Dear me,said Mrs. Melwyn, in a harried, frightened way,"could you venture?
31187Dine here, sir?
31187Do many accidents occur?
31187Do you like it, my dear?
31187Do you think so? 31187 Do you think that you have assassinated all the Marats?"
31187Done what?
31187Down where? 31187 Down?
31187Have you not a drum to give him?
31187His name?
31187How is it to be done?
31187How shall I bless the arm that is lifted to wound the Holy Church? 31187 How so, alone, sirrah?"
31187How so-- I never refused it; you dare not tell M. Robespierre that I refused, sirrah?
31187How so-- of M. Robespierre, boy? 31187 How-- where was it found-- in whose keeping has it been, boy?"
31187I shall get over th''ground rayther faster nor you done a- foot, eh? 31187 If I can, dear sister,"she said,"have advised you to your injury, how shall I forgive myself?
31187If I could make her love me!--and with such an affectionate temper why should I not? 31187 If M. Robespierre--""Who speaks of me here?"
31187If they can fly,I asked,"why are they sent in coaches?
31187Indeed, and what may it be?
31187Is it possible?
31187Is there any thing worth reading in it?
31187Is there room inside?
31187Is this a snare-- what secret mischief have we here?
31187Is this the fellow?
31187It may cost a couple of thousand francs, Boivin,said I, calmly;"but what then?
31187Let me see that they are his orders,said he, sturdily;"who tells me that such is his will?"
31187Look here, for instance,cried he, as he pointed to me with his sword,"is that''gamin''yonder like an artillery- driver?
31187My good man, what have I done?
31187Nay, then, what next?
31187Now, about their mode of living?
31187Oh,exclaimed Jane Dunster,"what will they say at seeing us riding here?"
31187Say?
31187Shall I pass on to the next subject?
31187Shall I read the newspaper this evening?
31187Sir,said the steward, advancing,"they tell me you are going to send my boy to prison-- is it true?"
31187So you shall; and what about old Peggy?
31187Something about the rebels, I suppose?
31187Th''foot- track? 31187 The society, however, in the government towns must be different?"
31187Then he is dead? 31187 Then what are we to do?"
31187Was he a royalist, boy?
31187Was she then so beautiful?
31187Well, Gahan, what do you want?
31187Well, what has the fool to say about that?
31187Well-- can''t you go on? 31187 What can it be?"
31187What do you understand by energy?
31187What general-- who told thee?
31187What has he done? 31187 What is it all about?"
31187What of your father, boy?--is he a soldier?
31187What says Nancy?
31187What says he?
31187What the devil, Randall, are you about to do now?
31187What took me round the house, is it? 31187 What took you round the house just now, Tim?"
31187What trade, then, has the good fortune to possess your shining abilities?
31187What, then, did you hate in Marat?
31187Whatever are you talking of, Nancy? 31187 When_ are_ we to have dinner, Mrs. Melwyn?
31187Where I go must Nancy go,she said to herself,"and of whom can I be sure?"
31187Where are we?
31187Where did you get those cherries?
31187Where is David? 31187 Where is he now?"
31187Where is the lad, then?
31187Where to, youngster?
31187Where''s Billy?
31187Where''s the foot- track?
31187Where''s the use, Nelly,said the coachman,"in hiding it from him?
31187Which means straight to Robespierre''s dwelling, to tell him that I have turned you out of doors-- eh, sirrah?
31187Who are you, sirrah-- what brings you here?
31187Who inspired you with so much hatred against him?
31187Who is your father, boy?
31187Who were the people,asked his master,"whom I saw moving through the western grove?"
31187Why should I go to Court?
31187Why should I-- what value has life for me?
31187Why will you trouble the dead? 31187 Why, what is there to be afraid of there, my good fellow?"
31187Will no one answer for him?
31187Will you not bless me, Père,said I, approaching him in deep humility;"will you not let me carry with me thy benediction?"
31187You are going to Court, sir, I presume?
31187You astonish me: how is that?
31187You have certainly tried the extremes of life,said he, laughing;"and now you wish, probably, to hit the''juste milieu,''by becoming a soldier?"
31187You have no care for your own neck, then?
31187You hear that, boy?
31187You think so?
31187You''d send me to the guillotine for another?
31187_ Missionary_ Can you see the wind?
31187_ Missionary_ How then do you know that there is such a thing?
31187Again her heart beat pit- a- pat, and she thought,"Can he really be thinking of me?"
31187And do we taste thee here in light and flowers?
31187And how would it be possible for mine host to commence the day without keeping his customers waiting till he has perused the"Advertiser"or the"Sun?"
31187And so, boy, thou hast spoken with one of these men-- these generals, as they call themselves, of that republican horde?"
31187Are you a mere reading machine, madam?"
31187Art silent?
31187Art silent?
31187Art silent?
31187Art thou a god, indeed?
31187Art thou the first sweet place, where hearts, made even, Sing tender songs in earth- remembering bowers?
31187At first James Cheshire replied with a careless waggery,"The pretty face makes capital butter though, eh?
31187Besides, who walks in Greenwich Park after the gates are closed?
31187But I reckon you do n''t understand much of farming stock?"
31187But Jane asked how nothing at all could shout and laugh as it did?
31187But another question is less easy to answer, What can he, or should he, or shall he yet do?
31187But have I not been now for five days chiefly among this class?
31187But what is the return of the wave, and the reaction from that state of things following the universal extension of the suffrage in France?
31187But what meant that dreadful cry?
31187But where is David?
31187But where were they whose beating hearts had throbbed with deep devotion?
31187But why do I discuss the question with thee?
31187But why do they seem so disagreeable?
31187But why then did they not answer?
31187But, she did not like to ask such a thing, so she said"_ them_;"hoping somebody would answer to it some way or other, but--"Who?"
31187Can opium think?
31187Can the financial reformer know breakfast- table happiness till he has digested the"Daily News,"or skimmed the"Express?"
31187Could the Père Michel have been there?
31187Could the oppressed farmer handle the massive spoon for his first sip out of his Sèvres cup till he has read of ruin in the"Herald"or"Standard?"
31187Could there lie any thing under that sweet outside, but the gentlest and most indulgent of temper?
31187David, lad, where ar ta?"
31187Dick, is that thee at last?
31187Does it not stir thy heart, my child, to know that such blessed privileges may be thine?"
31187Every one said it was an opportunity not to be neglected: but Jane weighed in her mind,"Will he keep faith in my compact with Nancy?"
31187Had the poor priest come to take a last look and a farewell of a spot so dear to him?
31187Have you no business that you can do in Tidser, sir?"
31187He said to me one day, with a face of great solemnity,"What must have been that man''s feelings, who thought himself_ the first deist_?"
31187Heat excites, how then can it relax?
31187Here, Lettice, give me the poultice; put it on, and then write for Lysons, will you?"
31187Hou''ll grow soft, and then who''s to maintain her?
31187How could Randall bear to hear you say so?"
31187How have you supported yourself?"
31187How is it possible for any respectable person to occupy himself with such nasty stuff?
31187I exclaimed,"what did you do?"
31187I have frequently asked clergymen and others, if they often find the adult peasant reading for his own or others''amusement?
31187I know thee now: but how art thou here, and thus?"
31187I repeated;"and how does the spirit show himself?"
31187I said to him,"What_ is_ the meaning of all this going on between your mate and his wife, and the big stockman?"
31187I suppose you could not carry them up yourself, Bridget?"
31187I tell ye?
31187I thought it well to look astonished at nothing, and, having pointed in a careless manner to the scalps, asked what might be their destination?
31187I''ve an eye in my head and a head on my shoulders, eh?"
31187If one''s child has little ways one does not quite like, who thinks of hating her for it?
31187If one''s mother is a little provoking and tedious under the oppressive weight of years or sickness, who thinks of making a great hardship of it?
31187If that be so, why have not I and others reason as well as you, the judges?"
31187In the lower classes, perhaps, in the every- day life of the Russian peasant?
31187In what corps did he serve?"
31187Is he lost?
31187Is it right?''
31187Is n''t it David Dunster''s lad?"
31187Is n''t that so, eh?
31187Jolly fellows, those, eh?
31187Let it go, will you?
31187Matter, or mind, of either, what knows he?
31187Might the juvenile Conservative open his lips to imbibe old English fare or to utter Young England opinions, till he has glanced over the"Chronicle?"
31187Of course you''ve no appetite now for dinner?
31187Oh, dost thou think, with pitying mind, On untaught infants left behind?
31187Oh, where is David?
31187On what else are many of our summary critical and moral judgments founded?
31187Or have they ever read his chapter in"Blackwood"for July, 1837, on the"Retreat of a Tartar tribe?"
31187Presently my friend again inquired whether I was going up to Court?
31187Self- control ought to be more than at present a part of education, sedulously and sternly taught, for is it not the geometry of life?
31187Shall I begin with the leading article?"
31187Shall I give you the summary of last night''s debate?"
31187Shall you find it so?
31187So,"What has De Quincey done?"
31187That a higher civilization followed this every body knows; but how many centuries did it take to civilize the Barbarians?
31187That young farmer fall in love with a mill- girl?"
31187The Père was your tutor, I suppose?"
31187The dressed doll turns out a tolerable dairy, eh?
31187The only notice the farmer took was to turn with a broad, smiling face, and shout to them,"Would n''t you like to be here too?"
31187The question still returns: Why do they seek amusement in sufferings which are unnecessary and avoidable?
31187The union effected, what should hinder his return to favor?
31187The whole party was startled at not seeing the boy, and joined in a simultaneous"Where is he?
31187There is Randall, to be sure, sets herself extremely against it; but, as Catherine says,''Is Randall to be mistress in this family, or am I?''
31187Under the impression that I was subjected to an accidental intrusion, I called out, first in a gentle and afterward in a sharper tone,"Who''s there?"
31187Was it indifference to her guest''s comforts?
31187Weighs o''the back?"
31187What are the consequences?
31187What can I write?
31187What comfortable, beneficial unions might be brought about in such cases, one should think; and yet why did they never or seldom turn out well?
31187What could be done without the faithful Randall?
31187What did I do?
31187What dun they do letting thee be upon th''hills in such a dee as this?"
31187What in the name of-- is the use of wasting your breath and my patience-- can''t you skip?
31187What is the meaning of this?
31187What made this kind Mrs. Melwyn permit such things?
31187What people in the world have so fine, so magnificent a country?
31187What sort of sky have they in Skitzland?
31187What then is"Young Russia"to do?
31187What was it then, that left her helpless guest thus exposed to want and insult?
31187What was the consequence?
31187What was the sustaining spirit of such martyrdom?
31187What was to be done?
31187What would become of the servants?
31187What would the general do?
31187What''s a pack o''wenches to my lad?"
31187What''s that you''re saying, Miss Arnold?"
31187What''s the use of sitting there looking like a child of six years old, who''s afraid of being whipped?
31187What, indeed, is more probable?
31187What_ are_ we waiting for?
31187What_ shall_ become of me?"
31187Where am I then to find Russia?
31187Where is your brother?"
31187Where''s the track?"
31187Whither to?
31187Who are you?"
31187Who can torment us before the time?
31187Who can torment us before the time?
31187Who could help being happy in such a paradise?"
31187Who is there below?
31187Who would look after them?
31187Why should I not try to make such a being love me?
31187Why should Russia be worse than England?
31187Why should we not be very happy together?
31187Why, what art ta doing here, my lad, in such a starm?
31187Will nobody undo it?
31187Will you never teach that cook of yours to be punctual?"
31187Will you ring the bell for them?
31187With this piece of a child''s song of sheep, David sat down to his supper, and Betty Dunster hurried up the valley, shouting,"Children, where are you?
31187Would the minister of state presume to commence the day in town till he has opened the"Times,"or in the country till he has perused the"Globe?"
31187You remember this, night twenty years?
31187_ Is_ dinner to be upon the table at seven o''clock, or is it not?"
31187can beer imagine?
31187exclaimed the mother;"what is it?
31187goes by; And what ensues?
31187how shall I pray for one whose place is in the ranks of the infidel?
31187muttered Boivin;"what will he say next?"
31187or is it to a drummer- boy you intrust the caisson of an eight- pounder gun?
31187or thyself heaven?
31187returned the master, when he saw them,"you have escaped, have you, sir?"
31187said David;"what are you afreed on?
31187said the farmer;"wo n''t the youngsters we left on the road talk?"
31187she said, after a pause,"what noise is that?"
31187thou who knowest life, Temptation, trial, toil and strife, Wilt thou not still thine aching breast To bless his early rest?
31187what will you_ dar_ say again my boy?"
31187where are you?"
31187where are you?"
31187where are you?"
31187where is your brother?"
31187who cares for talk?"
31187why the deuce ca n''t you pass over all that, and tell us what the confounded blockheads on that side did really say?"
31187you are among them, are you?"
42267''And pray, what do you mean, sir, by this insolence?'' 42267 ''And what did you say to_ that_?''
42267''Do n''t you know, stupid, that these orders can not be intended to apply to_ us_?'' 42267 ''Do you know who we are, sir?''
42267''Then you have the effrontery, do you, to refuse admittance to the lady of your commanding officer?'' 42267 ''What did I_ say_ to it?''
42267''Where did you get your liquor from?'' 42267 A guinea that we knew of; but I''ve had plenty in my time, and how do you know this is not one we had overlooked?"
42267A long step back-- and to what? 42267 About me, sir?"
42267Am I not so?
42267And have the children looked after themselves at all, sir?
42267And how did you like the ride? 42267 And how, then, has what seems to me so obvious never occurred to you?"
42267And in that case, must the government resign, sir?
42267And it sounds-- somehow it sounds,said Mr. Skimpole,"like a small sum?"
42267And suppose I am willing to go to prison,said Antonio,"rather than testify against Ellen''s brother; can I do so?"
42267And where,said Randal, with an iron smile,"are the £20,000 you ascribe to me to come from?"
42267And why can not the officers do the same?
42267Are you all ready, and have you got every thing that you want?
42267Are you arrested for much, sir?
42267At what time did you arrive there?
42267Ay?
42267But how can I serve Riccabocca? 42267 But if the question at issue comes before the House you will vote against it?"
42267But what did you think upon the road?
42267But whom can the exile possibly have seen of birth and fortunes to render him a fitting spouse for his daughter? 42267 Can he?"
42267Can he?
42267Can you read it?
42267Did I not tell you?
42267Did you imply that he has children of his own, sir?
42267Did you know this morning, now, that you were coming out on this errand?
42267Do you know?
42267Do you see that short branch just above you?
42267Do you see,inquired Sieyes, pointing to a sort of cabinet in the room,"that pretty piece of furniture?"
42267Do you suppose,Napoleon replied,"that I have never thought of that?
42267For me?
42267Gentlemen of the jury,said the judge again,"what say you?
42267Gentlemen of the jury,said the judge,"are you agreed upon the verdict?"
42267Has Hazeldean consented to the post- obit?
42267Has my wife,said he to Bourrienne,"been speaking to you of the Bourbons?"
42267Have n''t you just come from Franconia?
42267Have we ever met before?
42267Have you any thing to sell?
42267He is quite happy?
42267He is well?
42267Honest, is she?
42267How can you tell how it came into the gruel? 42267 How can your woman eyes be so dull, and your woman heart so obtuse?"
42267How do you know that?
42267How far is it from here to Franconia?
42267I can not conceive,said he, abruptly,"why you should tempt me thus-- what interest is it to you?"
42267I hope I have not driven her away?
42267I worthy of such a creature? 42267 If Audley''s affairs are as you state, what can he do?"
42267Indeed, sir?
42267Is it about Rodolphus?
42267Is n''t the gruel good?
42267Is not this house,he asked,"as nigh heaven as my own?"
42267Is that Mr. Jarndyce''s wagon?
42267Is this Governor Dummer?
42267It did n''t affect your appetite? 42267 May I ask, sir, what is--""Coavinses?"
42267May I say what I have heard expressed with regard to you and your position-- in the streets-- in the clubs?
42267My child,said he, with a trembling voice,"what is this?"
42267No?
42267Of what?
42267Oh, dear me, what''s this, what''s this?
42267On what ground do you wish to be excused?
42267Randal Leslie? 42267 Rheumatism, sir?"
42267Shall I''old your''Orse, Sir?]
42267She does not expect a judgment? 42267 That''s your daughter, is it?"
42267Then,said the other,"would you do me the favor to deliver this letter to a friend of mine, there resident?
42267They could n''t know that the money belonged to me,thought he; adding aloud:"Have you no friends here in London?"
42267This?
42267Took?
42267We can not talk very well here,said Antonio,"will it do if I come and see you about it to- night?"
42267Well, citizen,said Napoleon, in one of the shops,"what do they say of Bonaparte?"
42267Well, father, dear, how are you this morning?
42267Well, general,said Bourrienne,"why do you not endeavor to remedy those evils which you foresee?"
42267Were you at the corn- barn when it took fire?
42267What are the numbers? 42267 What company is this, Rosa?"
42267What could possess that fellow; with his unmeaning face, fat paunch, and bandy legs, to have his picture taken?
42267What did Esther do?
42267What do you think will be best, Miss Summerson?
42267What does that spell?
42267What is it that is buried there?
42267What is it, father? 42267 What is it, father?"
42267What is it?
42267What is the alternative, sir? 42267 What is the reason?"
42267What is your name?
42267What may I call your name?
42267What wheels on such a day as this, for gracious sake?
42267What would be done,asked Antonio,"if I should refuse to do so?"
42267What''s the use of a cloak if it''s not rolled up?
42267What''s this you have put into the gruel, Mary?
42267What''s this, they tell me? 42267 When can you go?"
42267Where did you say the wind was, Rick?
42267Where do you live?
42267Where would you wish to go?
42267Where''s your cloak, rascal?
42267Who doubts that? 42267 Who lives in the attics?"
42267Who''s that?
42267Who''s this, Miss Summerson?
42267Whose money is it, I should like to know? 42267 Why did I not,"he afterward often said, as he looked at his brawny, hairy, Samson- like arms,"strangle that man when I had him in my power?"
42267Why does he show that fat hand so conspicuously?
42267Why must I?
42267Why so?
42267Why that sigh, my dear mother?
42267Wot do you mean?
42267You are a friend to the present ministers? 42267 You are sure, then, that the government will be outvoted?"
42267You ask,the opposition exclaimed,"who was the aggressor?
42267You can not be serious? 42267 You have?"
42267You think we are right, Harley?
42267''Alas,''said the poor Frenchman, profoundly dejected;''and if so, where shall I spend my evenings?''"
42267''What did I_ say_?
42267( Inquiringly) Pray, Sir, wot''s it like?
42267A blank, however, it has turned out, and the question becomes grave-- What are you to do?"
42267Accosting Del Uomo, this spy inquired whether he were not about to visit such a town?
42267After the oath was administered as usual, the county attorney began to question Antonio as follows:"Were you in Hiburgh on the night of this robbery?"
42267Am I so very-- very childlike?"
42267And I ca n''t abear to part with any thing I once lay hold of( or so my neighbors think, but what do_ they_ know?)
42267And how did you like Mrs. Jellyby, my dear?"
42267And if I did-- if I lost ten thousand pounds-- what then?
42267And nine?
42267And what was the answer he got?"
42267And who is your friend?
42267And why do you think they call me the Lord Chancellor, and my shop Chancery?"
42267Apropos, have you spoken to my father, as you undertook to do?"
42267Are not these families substantial prayers?
42267Are there no means of coming to an understanding?
42267Are you as kind as if she were the great heiress you believe Violante to be?"
42267Are you not in a situation to impose any conditions you may think fit?"
42267Attar of roses did Golden Sleeve suggest?
42267Being compelled to record categorically a reply to the inquiry,"What are the manners and customs of the inhabitants?"
42267Besides, how live in the mean while?"
42267Better do it yourself; reason enough for it, that he has confided to you his hope, and asked you to help him; why should not you?
42267But at all events, Ada-- I may call you Ada?"
42267But how is this?
42267But how?
42267But if it be"wicked"to malign the black hat, who shall be justified?
42267But were you frightened at the snakes?
42267But what are all such difficulties to our modern Galileo, or to his scientific audience?
42267But what avails it?
42267But what do you know of him?"
42267But what guarantee have I that this money will be paid-- these estates made mine upon the condition stipulated?"
42267But why_ will_ you call me child?
42267But would such absurdities in reasoning have ever gained currency in those thinking though little scientific periods?
42267But, to leave the very day after your friend''s daughter comes as a guest!--what will_ she_ think of it?"
42267Can any thing be more horrible than your pressing of seamen?
42267Can he be devil enough to propose it?
42267Can the married world explain to us, how it is that matrimony seems to dull the edge of triumph, and to round a grave over maiden glory?
42267Can you believe that I could tear myself from a gift which alone recalls to me the day when my husband loved me?
42267Can you hear the sound upon the terrace, through the music, and the beat, and every thing?"
42267Could it have been so in our own land, when Edwards preached his deep theology to plain men in plain New England villages?
42267Did n''t make you at all uneasy?"
42267Did terror constitute any part of the exercises of your own mind?
42267Did you break your doll?"
42267Did you recognize no family likeness?--none in those eyes-- mother?"
42267Do n''t mean to say yer''ve come down to a Pony?"
42267Do you forget that I am engaged-- and of my own free will and choice?
42267Do you hear a sound like a footstep passing along the terrace, Watt?"
42267Do you imagine that all those people who came to pay their court to me were sincere?
42267Do you want your breakfast?
42267Does the operator_ will_ it thus to be?
42267Eastward lay Bagdad and Persia, thrones of Caliphs who once sat in his seat-- why should not he sit in theirs?
42267From the beginning was not the Oriental merchant a magician?
42267HARLEY.--"And what undeceived you?
42267Has not this ever occurred to you?"
42267Has the picture been engraved, miss?"
42267Have I not seen you one; have I not held you in my arms?"
42267Have I the pleasure of addressing another of the youthful parties in Jarndyce?"
42267Have you ever seen a man rise under kings by merit alone?"
42267Have you taken arms to revive the reign of the ancient kings?
42267He began:"''So, Reuben Darke, you have considered my proposition, and agree, of course?''
42267He rose, and approaching his scrutinizing intruder, said:"Do you_ know_ me, sir?"
42267How comes one of the most essential ingredients to be left behind in the psychological transfer?
42267How could Mohammad Alee reflect that sallying forth to grasp it, that peer had bitten the dust?
42267How could he?
42267How could you do it?
42267How do I put down three- and- twopence?
42267How have I become so?
42267How is it that they do not feel peace to be the first of necessities as the first of glories?
42267How much are you out of pocket?
42267How much, you?
42267How much,_ you_?
42267How otherwise can I aid him?
42267I do n''t know what the business name of it may be, but I suppose there is some instrument within their power that would settle this?"
42267I guess-- the young author?"
42267I ventured to take this opportunity of hinting that Mr. Skimpole, being in all such matters quite a child--"Eh, my dear?"
42267In case of a restoration, what is to become of the men who were conspicuous in the revolution?
42267In reference to this assertion Napoleon says,"How was such a thing possible?
42267Is it any thing about a picture?"
42267Is it any thing like beer, for example?"]
42267Is it honorable for so decided a minority to attempt, by force of arms, to dictate laws to the majority?"
42267Is that the natural conduct of a lover?"
42267Is there any tide of atmosphere which makes flux and reflux of cold-- kindred to the sweep of the ocean?
42267Is this connecting medium mind, or matter, or a compound of both, or a tertium quid?
42267Leonard, I think you would rejoice at an occasion to serve your old friends, Dr. Riccabocca and his daughter?"
42267May I know?"
42267Miss Summerson, if I do n''t deceive myself?"
42267Miss Violante, is the doll to have blue or black eyes?"
42267Must the war, which for the four last years has devastated the world, be eternal?
42267Napoleon quietly listened to his story, and then, raising his head from his pillow, inquired,"Have they corrupted our guard?"
42267No man ever yet saw that Baron in a dressing- gown and slippers?
42267Now is n''t he?"
42267Now what do you make of thirty- eight pence?
42267Only--""Only, you would say, I am going out of power, and you do n''t see the chance of my return?"
42267Or is it a bridge without an abutment on either shore?
42267PUPIL TEACHER( drawing nine strokes).--How can that be?
42267PUPIL TEACHER.--Twelve-- and eight?
42267Randal thought of that dry witticism in Gibbon,"Abu Rafe says he will be witness for this fact, but who will be witness for Abu Rafe?"
42267Rick, my boy, Esther, my dear, what have you been doing?
42267SMITH.--"Is Mrs. Brown in?"
42267Saving yourself, what of the scene is changed since then?
42267Seven and five, how many?
42267Shall interminable war continue merely to settle a question of history?
42267Shall not you and I, my reader, swim to our Heros, though a thousand Leanders never came to shore?
42267She hurriedly took up her little bag of documents, which she had laid upon the table on coming in, and asked if we were also going into court?
42267She then asked,''Have you a servant, sir, in whom you can rely, who can go with me into the street for a few moments?''
42267Sieyes, much annoyed, rather petulantly exclaimed,"Gentlemen, who shall take the chair?"
42267So that''s Lady Dedlock, is it?"
42267So, he has brought you up to follow in his ways, and has sent you into foreign countries and the like?
42267Such a sum-- for what?--for a mere piece of information?
42267Surely you will not deny me?"
42267Tell me now, why do you desire the return of the Bourbons?
42267The security, too, bad-- what security?"
42267The sum is large, no doubt; it answers to me to give it to you; does it answer to you to receive it?"
42267Thirty- eight pence, how much?
42267To the petitioners, pleading in his behalf, Napoleon replied:"Why should I pardon this man?
42267Ve- ry mortifying, is it not?"
42267Was it indeed true that he was in the elegant saloon of the_ Marquise_ M----?
42267Was it not the magic to draw from your purse the Philosopher''s Stone?
42267We have had deep snows in April, and May_ may_ bring him his season yet: for what says the Almanac of past years?
42267What are we to do when you are gone?
42267What can it mean?
42267What could a man do, in the little leisure left by so much unremitting work?
42267What in men''s mouths?
42267What is there in that glen of mimosas?
42267What is to become of France?
42267What is to become of all the changes which have been effected in the last twelve years?"
42267What is to become of the confiscated estates and the national domain, which have been sold and sold again?
42267What matters that?
42267What right have I to such kindness, save my name of Leslie?"
42267What say you-- shall it be so?"
42267What say you?"
42267What urged him to it?
42267When all was ready, the justice commenced by saying to Antonio,"What is your name?"
42267When you stopt out till mornink, who sat up for you?
42267When you was ill, who forgot the nat''ral dignities of his station, and answered the two- pair bell?
42267Where do I carry the three?
42267Where was it likely Violante should go but to the Lansmeres''?
42267Where, then, the danger?
42267Who can help sympathizing with the poor woman, who thus saw all her fairy treasures resolved into their intrinsic worthlessness?
42267Who has not inhabited this palace?
42267Who has not seen just such statistics as these dwelt upon with unction by your thorough"statist?"
42267Who was there to make him afraid?
42267Who would care for a fox''s brush, if it had not been rendered a prize by the excitement of the chase?"
42267Whom, my lord, except yourself?"
42267Why did you do it?
42267Why did you?
42267Why is Madame Goldschmidt so much less than Jenny Lind?
42267Why should I regret my incapacity for details and worldly affairs, when it leads to such pleasant consequences?
42267Will you give them back to me again?"
42267Will you tell Peschiera where the young lady is, or shall I?
42267With such a rival what chance had he?
42267With that laconic logic which he had ever at command, he said,"Are you fighting in self- defense?
42267With the loss of that place, Randal lost all means of support, save what Audley could give him; and if Audley were in truth ruined?
42267Would it be well, do you think, to come out of the controversies for a little while, and be simply Apostolic thus low down?
42267Yes, my dear?"
42267You called her Rosa?"
42267You could not wish them to be mean enough to stay in?"
42267You find the long vacation exceedingly long, do n''t you?"
42267You thought nothing to that effect?"
42267You understand how those things are managed?"
42267[ Illustration: FLUNKEY.--"Apollo?
42267_ Que voulez vous?_ It is my profession, my hobby.
42267and eight and three''s eleven, and eight''s nineteen, and seven''s what?
42267do n''t talk of duty as a child, Miss Summerson; where''s Ma''s duty as a parent?
42267has nothing been said as to the division?"
42267in his letter to you guarantees the contrary of all which you apprehend?
42267is the prisoner guilty or not guilty?"
42267says Mr. Guppy, greedily curious;"what''s the story, miss?
42267what''s the matter?"
35271''And when do you intend to commence your chase?'' 35271 ''I see you intend to use your musket?''
35271''Once more, then-- are you quite determined not to let me share the chance with you?'' 35271 ''What are you about there?''
35271Ah,cried Leonard, sorrowfully,"how could I forget?"
35271Ah?--well, EBEN, what is your_ other_ name?
35271All ready?
35271Am not I devoted to the devil, and will not that be sufficient to make my way?
35271And by what right,Madame Permon replied, with continued duplicity,"should Salicetti seek an asylum here?
35271And how could you-- how dared you break the seal of a letter which bore my address? 35271 And how have you pictured him to your imagination?"
35271And how is the place called?
35271And how, sir, have there ever been poets? 35271 And how,"cried Leonard, fiercely,"how have they dared to slander this dead mother?
35271And no inquiries were ever made?
35271And what is Mr. Burley, and what has he written?
35271And why not, Laura; was the thing so very impossible? 35271 And you presumed-- was it from here?
35271Are they to be both married in one day?
35271Are we asking too great a favor, Monsieur de Tiernay?
35271Are you sure this is a bear- steak?
35271But who are you?
35271But who is this Monseigneur?
35271But,resumed the Doctor, seriously,"you really feel a strong predisposition to make verses?"
35271Can ye no kape that long red rope i''yer own impty hid, but ye must let every body know ye''re a gomulah? 35271 Can you remember all this so well, Laura?"
35271Did he pray to God?
35271Do you look on it as no more, then?
35271Does she not let me see you? 35271 Does the question admit of a discussion, madame?"
35271Father,said Willy, timidly, but curiously,"did you make mother cry too?"
35271For yourself, my darling!--what can you mean?
35271Frances, do you remember how I and your mother-- there she stands-- have cherished you? 35271 General, have you heard this strange avowal?
35271He was about to leave me, when stopping, he exclaimed,''But what is the matter, Napoleon? 35271 How could such a thing happen?"
35271How do you like the new constitution?
35271How do_ you_ know Viscount L----?
35271How far is it from his home?
35271How so? 35271 How, my young friend?
35271How, sir?
35271How_ could you_,said a lady,"thus mercilessly fire upon your own countrymen?"
35271I will, but what do you intend?
35271I wonder if they are English?
35271Is it for the convent?
35271Is it so cold a night?
35271Is there no one to teach this man his duty better than this? 35271 Is_ dis_ you''best room, landlord?"
35271It is handsome and good: will not the enlarging of it savor much of worldly vanity?
35271Master Poulailler,said Roussart,"you are going to be married, then?"
35271May I beseech you to open the door?
35271May I go with him to the gate?
35271Never thought of him, perhaps?
35271Never,replied the soldier;"do you take me for a spy?
35271Not stay here? 35271 Oh, dear no, Miss Leslie, it costs me more; shall I send it in?
35271Shall I sing you your favorite songs to- night, papa?
35271Shall we not hear from you?
35271Then where is it?
35271Thirty- five shillings, did you say, Mrs. Grey? 35271 Well, Monsieur le Compte, what is your business with me?"
35271Well, then, ma''am, shall I make out the account to you? 35271 Well,"he said, seeing that she remained silent,"how can_ I_ hope, when this mighty genius labored and despaired?
35271What are you dreaming of, Mary? 35271 What are you thinking of so seriously?"
35271What can I do for you?
35271What do I care what men without are to say and think of the words that gush forth on my page?
35271What do you do, Frances, so far from the fire?
35271What is it, my dear L----? 35271 What is it?"
35271What is the good of it?
35271What letter shall I put on?
35271What note?
35271What party?
35271What then?
35271What was your mother''s family- name?
35271What''s the kick- up?
35271When? 35271 Where''s your boots?"
35271Whether have you been hunting or fishing?
35271Whither?
35271Who can tell that?
35271Who is he, fairest?
35271Who is it?
35271Who would not love her?
35271Whom can we trust now?
35271Why do you ask that, Helen?
35271Why not take her with you, then?
35271Why not? 35271 Why, dear, is n''t my meaning plain enough?
35271Will you give me my revenge at chess?
35271Will you work at something practical and prosy, and let the poetry rest awhile?
35271Will you,he cried to Frances, after an hour spent in fruitless discussion and recrimination,"will you, or will you not, give up this man?"
35271With your mother, perhaps?
35271Yes, sir; can not you hear the whip of the postillions?
35271Yes, why should you or any woman have your private purse? 35271 Yes,"replied the landlord,"yes-- doesn''t it suit you?"
35271You are before the carriage, then, mademoiselle?
35271You are not disposed to give her up, then?
35271You eavesdropper-- you impersonation of all jealousy--- how dared you do so? 35271 You never saw him afterward?"
35271You say you walked up to London-- was that from choice or economy?
35271Your power is faint, your threatenings naught, What empire have ye now? 35271 ''Is that all?'' 35271 ''Twas the dearest privilege of my Lord Chancellor; but now he''s dead and gone, how shall we contract the charges of Sir Thomas More?
35271A duel?"
35271A quarrel?
35271After a moment''s hesitation, the president continued,"Are you aware of the magnitude of the undertaking?"
35271Ai n''t it a watherspout, eh?"
35271And did Shakspeare himself, in his life, ever hearken to the applause that thundered round the Personators of his airy images?
35271And for what do they weave a tissue of untruths?
35271And have not we had enuff of bringing up children to be above their birth?
35271And if a favor, should I take it?
35271And is that his wife?"
35271And methought, can not I live apart from sin here, and now; and as to sorrow, where can we live apart from that?
35271And now her father''s position was explained to her; what was to become of them?
35271And the company?
35271And what is your report of the calling?
35271Answer me at once-- yes or no-- did you ever owe them any thing?"
35271Are we not one, Constance?
35271At last he says,"Who was that old prophet that could not or would not prophesy for a King of Judah till a minstrel came and played unto him?
35271At the same time a familiar voice exclaimed,"Canst tell us, mistress, why fools have hot heads and hands icy cold?"
35271But how explain this to Willy?
35271But how to get at them?
35271But it looks out of place by the road- side: what say you?"
35271But stay-- shall I tell you all?"
35271But what about Robinson Crusoe?
35271But what could she make of them now?
35271But what relation has this to De Foe''s Robinson Crusoe?
35271But who could advise another man to set his whole hope of fortune on the chance of a prize in a lottery?
35271But why do we speak of these things, Maurice?
35271But why should she not tell him the cause of her unhappiness; why was there not perfect confidence between man and wife?
35271But you have friends of your own in town?"
35271But, was it certainly and invariably good in every crisis of temptation?
35271Constance''s was only an old dress re- trimmed; if so, where was that money?
35271Could I throw my body flat, and prevent myself from sinking deeper?
35271Could his dear wife behold her husband in a coffin, what would her feelings be?
35271Could the enemy have attacked us?
35271DOCTOR.--"Pless me, you do?
35271Did you find it here?"
35271Did you know my aunt?"
35271Do you know that you are entwined round our hearts as never child was yet entwined?
35271Do you suppose Burns drinking at the ale- house with his boors around him, was drinking, like them, only beer and whisky?
35271Does he know the clergyman?"
35271Does it not bid us look to_ our_ harvests, that we may gather in season, and be furnished for the long winter which approacheth?
35271For what parts in the skies have your studies on the earth fitted you?
35271Had_ they_ other callings?"
35271Hair chestnut; eyes-- what color?
35271Has it no analogy to the Present of our own lives-- yours, and mine, and----''s?
35271Have we not kept our promise?
35271Have you ne''er before noted these signs?"
35271He died in obscurity in the British metropolis, in 1801, and who knows the place of his grave?
35271He felt annoyed at this; why should she not say how she had laid out his present?
35271He paused a moment, and added,"Is it that Nature is very patient?"
35271He threw himself into the Doctor''s own well- worn chair, and muttered to himself,"Why did he tell me to come?--What new can he think of for me?
35271Helen sobbed aloud; then, writhing from the Doctor, she exclaimed,"But he may know where I am?
35271How anxious she was to please him in all save this?
35271How can that be saved if you willfully ally yourself with one who can never enter into the fold of Christ?"
35271How do I come_ here_?
35271How knew they that I-- was-- was-- was not the child of wedlock?"
35271I am in no mood for singing?"
35271I do n''t know the names even of some of these fellows-- did you ever deal with them?
35271I made answer,"Canst tell me, Patteson, why fools should stray out of bounds?"
35271I sayd,"Mercy, thou lookst like a nun: how is''t thou hast ne''er become one in earnest?"
35271I shall give him sweet water, shall I, father?"
35271Is John Burley now of man''s common standard?
35271Is it not a pleasant season, a profitable halting- time; a point of prospect, from which we may look backward and forward?
35271Is the fault with the rulers?
35271Is this true?"
35271It was a thing unheard of in the district that a woman should work in the fields; but what else could be done?
35271It was sundown before I reached camp; where I was met by the inquiries of my wondering companions:"Did you come across the''goats?''"
35271Its falsehood I knew, and yet, could I dare to disprove it?
35271Just show me that straw again, will you?
35271Mr. Burley, is that you?
35271No, gentlemen of the jury, you may bring the prisoner at the bar, my client, in guilty; the hangman may do his duty, but will that exonerate_ you_?
35271Now do you know, gentlemen, that if you go to hang my client, the prisoner at the bar, that you commit murder?
35271Now what d''you''spose Bill does?
35271Now, when the force of appearances is not carried further than this, should we blame it?
35271Oh!--""That may all be; I doubt it not; but what else can you do?"
35271Oh, as to his fishing in the still, deep pools, what had it done for him?
35271Robinson, then, is a place, and not a person?
35271Sally wished now they had brought in more from the barn; but who could have thought they would want any more?
35271She asks, Why is Toulon not yet taken?
35271She said,"Why, why did I leave you?"
35271She started; then sayd,"Could I be more usefull?
35271Should I hoist my handkerchief, and try to lure them up?
35271Should I imitate their call?
35271Sold his tools!--Yes; how could he help it?
35271Summat to ate?"
35271The Doctor did not expect that thanksgiving, and he was so startled that he exclaimed,"For what?"
35271The horses will be ready by this, and the rest will be waiting; come, Henry, you will go?
35271Their husbands believe them-- how can they doubt a wife''s truth?
35271Then she was growing thin and low- spirited, nearly fretful, so he did not like to press her-- what could it all mean?
35271This indulgence, coupled with that fostered vanity, brought forth its fruits-- and can you wonder at it?
35271This is the_ salle à   manger_, is it not?
35271This lady is kind to you, then?"
35271Was I suffering a retribution of God?
35271Was he suspicious that his days had been shortened by poison?
35271Was not that enough without such disgrace as this?
35271Was this the feeling I had counted on?
35271We are interrupted in the midst of this inspection, by the question where we will dine?
35271We may see each other sometimes?
35271We were to share together-- you paid all; and how can I want it here too?"
35271Were you in Paris then?"
35271What am I to do with her?"
35271What are the symptoms?"
35271What could Constance do?
35271What could he do without me?
35271What could it be?
35271What did he mean by those words?
35271What else?"
35271What is the difference between being good and bad?
35271What misfortune threatens you?
35271What object would Mr. and Mrs. Hildyard have had to doat upon had their precious child been removed from their sight?
35271What response does Frances make?
35271What the deuce did he do there among prize- fighters, and actors, and poets?
35271What was to be done?
35271When would he take his next round?
35271Whence did he come?--what had he done?
35271Whence had it come?
35271Where?
35271Wherefore doe men make themselves brave, but to riot and to revell?
35271Which of us stands in the preferable point of view at the present moment?
35271Who coulde have thoughte that those ripe grapes whereof dear Gaffer ate soe plentifullie, should have ended his dayes?
35271Who dares to say that Joel Jerdan carries a basket full of dead babies instead of fish?"
35271Who knows?
35271Why did God make Dan different from the rest?"
35271Why what is all I give you but that?
35271Why, then, do we find a whole nation, gifted and capable as this, so backward in civilization?
35271Will sayth:"What three soe great things can they be, father, as to move you to such a wish?"
35271Will this suit you?"
35271Will you outrage this affection of years for the sake of a stranger-- and he an apostate?"
35271Wilt thou sink?
35271Would you have wished him to betray me?"
35271Would you like me to add the pelerine you were admiring?
35271You will come to me,''And my poem, how does it sell?''
35271You will stand by us?"
35271[ Illustration] Who would not prefer something like this, to the"sweep and pole,"however delightful the"old oaken bucket may seem as a reminiscence?"
35271_ Where?_ thought the terrified and miserable man-- where are they off to?
35271_ Where?_ thought the terrified and miserable man-- where are they off to?
35271an''what''s that, avick?
35271coquine, m''aurais- tu fait aussi avaler le boucon?"
35271cried Leonard, raising his brows from which the cloud had passed,"why, indeed, did you leave me?"
35271cried the husband and wife;"who are you, and by what right is it that you thus dispose of the goods of another?"
35271exclaimed Madame Permon, with an air of affected astonishment,"is Salicetti arrested?"
35271for what do they tremble at the slightest word or glance which may betray their secret?
35271he replied, with a contemptuous smile,"What would you have had him do?
35271how can she clear you?
35271how dare you presume to stand in my presence and assert it?"
35271how her precious heart would ache if she were to hear this tale of the wicked lord and those dear innocents?
35271in what place was that?"
35271in what year?
35271inquired his friend,"are you not in bed yet?"
35271it is a nobleman who is coming, did you not hear?"
35271it is she who is ill. Shall I go to her?
35271less exposed to temptation?
35271more harmless?
35271of whose hand have I received any bribe to blinde mine eyes therewith?''
35271or did he allude, with the last accents he uttered, to the barbarous assassination of the Emperor Paul?
35271or half so happy as I am now?
35271or is it possible that my ears have deceived me?"
35271said Leonard, mournfully, and after a long silence--"no inquiries to learn who was the father of the motherless child?"
35271was it even so unlikely?"
35271were these the evidences of an affection, for which I had given my whole heart?
35271what can I do for the orphan?"
35271what can I do for you?"
35271what could she do?
35271what is this?
35271where can pleasure be found?"
35271whither had it led him?
35271who is that?"
35271whom have I defrauded?
35271whom have I oppressed?
35271whose ass have I taken?
35271why fear I then A moment''s tyranny?
35271why is the English fleet not yet destroyed?
31455''Why so?'' 31455 Ah, sir, what indeed?"
31455And now,asked Harry,"have you any idea of what a deal of heat there is in steam?"
31455And so you will not join our party to Dunwich fair to- morrow, Elizabeth?
31455And why, then, did you expect to find an old head on Young England''s shoulders?
31455And you,I said;"how are you to escape?"
31455And, whom do you suspect? 31455 As poor as my father?"
31455As you please, Elizabeth;--but have you seen Arthur yet?
31455Ay, truly; but what can_ you_ know of him? 31455 But are you enough, you rascals?"
31455But which way be you going, sir? 31455 But would you believe it, David,"said Mrs. Thomas,"she has gone and taken Mary Williams to live with her?
31455Did ever you see down the shaft of a pit?
31455Do you know how I escaped?
31455Do you know where these screams come from?
31455Do you know, gentlemen, what I''m thinking of?
31455Does it boil?
31455Eh, what says he?
31455Eh? 31455 Eh?"
31455Had n''t you had warning enough, about playing with candles and candlesticks? 31455 Have I not loved?
31455Have you come far?
31455His sixty summers-- what are they in truth? 31455 How came Nest to take her to live with her?"
31455How came you acquainted with this robber''s haunts?
31455How do we know that?
31455How is Nest? 31455 How should I know you were home?"
31455How so, colonel?
31455I am weary of earth,said she, mournfully,"and can I find rest in death even, leaving my child desolate and broken- hearted?"
31455I thought the Bulls of Rome had got into difficulties and run away, ma?
31455Is Mr. Brown still within?
31455Is he a pilot?
31455Is it a secret?
31455Is n''t that the doctrine of metamicosis?
31455Is that all?
31455Is there any rumor of our coming abroad, or have the frigates been seen?
31455It was likely, was not it? 31455 Levasseur called you Marie Duquesne just now; but surely your name is Jaubert-- is it not?"
31455Might they calculate on a thousand stout, effective men?
31455Mother, why did not you let me die? 31455 Never to wear what?"
31455No artillery?
31455No one loves you now? 31455 No-- very little-- very badly-- not at all; but is n''t this-- am I not on board of--""Can none of them speak French?"
31455Perhaps we are going the same way, and I can give you a lift?
31455Prove that water is heated by the rising and falling of hot currents? 31455 Relations?--Eh?--what the pot and the saucepan?"
31455Semminating--"Disseminating, you blockhead-- disseminating what?
31455Sharp enough for the English, eh?
31455Shindrennin,said a man who seemed to be the chief of the party;"and, if I might make so bould, who are you, yourselves?"
31455Suppose you put your fire on your kettle-- on the lid of it-- instead of your kettle on your fire--- what then?
31455Tell me what is the matter?
31455Tell me--tell me, as you hope for life or mercy, where I may find my child?
31455Then, if they are so unsafe, and so found out, ma,said Master C. J. London,"how come they to interfere with us, now?"
31455To what purpose?
31455True-- true,she muttered:"how else should he know?
31455True; but what heat? 31455 Well, but what of the Irish forces?
31455Well, now,interrupted Mr. Bagges,"I dare say this is all very true, but how do you prove it?"
31455Well?
31455What are you talking about? 31455 What do you want here, you spy?"
31455What happened then?
31455What have you been doing to- day?
31455What have you to say to me?
31455What is he saying now?--what is he looking at?
31455What is it, man-- can''t you tell who it is?
31455What is the amount of the force in this neighborhood?
31455What is the matter?
31455What is to be done, then?
31455What news has he from the shore?
31455What next?
31455What number of them may we reckon on in the neighborhood?
31455What of the people themselves? 31455 Where have you been cruising out of your course, girls, for the last age?"
31455Where have you been wandering about by yourself?
31455Where is my brother Edward?
31455Where,said he,"is the wit of your_ salons_, the independence of your writers, the charm and influence of your women?
31455Who are you, monsieur?--are you a civilian?
31455Who is that?
31455Why did you not go to Ravenna?
31455Why so cautious about your information, then, sir,broke in Serazin, roughly,"since you have none to give?"
31455Will she live, or will she die?
31455Will you be quiet,returned Mrs. Bull,"and let your poor father rest?
31455Wo n''t you say that I''m a prisoner, sir; wo n''t you tell them that you took me?
31455Yes: what do you want with him?
31455You are not afraid, my child?
31455You did n''t expect it, you naughty boy?
31455You have been asked if you can speak French, sir?
31455You must have seen her, for I know you''ve called at Thomas Griffiths''s where the parish boarded her?
31455You will give me a little time, Edward, to get her strong, wo n''t you, now? 31455 You will pardon me, sir,"said the youth,"if I ask, first, who it is puts this question, and under what circumstances I am expected to answer it?"
31455do you think, love, that you could put off the end of the world a little longer, or must we make haste in order to be in time?
31455''Ah, sir,''said I,''and where is such a seat provided?''
31455''And how did you decide upon it, Philip?''
31455''And what happened then?
31455''How so, sir?''
31455''Humbly asking pardon, sir, and meaning no offense, may I inquire whether in present company it is permitted to speak disrespectfully of the Devil?''
31455''In what way is my condition to be improved by the act of sitting in a coal- box?''
31455''Tis true, there were abuse and exaggeration in many of our institutions, but where is the system in which these do not exist?
31455''Well, your highness,''said I,''how about the pain?''
31455''Well,''he said,''Philip, will you come to bed with me?''
31455''What is that, Phil?''
31455''What will you take to drink?''
31455''Who did you say?''
31455''Why not, Phil?
31455''Yes, my dear sir, but you forget the difference there is between us?''
31455And are we to suppose, because they carry on their ravages in the dark, that they are less destructive?
31455And ca n''t I wait?
31455And the"voyager"whom he"steered"into a secure haven amid"storm and tempest?"
31455And was it right to do so?
31455And what are temptations but trials?
31455And what else have you to say of human nature?''
31455And what if it has''biled,''or_ boiled_, as I desire you will say in future?
31455And what is boiling?"
31455And what is to become of the poor Signorina?
31455And what shall we find to be the alarming result?
31455And whose farm did he take?"
31455And yet, with all my struggles, will knowledge ever place me on the same level as that on which this dunce is born?
31455Ask him what men of rank or consequence live in the neighborhood, and how are they affected toward the expedition?"
31455At this calculation, I will take one pair of rats; and, at the expiration of three years, what do you suppose will be the amount of living rats?
31455Bruce?"
31455But how can you hide heat?
31455But now that the truth has come out, who do you think will give credit to a pauper?"
31455But now, after all, what was to be done?
31455But of all the poor, who should hate the rich like the pauper gentleman?
31455But what occasions the escape of the steam?"
31455But who could be so selfish as to be sad when Nest was so supremely happy?
31455But, you see, he had an unexpected legacy--"RANDAL.--"And retired from business?"
31455Can I do any thing for you?"
31455Could it be exhausted so soon?
31455DALE.--"She is very amiable, Jemima, is she not?"
31455Did M. Colmache consider it of apocryphal authenticity?
31455Did he think that shade would escape the mother''s eye?
31455Did you never see a fly jump into a lamp- flame?''
31455Do n''t it fidget you?''
31455Eh, what says he?
31455Eh?
31455Eh?
31455Even the aid and alliance of France inspired no other feeling than distrust; for he said more than once,"Sure, what can harm_ yez_?
31455For if he ran away every day of his life, what then?
31455Had I read Milton, had I seen Rome, had I heard Mozart?
31455Has_ he_ gained by the exchange?
31455Have I not heard my mother say that I am as near in blood to this Squire as any one, if he had no children?
31455Have I not my savings too?
31455Have n''t ye yer ships, beyant, to take yez away, if things goes bad?"
31455Have they any head quarters near this?
31455Hazeldean''s?"
31455He asks,"what could the South gain by resistance?"
31455He is a relation of yours?"
31455He suddenly asked some minister, who was with him, how much the egg at the end of the bell- rope should cost?
31455He who feels only for himself abjures his very nature as man; for do we not say of one who has no tenderness for mankind that he is_ inhuman_?
31455His father''s halls?
31455How could I say she did not speak?
31455How could this be done on his half- pay?
31455How did you come here?''
31455How should I otherwise have become acquainted with these particulars?"
31455How-- eh?--how can heat be latent?"
31455How?
31455I ask you whether you and Nest are troth- plight?"
31455I exclaimed, with unfeigned surprise,"why, what on earth can you be waiting here for on such a night as this?"
31455If fortune with a smiling face Strew roses on our way, When shall we stoop to pick them up?
31455If there had been no poverty, and no sense of poverty, where would have been that which we call the wealth of a country?
31455If there were no penury and no pain, what would become of fortitude?
31455Is King Opinion an honest ruler?
31455Is he alone?"
31455Is it because you are a Bull, that you are not to be roused till they shake scarlet close to your very eyes?"
31455Is this the way you are to marry her in the foreign land?"
31455Is_ that_ your bringing up?"
31455It''s cold work living in the flesh, such as I find it-- you seem jolly as a hot cinder, and for the matter of that, what am I now but dust and ashes?
31455Let me see-- eh?
31455London?"
31455Men seldom think of rats, because they seldom see them; but are they less destructive because they carry on their ravages in the dark?
31455None on the floor?
31455Now for a blessing upon our labors-- where shall we find our friend, the bishop?"
31455O my brethren, do you not perceive?
31455Oust him from what?
31455Oust him-- what from?
31455Parson Younges always preaches against them, does not he, aunt?"
31455Presently she said, with a sneer,"You are afraid, I suppose?"
31455RANDAL.--"Would the money have paid as well, sunk on my father''s land?"
31455Reverting to the"master cow,"we inquired whether her supremacy in the case of newcomers was established"mesmerically"by a glance-- or how?
31455Spruce went on:"''Did you never,''continued his majesty,''when gazing into the fire, see a grotesque face glow before you?
31455Spruce?
31455Spruce?''
31455Stay-- can''t you get assistance?"
31455Suppose you let off steam, so compressed and heated, by a wide hole, from the boiler, and put your hand into it as it rushes out--""What?
31455Surely you are not_ yet_ fallen so low as to be the associate or accomplice of burglars?"
31455The boiling point of water is two hundred and-- what?"
31455The count asked me whether I had any wish to see how he managed raving madmen?
31455The lawyer asks our Lord,''who is my neighbor?''
31455The question then suggests itself, what should be done to save this waste-- to stop the plunder-- to banish the thieves?
31455Then how does it so easily get from the bottom to the top?"
31455Then why did n''t you say it, sir?
31455These were no ordinary trials; and if the youth who was subjected to them became in after- life a cynic, is it to be wondered at?
31455To sum up, then, What was the character of M. de Talleyrand?
31455To which of these classes did Talleyrand belong?
31455Was Armstrong a drinking, a gaming, or a play- going man?
31455Was he great?
31455Was it boiling, sir, eh?
31455Was the acquaintance mutual?
31455Waters?"
31455We were aristocrats, and it was in vain to deny it; could we deny our boots?
31455Well, then shall I have no power to oust this blockhead?
31455Well-- but if he were dead, who would be the heir of Hazeldean?
31455What boy do you mean?"
31455What can a man learn by skimming the newspapers and journals of the day?
31455What did he say?
31455What did you mean by playing with Young England at all?"
31455What do you think approached?
31455What have you received in exchange for all these, which have fled forever?
31455What is all that about the-- eh-- what-- law of ex-- what?--pansion--eh?"
31455What is that to the purpose?
31455What is that?
31455What is the rule to be observed in general conduct?
31455What is this place called?"
31455What letter could she expect so nervously?
31455What must I do, David?"
31455What sort of a person is he?"
31455What the devil is come to the parish?"
31455What were your thoughts this morning, Philip Spruce?''
31455What''s that?
31455Where are the national forces?
31455Where are they?"
31455Where is she?"
31455Which of the felons, whom he had cut off prematurely, could pretend that a court of appeal would have reversed his sentence?
31455Who shall condemn his shiver?
31455Who shall tell the bitter throes of that bold, strong- hearted youth, as he heard the unjust sentence?
31455Who was it that could have a right to feel aggrieved by his contempt?
31455Who were these shams and make- believe men?
31455Who, if not myself?
31455Who, then, was this bold lady who contrived so cunningly to ensnare in her toils the wariest man in France?
31455Why are they unequal?
31455Why did you keep me alive for this?"
31455Why do we fail so often in the practice?
31455Why does he laugh?"
31455Why should he?
31455Why should you doubt me?"
31455Why was she daily so sadly disappointed?
31455Why?
31455Will God let her go to Nest now?"
31455Will this suffice?"
31455Will you indulge them by playing a quadrille?"
31455Will you walk in and take a little something warm?''
31455With a fine burst of eloquence, the author asks,"Are rats a calamity to be deplored, or are they not?
31455Wo n''t you come in and sit down?"
31455Yet now, what to us the priest and the Levite, of God''s chosen race though they were?
31455You know Rood, then?"
31455You know what a draught is?"
31455You may have heard of Farmer Bruce?"
31455You want to find Jem Martin?"
31455You will not fail me?"
31455_ To- day, my love, to- day._ But if our debtor fail our hope, And plead his ruin thorough, When shall we weigh his breach of faith?
31455_ To- day, my love, to- day._ But if she would indulge regret, Or dwell with bygone sorrow, When shall we weep, if weep we must?
31455_ To- day, my love, to- day._ But if stern Justice urge rebuke, And warmth from Memory borrow, When shall we chide, if chide we dare?
31455_ To- day, my love, to- day._ But should she frown with face of care, And talk of coming sorrow, When shall we grieve, if grieve we must?
31455_ To- morrow, love, to- morrow._ If love estranged should once again Her genial smile display, When shall we kiss her proffered lips?
31455_ To- morrow, love, to- morrow._ If those to whom we owe a debt Are harmed unless we pay, When shall we struggle to be just?
31455_ To- morrow, love, to- morrow._ If those who''ve wrong''d us own their fault, And kindly pity pray, When shall we listen, and forgive?
31455and do we not call him who sorrows with the sorrowful,_ humane_?
31455better than a magistrate?
31455cried her brother,"that''s not the way_ we_ account for things, Harry, my boy, eh?
31455cried the Squire, reddening,"did you say''Damn the stocks?"
31455cried the aid- de- camp;"are not those sheep feeding in that little glen?"
31455did I curse you?
31455do you suppose Dr. Rickeybockey got out of his warm bed to bung up the holes in my new stocks?"
31455muttered he, half aloud; then added,"But for what object should we?
31455of fighting, wrangling, struggling, without pause, or promise of pause, from day to day, or even from year to year?
31455or, Why it is that one person has succeeded in getting a husband before another?
31455says the king,''where''s your philosophy?
31455the chief magistrate of the borough and corporation of Southwold, Bessy Younges?
31455this is the most insolent, unprovoked, diabolical-- but whom do you suspect, I say?"
31455was it, eh?
31455what are trials but perils and sorrows?
31455what do I see yonder?"
31455what do they call this singular state of water?"
31455what of patience?
31455what of resignation?
31455when you took it off the fire?
31455where art thou gone?"
31455where is now the"skillful pilot?"
41411''How? 41411 ''Is that a friar passing?''
41411''Say ye so? 41411 ''Shall we?''
41411''Sink the ship?'' 41411 ''Then I entreat you, tell me if to the best of your own convictions, this your story is, in substance, really true?
41411''What are you making there?'' 41411 ''What do you think?
41411''What do you want of me?'' 41411 ''Where are you bound?
41411''Why not? 41411 ''Will you be so good as to bring the priest also, Don?''
41411''Will you promise not to touch us, if we do?'' 41411 Ah, Master John,"said she, clasping his nerveless hand--"well, the fields be pleasant now-- I hope you are come to stay a bit?
41411Am I reinstated in my grade?
41411And do you think that he would have gone thus far, sir?
41411And never buys?
41411And the narrative is true?
41411And what sayd he, mother, to that?
41411And yet you are not much above four or five- and- twenty years of age?
41411Are you a native of----?
41411Are you not ashamed of yourself?
41411Are you sure?
41411At whose suit?
41411Ay? 41411 But can she talk?"
41411But the prince rejected the proposal?
41411But, friend,said the cautious miser,"how often will it be requisite to bleed me?"
41411But_ apropos_ of what do you puzzle us with these queries on courage?
41411Can you doubt the author?
41411Cocquerel, the Guernseyman you mean?
41411Come, give over weeping, dearest mother;''twill do neither him, you, nor us anie goode.... What was your first speech of him?
41411Cut himself loose, do you say, lieutenant?
41411Did not stern old Sam Johnson say he could never write but from want?
41411Did not you say that you made, at least, a guinea a- week?
41411Do you know, with any certainty, in what language Adam declared his love to Eve?
41411Do you want me?
41411Do you write orthographically?
41411How can you be dull enough to ask? 41411 How did the fellow propose the act?
41411How do you know that, sir?
41411How do you mean?
41411How old are you, my dear?
41411How to others?
41411I ca n''t quite agree with you,said Randal, taking his leave;"but you must allow me to call again-- will the same hour to- morrow suit you?"
41411I thought it would be useless; when they made so little of a Condà ©, what right had I to suppose they would think much about me?
41411I will stay with you, my kind friend,said Burley, with unusual meekness--"I can have the old room, then?"
41411I wish to be bled,said he;"what is your charge?"
41411I?
41411In other words, the Count D''Artois,said the count;"did it not strike you so?"
41411Is it here?
41411Is it indeed so?
41411Is it insensibility to fear? 41411 Is that all?"
41411Is the descendant of a Condà © ashamed to own his name?
41411Is there a copy of the Holy Evangelists in the Golden Inn, gentlemen? 41411 Is there any other living who could have dared to make such a proposal but the count?
41411Is there no mention of my restoration to the service?
41411Joanna behaved very well, did not she?
41411La, Austin, how can you say so?
41411Man, launched into life,said Napoleon,"asks himself, whence do I come?
41411Monsieur le Comte,pursued the gallant captain,"are you, too, in a jesting mood?
41411My dear Constantine,said he,"I thought you intended to stay at Greendale a much longer time?"
41411My dear friend,said I to him one day,"how have you managed to be so happy in your marriage?"
41411Never better, child, sayst thou? 41411 Never were one?"
41411No; but I mean to ask, were the sentiments your own, without any external influence, or any persuasions from others?
41411Not the Colonel Mahon who commanded the 13th Cuirassiers?
41411Now, madam,said he,"where shall we carry you?"
41411Of course suborned by England? 41411 Oh, yes; some that the dear lady left behind her; and perhaps you would like to look at some papers in her own writing?"
41411Or that this acknowledgment for eight hundred was not given?
41411Out of the bill, good fellow?
41411Perhaps,said he, with a half- sneer,"Monsieur de Tiernay might refuse to accept my excuses?"
41411Poor fellow,he said in a whisper, to his fair companion,"would it not be a pity to disturb him?"
41411Shall I keep the purse again, Leonard?
41411So that you are not a royalist?
41411Soe then, sweetheart, he sayth,''Come, tell me, Mrs. Alice, how long do you think we might reckon on living to enjoy it?'' 41411 Surely, Evers, you are not thinking of that in earnest, are you?"
41411That is, I never knew him to be the duke till the moment of his arrest?
41411The tabernacle of our earthly joys And sorrows, hopes and fears-- this Home of ours Is it not pleasant?
41411Then, what is to become of me-- to what end am I liberated?
41411This is a bad business,I said;"but the venture has not, I trust, been made with your own or your father''s money?
41411Unprompted; without any suggestions from another?
41411Well, but, it is clear enough, the man must have had means; he traveled by a very circuitous route; he had come from Hamburg, probably?
41411Well, the eggs are fresh laid, and you would like a rasher of bacon, Master John? 41411 What class is this?"
41411What class is this?
41411What do you mean?
41411What do_ you_ say, sir?
41411What in the name of madness could induce you to venture your all upon a single throw in so hazardous a game?
41411What is courage?
41411What is courage?
41411What is gambling,said he,"after all, but a species of exchange, skill for skill, or chance for chance?
41411What is his name?
41411What is the book, my lord?
41411What more would you have?
41411What think you of this self- confidence? 41411 What''s to be done, gentlemen?"
41411What,he exclaimed, when assured that otherwise his case was hopeless,"shall I break my faith with him who trusted it?
41411Where could you two ever have met?
41411Which is the Duc D''Enghien?
41411Why do you not remind him of it?
41411Why was it,said one of these visitors,"that the Americans_ fled_ on this occasion?"
41411Why, you are not a constituent, as I am?
41411Will you give me Marie?
41411Would you have me violate my word of honor?
41411You are sure you would him remember if we met him by chance?
41411You are then, father, put out of the bill?
41411You had an object, however, in composing it?
41411You have not breakfasted?
41411You hesitate; you have not yet made up your mind, apparently?
41411You wrote it for yourself alone, then?
41411Your age, monsieur?
41411''My lord,''he said,''have you in any way committed yourself?''
41411''Tis the river that founded and gave pomp to the city; and without the discontent, where were progress-- what were Man?
41411''s evening party, summoned the sinner Sundholm to hear his final doom?
41411***** Now that I''ve come back, let me seek to think, to remember.... Sure, my head will clear by- and- by?
41411... And how goes the court, Meg?"
41411... Soe then I say,''What thing?''
41411..."And then, mother?
41411; will you buy it?
41411An excess in wine had never affected him so before: could this arise from simple drunkenness?
41411And Lisette, all this time?
41411And how could the boy turn out of his room the man to whom he was under obligations?
41411And is it so, that woman is responsible, in a great measure, for the fashions and habits of the community in which she lives?
41411And then I took hold of him by the sleeve, and asked him,''Jan Evers, Jan Evers, where have you come from?''
41411And we''re scarce off our knees, when I''m fetched away; and I say,''When will you change your note, and act like a wise man?''
41411And what was the aggregate sum of all these twenty monthly payments?
41411And who does not love their pleasant song, shrill though it be?
41411And who were the blackguard actors in this cold- blooded tragedy?
41411And your father, is he yet living?"
41411And, think you, without feeling aught of its forces?
41411As you are going into the House, will you remind him?"
41411Ask why civilization can not escape its ills and fly back to the wilds and the wigwam?
41411At what school did you conceive a taste for letters?
41411Brainard, a poet of true tenderness and feeling, once asked,"What is there saddening in the autumn leaf?"
41411Burley( moved).--"You go, my little lady?--and why?
41411Burley( with a gulp).--"Is it because he thinks I am not fit company for you?"
41411Burley?"
41411But now I have time to think about it, and I like Marie very much?
41411But pray, Austin, what is courage?"
41411But what comfort in this?
41411But what of all this?
41411But why should it be so?
41411But why then was so excellent a soul so cold toward me?
41411But, had Burley written the pamphlet, would the same repute have attended_ him?_ Certainly not.
41411Can we not all live together?"
41411Caxton.--"You would not have minded if it had been a Frenchman with a sword in his hand?"
41411Could I remain there till his return?
41411Did you get it from an unquestionable source?
41411Do you think he wo n''t do me a turn, when it''s to help himself in the end, shipmate?''
41411Do you want to sink the ship, by knocking off at a time like this?
41411Does he not speculate to gain?
41411Does he not?"
41411Does it not prove her love of truth; her strength of character, and her greatness of soul?
41411Even from the first, when Leonard had exclaimed,"Ah, Helen, why did you ever leave me?"
41411Every one inquired, Who is this young general, whose talents thus suddenly, with such meteoric splendor, have blazed upon Europe?
41411From what point shall our bibliographical notices date?--beyond or in advance of the monasticism?
41411From what source did this young soldier imbibe these elevated principles?
41411Goodyer?"
41411Have you not heard how a noble of the court rode postillion to the king''s carriage on the celebrated escape from Varennes?
41411He gazed in silence, and at length said--"But can she walk?"
41411He trembled in all his limbs, and convulsively drew back his foot as he addressed his guides in front:''Where are you conducting me?''
41411Heavens, sir, do I understand aright-- can Mr. Prickett be dead since I left London?"
41411His companion smiled, and replied by another question,"What is the man who reads the book?"
41411His dreamy impressions of London?
41411His lordship was quite unprepared for this additional infliction, and exclaimed,"What, Mr. A----, are_ you_ really going to speak on the same side?"
41411How do you like her?"
41411How shall I come to book?
41411How?
41411I go for it; but are you well advised?
41411I have writ somewhat after this fashion to him...."What do you think, most dear father, doth comfort us at Chelsea, during this your absence?
41411I held her back and said,"What is to do?"
41411If you remember me, I hope all boyish quarrels are forgotten?"
41411In a moment he saw his own error, and returning the slate to the pupil, with ill- concealed chagrin, exclaimed,"Yes?
41411In the devil''s name how can I face my creditor this evening at Madame''s rà © union?
41411Is it not a proof of excess of vanity?
41411Is it said that He is always speaking-- that the Great Cause of causes is always exhibiting itself in its effects?
41411Is not his sole object to profit by the transfer?
41411Is their speedy rise to be followed by a like speedy decline?
41411Is there any thing so singular in the fact, sir, that you should look so much astonished?"
41411Is there not something grand in all this?
41411Is there one gamester out of twenty who, in a very few years, does not go-- circumstances only considered-- to ruin?
41411Is this the result of the conduct of a merciless, unfeeling tyrant?
41411It was purely accidental?"
41411Lord, Meg, who would live, that could die?
41411Of whom else should he beg?
41411Oh, wicked woman, how could you?...
41411One day at St. Helena, he was conversing with Las Casas, when some remark which was made led Napoleon to inquire,"Were you a gamester?"
41411Pardon: who and what are they?''
41411Poor thing, what could have become of her?"
41411Pray, what is a Lakeman, and where is Buffalo?''
41411Quakers?"
41411Reader, what think you would have been the amount of the payment due on the first of the twentieth month?
41411Sayth Bess,"Sure, mother, that was cold comfort.... And what next?"
41411See, would you like to look at it?"
41411Shall a man be more pure than his Maker?
41411Shall posterity say that we knew how to conquer, but knew not how to improve victory?
41411Shall we find a Capua in Lombardy?
41411Shipmate, I have n''t enough twine-- have you any?''
41411Should she burden him?
41411Sir sailor, but do whales have christenings?
41411Soe then he puts me off with questions, How is Will?
41411Soe then he sayeth,''Is not this house, sweetheart, as nigh heaven as mine own?''
41411Soldiers of Italy, will you fail in courage?"
41411Suddenly his attention was diverted to those around by the sound of a name-- displeasingly known to him,"How are you, Randal Leslie?
41411Talleyrand started, as he heard it, and then turning to Caulaincourt, whispered,"Yes;''tis all over now?"
41411That had been their statement; and was there not something very beautiful in it?
41411Then, suddenly, as the light flashed full on my features, he started back, and said,"How is this-- who are you?"
41411Then, why did you not address a memoir to that effect to the minister?"
41411There was silence-- And yet I heard a voice-- saying-- Shall a mortal be more just than God?
41411Turning to one of the pupils, he inquired,"What is the difference between sleep and death?"
41411Two days before, Leonard had pawned Riccabocca''s watch; and when the last shilling thus raised was gone, how should he support Helen?
41411Was I, or was I not, any longer a soldier of his army?
41411Was there not something worldly in thinking so much about money and the future?
41411What am I?
41411What but disgust can be created against a system when prostituted to the purposes of sheer murder?
41411What cause have I then, to care so greatlie for a house that woulde soe soone forget its master?''"
41411What comfort has it for the soul, or what enlargement even for the intellect?
41411What is she, if her lips revile The lowly Jesus?
41411What is this?
41411What say ye, men?''
41411What sum, think ye, the little penny had become?
41411What think you?"
41411What was it that he wrote?
41411What, then, shall I do?
41411When can you let me have it?"
41411When would he be back?
41411Whither do I go?
41411Who can be long boisterous in the presence of woman?
41411Who the devil is this pamphleteer?"
41411Who were the original bookworms?
41411Who, and what is this clever man whom you call Burley?"
41411Who, but the head of his house, could have presumed on such a step?
41411Whom call you Moby Dick?''
41411Why could he not escape?
41411Why does not God speak to us here?
41411Why has the inspired historian placed the night first?
41411Why must you leave him because I come?"
41411Why this strange delight in believing in the omnipotence and unchangeableness of a blind and unrelenting nature?
41411Why, the enormous sum of four thousand three hundred and sixty- six pounds, eleven shillings, and threepence?
41411Would your honor like a jarvey?"
41411Yes, we shall meet in heaven, but how long first, oh Lord?
41411Yesterday, Bonaparte speaking of this favor, said to me,''Think they then, that_ I_ have need of_ their_ protection to arrive at power?
41411You fancy these four walls lonesome; how oft, dost thou suppose, I here receive Plato and Socrates, and this and that holy saint and martyr?
41411You must often have heard his name from the prince; has he not frequently spoken of the Count de Maurepas?"
41411[ Illustration:_ Uncle._--"So, you''ve been to the Crystal Palace-- Have you, Gus?"
41411_ Uncle._--"Well, now, I''ll give you Sixpence if you will tell me what you admired most in that Temple of Industry?"
41411an anathema on its streets, and its hearts of stone?
41411and Daisy?
41411and Rupert?
41411and for what are you bound?''
41411and has Tom found his hoop?
41411and have I practised the viol?
41411and have we elected a new king of the cob- loaf yet?
41411and he sayth,''When?
41411and how are we off for money?
41411and how goes the court?
41411and is not all speculation, morally considered, gambling?
41411and is y^e hasp of the buttery- hatch mended yet?
41411and pray, what quantity of blood do you intend to take from me at each operation?"
41411and rabbits?
41411and t''other one?
41411and that full development of figure, which all the poets, from Homer down, have made one of the chiefest beauties of a woman?
41411and the peacocks?
41411and then?"
41411and this one?
41411and was''t y^e chamber father had used to sleep in?
41411and what was the text o''Sunday?
41411and when the betrothed answers,''I will be true,''does not the lover trust to her courage as well as her love?"
41411and why ca n''t he see Meg?
41411coming to hear the debate?"
41411cried Coigny;"what does that mean?"
41411cried my mother, firing up;"was it not only last week that you faced the great bull that was rushing after Blanche and the children?"
41411cried the other;"we are here in the territory of the margrave?"
41411dark elegies on fate?
41411exclaimed the captain,"do you pretend, sir, to assert, that you did not lose three hundred naps to me?"
41411exclaimed the sick man with a stare;"why, what do you mean?
41411for goodness sake, what is it?"
41411had he any accomplices?
41411have ye come to kill me in mine own house?"
41411have you nothing for the million?''
41411he asked,"to be brought before me in this condition?--you that_ can_ be so good a soldier?
41411how does he know that?"
41411how long?
41411how?
41411murmurs against poverty?
41411or was I disqualified for joining in that burst of national enthusiasm which proclaimed that all France was ready to march under his banner?
41411or was he alone?"
41411pray, what''s the matter now?"
41411returned his companion;"you were not drunk but mad-- what devil possessed you to play?
41411said I, looking around my cell,"Is it here that I should be likely to find a fellow- laborer?"
41411said he, peering at me beneath the dark shadow of his heavy brow;"he would not hear of it?"
41411was that her voice?
41411was that indeed one of my faults?
41411what does it look like?''
41411what''s that pump stopping for?''
41411will this gear never be left?
45765''How much, how much?'' 45765 ''I mean, my lord,''explained the man,''what shall I be expected to do, if I take the_ situation_?''
45765''In what_ capacity_, my lord?'' 45765 ''Oh, do ye, do ye?''
45765''Oh, wages,''echoed my lord;''what d''ye ask? 45765 ''Salary, salary?''
45765''Well, my good fellow,''said he,''you want a lackey''s place, do you?'' 45765 ''What do I_ do_?''
45765A chief opposite, at the table, who had observed the consequence, but not the cause, asked him''What he was crying for?'' 45765 Again the gentleman explained;''I mean what wages?''
45765Am I grown so mean?
45765And do n''t you occupy yourself at all?
45765And do you dare to talk to me thus, and yet pretend to love me?
45765And has interfered, and trifled, and promised, Heaven knows what, ever since-- yet to what end? 45765 And she not gone to her father''s?
45765And there you sit, I suppose, all the day long, eh?
45765And to confer upon me the favor of your distinguished recommendation?
45765And to- night, too?
45765And what two reasons, Mr. George? 45765 And where''s Bart?"
45765And who have we got here to- night?
45765And who is your father?
45765And why not?
45765And why not?
45765And why?
45765Any thing been doing?
45765Are these your good men, my dears?
45765Are those the fever- houses, Darby?
45765Are you ill, madam?
45765Are you in pain?
45765Are you quite sure this is true?
45765Are you ready to accept his lordship''s very lenient proposal?
45765Are you satisfied_ Monsieur le Comte_,said Harley,"with your atonement so far?
45765Been along with your friend again, Bart?
45765Brickmakers, eh?
45765But do n''t you see I am going out with it at this moment? 45765 But was it really an alligator?"
45765But, Marchesa, this can not be; and--"Beatrice, Beatrice-- and me!--our betrothal? 45765 But, tell me, do you think better of her than of her brother?"
45765But,said Frank, a little bewildered,"if I go to my lodging, how can I watch the Count?"
45765But,said Mr. Tyler,"do you think it would be altogether proper for the President of the United States to drive a second- hand carriage?"
45765Can so short a time alter one thus? 45765 Can you give a fellow any thing to read in the mean time?"
45765Can you not induce my father to see her? 45765 Charley, do you mean?"
45765Charley, do you mean?
45765Come up on the tramp?
45765Did you ever see such a stupor as he falls into, between drink and sleep?
45765Did you really intend,inquired Napoleon,"to brave the terrors of the ocean in so frail a skiff?"
45765Dining at his expense, Bart?
45765Do I disturb you, sir?
45765Do n''t you read, or get read to?
45765Do you know the Marchesa di Negra?
45765Do you live so far?
45765Do you recollect the lady''s voice?
45765Do you rub your legs to rub life into''em?
45765Does God take care for oxen?
45765Does he request you to do so in his letter? 45765 Dread it?
45765For two good names, hey?
45765From Mr. Leslie, and-- and--"Go on-- why falter?
45765From no one else?
45765Glad to hear it; and if you do come into Parliament, I hope you''ll not turn your back on the land?
45765Has she not seen some one, and lately, whom she prefers to poor Frank?
45765Here you are, hey?
45765Hey?
45765Hey?
45765How de do? 45765 How do you do sir?
45765How do you know he was n''t here?
45765How do you know he was there?
45765How do you know that? 45765 How do you like that soup?"
45765How long is it since he bought this yacht?
45765How long should I have to hold out?
45765How much do you mean to say it wants then?
45765I have, sire?
45765I hope number two''s as good?
45765I quote only from memory, but the original has''walked to battle''--is not''went''a better word? 45765 I think I does?"
45765I was saying, what do you think_ now_,pursues Mr. Guppy,"of enlisting?"
45765Indeed?
45765Is he indeed, sir?
45765Is he your child?
45765Is it because you can not love me?
45765Is it indeed, sir? 45765 Is it not more probable that you are too scantily dressed?"
45765Is she not changed-- your friend?
45765Is the child like her?
45765Is there no choice-- no escape?
45765It''s his tea- time, is n''t it?
45765Madame di Negra?
45765My dear friend, will you shake me up a little?
45765No?
45765Not by union with your brother?
45765Nothing else?
45765Now, Mr. Leslie, what do you advise next?
45765Now, Small,says Mr. Guppy,"what would you recommend about pastry?"
45765Now, what do you say to that?
45765O indeed, sir?
45765Of Madame di Negra? 45765 On account of which, and at the same time to oblige a-- do you call it, in your business, customer or client?
45765She died very young, then, your daughter?
45765So you think he might be hard upon me, eh?
45765So you think your friend in the city will be hard upon me, if I fail in a payment?
45765Sure?
45765Then, what,retorts that worthy, pointing to the figure,"did you say it was the lady for?"
45765Therefore you kept your visit to yourself, last night?
45765Two drunken men, eh? 45765 Very good, indeed,"answered the other;"Turtle, is it not?
45765WHO MURDERED DOWNIE?
45765Was his mother as beautiful as he?
45765Well, Bucket?
45765Well, and how are you?
45765Well?
45765What about those rings you told me of?
45765What are you doing here? 45765 What are you talking of?"
45765What do you think, now,says Mr. Guppy,"about-- you do n''t mind Smallweed?"
45765What enemy?
45765What is that you say? 45765 What of her?
45765What shall not be?
45765What the deuce have you got to do with the general election?
45765What trick is this?
45765What work are you about now?
45765What''s the matter?
45765What, my sister!--you turn against me?
45765What? 45765 Where have you sprung up from?"
45765Whereabouts in Hertfordshire?
45765Who are you?
45765Who can see you, and not do so? 45765 Who?"
45765Why are you so cruel?
45765Why do you do it?
45765Why not?
45765Why not?
45765Why, Mr. George? 45765 Why, what age do you call that little creature?"
45765Why, you an''t such an unnatural woman, I hope,returns Bucket, sternly,"as to wish your own child dead?"
45765Why, you do n''t mean it?
45765Will you come and dine with me?
45765Will you run over, once again, what the boy said?
45765Will you take any other vegetables? 45765 With a vague sense of some impending evil, I asked:"''Escaped!--how!--from where?''
45765Would you allow me to get it filled for you?
45765You desire us then, Mr. Evans, to continue this advertisement for some time longer?
45765You do n''t happen to know a very good sort of person of the name of Gridley, do you?
45765You do n''t mean--?
45765You dread that so much, then?
45765You must, doubtless, then, have some mistress to revisit, since you are so desirous to return to your country?
45765You will do me the kindness to remember, sir, that I am not at present placed?
45765You wish your father to see her? 45765 You''d like to see the room, young man?"
45765You''re there, are you? 45765 ''And the senior lieutenant?'' 45765 ''Twas_ Turkey_ you promised: and where is the bird?
45765''What for?''
45765''What_ department_ then am I to consider myself expected to fill?''
45765''Who is the senior captain?''
45765*****"How do you spell Feladelfy?"
45765Adelaide, you are not going to die?
45765Ah, is that young Hazeldean?
45765Always a fire, eh?
45765Am I not right?"
45765And his father?
45765And how is it that with such a salary, you run into debt?
45765And on such poor fare as this was that pale boy expected to become a hearty man?
45765And should I not hold precious what is half himself-- his own son?
45765And two women?
45765And where lies the vessel?"
45765And you know little Flite?"
45765And, in addition, I think you have your board and lodging?"
45765Are you sure of that?"
45765At length she spoke, and the first words she uttered were,"What is trump?"
45765B----?"
45765Be able to account for every hour of your time--""An_ alibi_?"
45765But do we not all-- whatever may be our creed, our belief or our unbelief-- need a day, an oft- recurring day, of_ serious thought_?
45765But is this strange?
45765But what have you to do with the_ English_?"
45765But what is cold, dwarfed, European faith, when compared with the huge monstrous faith of the barbarous land of the sun?
45765But whither, if not to Norwood?--oh, whither?
45765But who cares?
45765By all that you hold most sacred in your creed, did you speak the truth when you said that you never loved me?"
45765By whom was I divested?
45765By- and- by I say to my landlady,''Where is your oldest of daughters, which used to bring to me my breakfast?''
45765Can she have gone to the Marchesa''s house?"
45765Come, Jobling,"says Mr. Guppy, in his encouraging cross- examination tone,"I think you know Krook, the Chancellor, across the lane?"
45765Did you speak to her of Madame di Negra?"
45765Do I not pay you all right, like a weekly man of honor?''
45765Do n''t you see?
45765Do you forgot me?"''
45765Does it seem strange that a stationer''s daughter should be so lovely, and should learn Latin?
45765Else why were the tears in her eyes so often as she returned?
45765From whom?"
45765George?"
45765George?"
45765George?"
45765Grandfather Smallweed looks hard after the tea as it is served out, and asks Judy where the girl is?
45765Grass?
45765Had I betrayed any thing during my delirium?
45765Had not Leonard spoken of Violante, and with such praise?
45765Had not his boyhood been passed under her eyes?
45765Had she ever refused an offer of marriage?
45765Harley had said that Madame di Negra had generous qualities; and who but Madame di Negra would write herself a kinswoman, and sign herself"Beatrice?"
45765Have I not the keenest interest to do so?"
45765He had once doubted if Harley were the object of her love; yet, after all, was it not probable?
45765He said, hoarsely,"Do you think the wife-- a good and pure woman-- would forgive all this?"
45765How am I to live?
45765How are you to serve my father-- how restore him to his country?
45765How are you?"
45765How de do?"
45765How should this be, if he had on his soul that awful sin?
45765How to attain this most coveted point?
45765I believe, if our mutual friend Smallweed were put into the box, he could prove this?"
45765I exclaimed:''what would you do?
45765I have been keeping out of the way, and living cheap, down about the market- gardens; but what''s the use of living cheap when you have got no money?
45765I have walked through this cloud of misery-- shall my courage fail me now?
45765I hope you are pretty well?"
45765I say:''what have I dones?
45765I wondered, did he think of her, too?
45765If she has indeed fled from me, need I say that my suit will be withdrawn at once?
45765In the name of the--""Of our friend in the city?"
45765In the name of-- of Brimstone, why?"
45765Is she not in Curzon- street?"
45765Is that it?"
45765Jist git me one o''them''_ char- gees_,''will ye?
45765Krook?"
45765Leslie?"
45765Let me take some walks in de Fauxbourgs, and what do I see all around myself?
45765Mr. Bucket throws his light into the doorway, and says to Mr. Snagsby,"Now, what do you say to Toughy?
45765Mr. Guppy replying that he is not much to boast of, Mr. Jobling ventures on the question,"How is_ she_?"
45765Nicolo was now entitled to claim his guerdon: and what did he ask?
45765Now, my lord, will you give me your arm?
45765Of two hundred students at the college, who could point out the guilty or suspected fifty?
45765Oh, why will you turn from me-- why will you not speak?"
45765On any humbled sinner I would have mercy-- how much rather must I have mercy on_ my husband_?
45765One might do some good-- who knows?
45765One that is forthcoming is to be entitled,"Cromwell-- shall he be King?"
45765Peas?
45765Pointing, with trembling finger, in that immediate direction, he said:"''Can they_ see us_ from THERE?
45765Shall I tell her?"
45765Small, what will it be?"
45765Smallweed?"
45765Still, even after dinner, I ask myself the question, What am I to do?
45765Summer cabbage?"
45765Surely no man would have taken the trouble to do this, for what would be the profit of his labor?
45765That''s about your intentions, if I understand you?"
45765The concession once made could not be revoked; but what did the wise legislature?
45765The only question he asked was--"Is the man dead?"
45765Then, what''s a fellow to do?
45765Thus is my husband-- what am I?
45765To which has the day been the truest_ Sabbath_, the most real_ test_?
45765Turning to our companion, who was well acquainted with him, we asked,"Why, what in the world has happened to Mr.----''s arm?"
45765Was I ever so fair as this?
45765Was he making retribution?--Was he trying to atone?--Was he seeking to compensate for a great injury?
45765Was it this voice, or at all like this voice?"
45765What am_ I_ to do, I should like to know?"
45765What can I now do?
45765What can this great advantage be, I wonder?
45765What could he do?
45765What do I say?
45765What do you say to marrying?"
45765What do you say to this, Bucket?"
45765What do you take me for?"
45765What is a man''s daily life-- his private conversations-- his familiar deportment?
45765What is your object?"
45765What other friends has she-- what relations?"
45765What salary have you?"
45765What two reasons?"
45765What was it they saw there?
45765What were Boswell''s_ Johnson_, that best of biographies, were it wanting in its gossip and small talk?
45765Where shall I find Lord Spendquick?"
45765Who but Violante could be the rival?
45765Who has dared to introduce you here, in disregard of my prohibition?
45765Who is it, and what''s wanted?"
45765Whose spirits would not rise high-- whose wits would not move quick to the warm pulse of his heart?"
45765Why did he marry me, and hide all this?
45765Why did you name him?"
45765Why do you ask?"
45765Why should we deprive ourselves of that pleasure?"
45765Why shrink?--is not the heart pure?"
45765Why so eager to leave it?
45765Why?"
45765Will you be a friend to me?
45765Will you do this, my love, my Adelaide?"
45765Will you wait?"
45765Will_ he_ do?"
45765Would you not counsel him to do so?"
45765Yet I could not help again murmuring that question--"You love me?
45765Yet, when I tell him all, how will he meet it?
45765You do n''t mind that?"
45765You know Snagsby, the stationer?"
45765You never, never loved any one but me?"
45765You''ve been a- trying to do it, have you?"
45765_ How_ am I doing it?
45765_ What_ have I to do?
45765_ Whence_ came I?
45765_ Where_ am I?
45765_ Whither_ am I going?
45765_ Why_ am I here?
45765can it be That_ this_ is all remains of thee?
45765can they telegraph us?--CAN they, I say?''
45765can they_ reach_ us in any way?
45765he exclaimed,"what is the matter?"
45765is it possible?
45765proceeds Mr. Jobling, after a defiant visit to his rum- and- water,"what can a fellow do, I ask you,_ but_ enlist?"
45765rascals,"shouted Andrew Bridgman, from the top of a flight of stairs,"what are you doing there?"
45765said she, with her tender, melodious voice;"or can I serve you as you would serve me?"
45765what d''ye ask?''
45765which, being translated, means: Louis Napoleon-- shall he be Emperor?
45765you ca n''t answer for him?"
45765you_ do_ love me?"
45765your countenance owns it; you have seen Peschiera?
40147''Government-- government? 40147 A traveling- cap drawn over his eyes?"
40147And Macdonald?
40147And have you nothing, then, to say in her favor?
40147And in what way has he accomplished this?
40147And is_ amount_ of any consequence to your friend?
40147And pray, Catherine,he asked, trying to talk calmly,"why should we not meet again?
40147And the old woman? 40147 And the pocket- book?"
40147And they have complied?
40147And thy cousin?
40147And what do you want a groom at all for? 40147 And what the plague are you all doing here?"
40147And where does Levi Samuel live?
40147And who is, sir?
40147And why should you not love me, Paul?
40147And why would it not be right? 40147 Any relation to M. le Breton''s fair correspondent Fidèle, I wonder?"
40147Are they banditti?
40147Are you indeed? 40147 Are you not Albert''s affianced wife?"
40147But I do not go yet for some hours, and we shall meet again below before I leave; why not defer good- by till then?
40147But how did he fly it? 40147 But how did you contrive to get it fixed so quickly, my kind, good boy?"
40147But must you go to sea again?
40147But pray, where is the gold you mean to pay us with?
40147But the expedition will sail, general?
40147But thou wilt not?
40147But what do you mean to do?
40147But you are frightened, also, a little, are you not-- with all your courage, or what made you shake so then?
40147But, Annie, dear,said her brother,"why should you talk thus earnestly to me?
40147Can the Brest fleet sail?
40147Can you make no allowance for the manner in which she has been brought up? 40147 Captain,"cried the Citizen Gracchus,"what is the meaning of this?
40147Could he fly it,or rather,"could he see John fly it-- really out of doors and in the air?"
40147D''ye know what the diggins the Squire did it for, Gaffer Solomons?
40147Did you ever hear,said a friend once to me,"a real true ghost story, one you might depend upon?"
40147Did you put up at the Post, grandfather?
40147Did your father teach you?
40147Do n''t I?
40147Do n''t you know? 40147 Do you know,"said the mother, laying her hand on the head of the eldest boy, a fine, rosy- looking fellow,"what name this has?
40147Do you really credit this?
40147From whom came, then, these scraps of perfumed note- paper I have found in his desk, I wonder?
40147Gammon, Bill-- ain''t we round the Cape? 40147 Had he a cloak on?"
40147Had you fallen into a den of thieves, or were you among honest people? 40147 Have they told you it was a holiday- party that we had planned?
40147Have you brought any money?
40147He has lost a son?
40147How can you, sir, a stranger to us, volunteer so large a sum, which we may never be in a position to repay?
40147How did you learn so much?
40147How many line- of- battle ships have they?
40147I frightened?
40147I suppose you mean your father? 40147 Is Grouchy coming?"
40147Is he going to stay all night?
40147Is it possible,said he,"that you have not heard of them?
40147Is that the law also with respect to bills of exchange?
40147Is the expedition so nearly ready, sir?
40147It would seem as if he had a foreknowledge of what my little statue contained?
40147John,he cried, as the door opened,"do n''t you think we could fly Harry''s kite out of the broken pane?"
40147My poor girl,said a kind voice,"are you ill?
40147No female relative or acquaintance has n''t he?
40147Not, marm?
40147Now, tell us, boy, what number of the Gardes are to be of our party?
40147Oh dear, dear, what_ shall_ I do?
40147Qu''est ce qu''il y a donc?
40147Quite gone, mamma, and Francie not quite well?
40147Richter was killed in a duel--"And Macdonald?
40147Stop-- you see those stocks-- eh? 40147 Tell me about him, mother, and about his going away?
40147That''s right,cried the Squire,"in half- an- hour, eh?
40147The geography of the country-- what knowledge have you on that subject?
40147Then he was not so_ very_ poor?
40147Then why should I not be a friend so far?
40147Very true, sir,replied Sullivan,"we can do so, but with what success?
40147Was it not grand? 40147 Well, that''s right enough: and how much discount do you charge?"
40147What could she be thinking of?
40147What do you want us to do, sir?
40147What for, when it beant the season? 40147 What for?"
40147What is it, Jem?--what''s the matter?
40147What is the lady''s name?
40147What mean you,asked I,"by the Wahr- wolves?"
40147What of Hardy?
40147What on earth would you do, then?
40147What sort of a boy is he?
40147What the deuce do you know about Mr. Egerton? 40147 What''s the artillery force?"
40147Where am I to drive you to?
40147Where are they stationed?
40147Where away?
40147Where is he, then? 40147 Where is he?"
40147Where was it?
40147Where''s Kilmaine?
40147Where-- what was it? 40147 Where?--how?
40147Where?--who?
40147Who and what is he?
40147Who is the particular?
40147Who peopled all the city streets A hundred years ago? 40147 Whose bag is that, Timms?"
40147Why?
40147Yes; but at what rentals? 40147 You are an American?"
40147You are quite a stranger here?
40147You are well acquainted with the language, I believe?
40147You do n''t mean_ him_, surely?
40147You have never seen it?
40147You then hate the English, Maurice?
40147_ Did you fall on purpose?_said he.
40147''And what if I be?''
40147''And which is the way?''
40147''But why all this secresy?''
40147''But why,''resumed he, in a sharp, quick way--''why must we all sleep in one room?''
40147''Laurenberg, your gayety is oppressive,''interrupted Macdonald;''why sing that song?
40147''Oh, nonsense,''said the other;''pray, how do you know it?''
40147''That is your grandmother, I suppose?''
40147''We should perhaps be burdensome to you,''said he, addressing the girl:''how far is it to the nearest inn?''
40147''Where is it?''
40147''Why do you lay them all with the head to the middle of the room?''
40147''You remember what the girl said about the way to Arnstadt?''
40147''You two live alone in this large house?''
40147A fine head-- very like Dante''s-- but what is beauty?"
40147A silence of a minute or two succeeded, and then Levasseur said,"You are, of course, prepared for business?"
40147About noon, Laurenberg said,''Come, brothers, do you not find this road tiresome?
40147All I can say to these rigid disciplinarians is,"Every man has his favorite sin: whist was Parson Dale''s!--ladies and gentlemen, what is yours?"
40147Am I not obliged to scour the country in the darkest night_ to bring sheep to your fold_?''
40147An interesting creature, is not he?"
40147And if those who have, like you, still covet more what wonder if those who have nothing, covet something?
40147And then more villas and palings; and then a village: when would they stop, those endless houses?
40147And to whose guidance and care did you owe your early training, for I see you have not been neglected?"
40147Are you afraid of tumbling off the pony?"
40147Are you aware of the causes which induced him to leave his native country?"
40147At length Justus, whose emotions were yet as summer clouds, inquired of his grandfather,"And your other comrades in the Thuringian Forest affair?"
40147At length he said,"And now you are about to devote your acquirements and energy to this new expedition?"
40147But had you not better walk in?
40147But has any one ever told you his fate, Justus?"
40147But how was I to decipher the writing?
40147But no, he must be dead, or he would have written: Many die in the swamps and from fever, do n''t they, sir?"
40147But pray, who and what is this Randal Leslie, that you look so discomposed, Squire?"
40147But was I to be the instrument of his deliverance?
40147But what was it she felt then, so warm and sticky, trickling down her arm?
40147But when such qualities rise, or become metamorphosed, to meet the exigencies of life, how do we recognize them?
40147But where was I?
40147But where was I?
40147But who shall describe the excitement of a chase at sea?
40147But why do we stand talking here?
40147CAPTAIN BARNABAS.--"Will you cut for your partner, ma''am?"
40147Ca n''t you show me how poor Harry used to fly it?"
40147Can you do no work?
40147Can you tell me with certainty that a sergeant''s guard is on the way hither?"
40147Could her prayers alter that?
40147DALE.--"Pugs?
40147Dale?"
40147Did they say it was a junketing we were bent upon?"
40147Did you not always teach me that His hand would keep me, and hold me, even in the uttermost parts of the sea?"
40147Do n''t you see the scarlet berries, the food of winter for the little birds?"
40147Do n''t you think it would be a very happy thing for both, if Jemima and Signor Riccabocca could be brought together?"
40147Do you know, mother?"
40147Do you not believe that the expedition will sail?"
40147Do you remember the other day an old gentleman stopping and asking some questions about the coat of arms I was painting?"
40147Does it need so long a prolegomenon to excuse thee, poor Parson Dale, for turning up that ace of spades with so triumphant a smile at thy partner?
40147FRANK.--"Eh, mother?"
40147FRANK.--"Why do n''t they mix with the county?"
40147Fear, of course, was the only motive she employed; for how could our still carnal understandings be affected with love to God?
40147Frank,"( here the Parson raised his voice),"I suppose you wanted to call on young Leslie, as you were studying the county map so attentively?"
40147Go home, will ye?
40147Greeting the assembled officers with a smile, he asked how the wind was?
40147Had he somebody to meet?
40147Had it not been decided from all eternity?
40147Have you never had a dim presentiment of approaching evil?
40147Have you no son-- no daughter-- no grandchildren?
40147He dashes toward us-- what can save us?
40147He nestled in closer to his mother''s side; and still looking up, but with more thoughtful eyes, he said,"Mamma, is the summer_ quite_ gone?"
40147He took the book, and casting his eyes hastily over it, exclaimed,"Why, what''s this lad?
40147How are these mysteries to be explained?
40147How could he know so well?
40147How d''ye do, my little man?"
40147How do you do, Papa Godard?"
40147I suppose you had reason to be grateful to him?
40147I then asked him to what intent he had left the notes with the young lady?
40147If any damage be done, it is to you I shall look; d''ye understand?
40147If it is not marriage, however, that calls her away, but bad health; if she goes home unwell, or is carried to the infirmary-- what then?
40147In thunder, and storm, and garments rolled in blood?
40147In whose division are you?"
40147Is it not a pleasure to explore an unknown country, and go on without knowing where you will come to?
40147Is n''t that the signal to heave short on the anchors?
40147Is that the same wine?
40147Is there a regiment, a battalion, a company?
40147It sets one thinking, does it not?
40147Leslie?"
40147MISS JEMIMA, half pettishly, half coaxingly.--"Why is he interesting?
40147MISS JEMIMA, hesitatingly.--"Do you think so?"
40147MISS JEMIMA.--"Very true; what is it indeed?
40147MRS. HAZELDEAN to Miss Jemima.--"Is that the note you were to write for me?"
40147Mackaye?''
40147My mother often said that the room was''too small for a Christian to sleep in, but where could she get a better?''
40147My wife is dead: wilt thou be too proud to take charge of my household?"
40147Not to know that they first set the example, by getting the army and navy clothes made by contractors, and taking the lowest tenders?
40147Now, tell me, sir, have I misplaced my love?
40147Now, what do you think of all that?
40147Or like the dew on the mown grass, and the clear shining of the sunlight after April rain?"
40147Or was the strong intellect really clouded?
40147PARSON, slapping his cards on the table in despair:"Are we playing at whist, or are we not?"
40147PARSON.--"What''s what?"
40147Pray, what do you think of the Squire''s tenant at the Casino, Signor Riccabocca?
40147Profligate too?
40147Rickeybockey?"
40147SQUIRE, who has been listening to Frank''s inquiries with a musing air:"Why do you want to know the distance to Rood Hall?"
40147Saunders?"
40147Shall I ever be a good workman, mother?"
40147Still mademoiselle, or are you madam by this time?
40147Still, should the clerk recognize me?
40147Tell me, therefore, in what condition are the people at this moment, as regards poverty?"
40147That beautiful book, Frank-- hold up your head, my love-- what did you get it for?"
40147That the enterprise contained every element of success, then, who could doubt?
40147The CAPTAIN, putting down the cards to cut.--"You''ve got hold of that passage about Botham Hall, page 706, eh?"
40147The SQUIRE, with a little embarrassment in his voice:"Pray, Frank, what do you know of Randal Leslie?"
40147The question that most concerned me was, how was I to extricate myself from this dilemma?
40147The young sometimes left the world before the old, unnatural as it seemed; what if she should die?
40147Then what brought you here, boy?"
40147Then why make us all sleep in one room?
40147Then, in the second place, have you any wine?''
40147There was another pause before she answered, with passionate energy, and grasping his arm tightly:"And is this all you have to say?
40147There, Mrs Dale, you hear me?"
40147They look something like now, do n''t they, Harry?
40147This warning cooled Mr. Hazeldean; and muttering,"Why the deuce did you set me off?"
40147This, indeed, looked like magic-- one of Houdin''s sleight- of- hand performances-- for what could interrupt its progress?
40147To turn back, and declare I would not travel in such a night, with so strange a person, or to proceed on my journey?
40147Was I to be put to all this inconvenience in order to favor the escape of an assassin?
40147Was he insane, or was he bent upon an errand perfectly rational, although for the present wrapped in the most impenetrable mystery?
40147Was not Jemima''s fortune about £4000?"
40147Was not_ that_ awful?"
40147Well, Master Dale, what do you say to that?"
40147Well, sir,"said he, turning abruptly toward me,"how many battalions of the''Guides''are completed?"
40147Were there not cheap houses even at the West- end, which had saved several thousands a year merely by reducing their workmen''s wages?
40147Were you all robbed and murdered before morning, or were you not?"
40147What can the torments that they tell us of, hereafter, be to this?"
40147What could the man do there at that hour of the night?
40147What did my employer mean by imposing such a task upon me?
40147What do ye ken aboot the Pacific?
40147What do you here, so far from your home and friends?"
40147What does he give, and how does he dispose of them?"
40147What does that blue light mean, Girard?"
40147What ha''you got in your willainous little fist, there?"
40147What is it that makes a chase of any kind so exciting?
40147What is there in the character we have drawn to account for the shock the whole family receives?
40147What more needs be said?
40147What sort of a creature is it?"
40147What!--trumps, Barney?
40147What, are we covetous, too?
40147When the man had finished, I said to him,"How was the gentleman dressed?"
40147When will such things cease?
40147When will that day come, and how?
40147When--""And Richter?"
40147Where is my Sam?
40147Where was I?
40147Where was I?"
40147Where was I?"
40147Which was the best course to adopt?
40147Whither was I to drive?
40147Who and what was my companion?
40147Who fill''d the church with faces meek A hundred years ago?"
40147Who is your friend?"
40147Whom ought I to ask, Mrs. Dale?
40147Why conceal his face in so unaccountable a manner?
40147Why is he interesting?"
40147Why should he invest himself with such a mystery?
40147Why should he not get rich as fast as he could?
40147Why should he pay his men two shillings where the government paid them one?
40147Why should he remain in the minority?
40147Why should he stick to the old, slow- going, honorable trade?
40147Why so?
40147Why was he to be robbing his family of comforts to pay for their extravagance?
40147Why, may I ask?"
40147Why, who knows but there may be an adventure before us?
40147Will you be advised?
40147Will you come up and play a rubber, Dale?
40147Yes?
40147Yet who are more superstitious than sailors, from the admiral down to the cabin boy?
40147You a tailor, and not know that government are the very authors of this system?
40147You are an English Jew I perceive?"
40147You seem tired, gentlemen; have you come far?''
40147You went there?"
40147Your father was then an Emigrà ©?"
40147_ Pres._--And who was he?
40147_ Pres._--Can''t you sell something-- little cakes-- bonbons?
40147_ Pres._--Robespierre!--why what did you know of him?
40147_ President._--Now, my good woman, what have you to say for yourself?
40147and do n''t you know that''s just where the Flying Dutchman never could get to?"
40147and, then, where is the capital?"
40147cried Justus, rising suddenly on his elbow;"stupid, did you say, grandfather?"
40147cried Paul, passionately,"why spoke you not two years ago?
40147cried he, stamping his foot passionately; then suddenly checking his anger, he asked,"How many are there coming to join this expedition?
40147he cried, in anguish,"what has happened?
40147how is it?
40147interrupted Catherine;"your sister calls; why does she come here now?
40147interrupted the other,''what better are you yourself?
40147or, may she never change from what you represent her?"
40147pardon, citizen, I recognize thee now; but why didst thou not knock?
40147replied the dauntless woman,"I frightened; and what at?
40147said Godard,"thou ownest this, then?"
40147said I;"and could you suspect a companion of so incredible a propensity?"
40147said the right- hand man, glowering on Lenny malignantly,"you are the pattern boy of the village, are you?
40147something to see or obtain?
40147the old grandmother?"
40147trump my diamond?"
40147turn robbers?''
40147what noise is that?"
40147when?
40147you are not sorry to come home, are you?"
43368''I was grieved to learn, through the public prints, that Mrs. Clay has been ill; may I hope that she is better?'' 43368 ''May I ask, my dear sir, what part of the twenty- four hours are you most comfortable?''
43368''What''s a_ sine qua non_?'' 43368 ''Why, do n''t you know?''
43368A little too boisterous-- like the sea? 43368 Am I an invalid, sir?
43368Am I such a mean miser as that? 43368 And do you always lock the babies up when you go out?"
43368And do you live alone here with these babies, Charley?
43368And do you often go out?
43368And have seen service?
43368And his address?
43368And how do you get on?
43368And how do you live, Charley? 43368 And what do you call these little fellows, ma''am?"
43368And when did mother die? 43368 Another requiem and a mass for a departed soul, at the church of St. Géneviève-- is it not so, captain?
43368Are there any more of you besides Charley?
43368Are we not, sir?
43368Are you a good shot, young man?
43368Are you speaking of the wife of a Hazeldean? 43368 Are you the boy I have read of in the papers?"
43368Are you the person,asked Sister Agatha, eagerly,"appointed to protect our flight from--?"
43368Are you trying to get our throats cut for us, you rascally aristocrat?
43368At what hour do you dine?
43368But suppose,said my Guardian, laughing,"he had meant the meat in the bill, instead of providing it?"
43368But the servants might have perished?
43368But where was the honor when he betrayed his friend? 43368 But why?"
43368But would it not be adding to his unhappiness, to marry without his knowledge or consent, my dear?
43368Did I?
43368Did he look like-- not like_ you_?
43368Did he take no legal proceedings?
43368Do I look weak, sir? 43368 Do n''t you think he was_ a little out of his head_ to talk in that way?"
43368Do you imagine, madame, that the man you are so much afraid of, is still waiting outside the shop?
43368Do you mean the tongs?
43368Do you think I am a fool, sir: do you think I am a liar?
43368Do you think he will die, captain?
43368Do you think then, father,murmured the stranger, deeply abashed,"that all indirect participations are visited with punishment?
43368Do you think you can make_ me_ the tool of a conspiracy? 43368 Do_ you_ not mean to accompany us?"
43368Does he teach?
43368Does his wife know of it?
43368Does it ever flash in the pan?
43368Easterly wind?
43368Foiled with Madame di Negra?
43368For the Chancellor,said the old man, with a chuckle,"not to be acquainted with a Jarndyce is queer, ai n''t it, Miss Flite?
43368Gentleman yonder? 43368 Has she been very ill?"
43368Have many people been kind to the children?
43368Have they any names?
43368Have you a good rifle, my friend?
43368Have you got enough, now? 43368 Have_ I_ ever''flashed,''"continued Mr. Clay,"except on the''Compensation bill?''"
43368He had no other calling?
43368Him as was dead?
43368How dare you ask me if I knew him?
43368How handsome our_ vis- a- vis_ is?
43368How old are you?
43368I do n''t know nothink about no-- where I was took by the beadle, do you mean?
43368Indeed?
43368Is Charley your brother?
43368Is it Gridley that''s wanted?
43368Is it blessed?
43368Is it blessed?
43368Is that all you have seen in the papers?
43368Is that all?
43368Is the wound mortal?
43368Is this place of abomination, consecrated ground?
43368It was he who was very gentlemanly, I think?
43368May I ask if you are both in the habit of reading the Latin language?
43368Mum,said he, one night( his usual way of addressing his wife),"Mum, who is that stepping so softly in the kitchen?"
43368My dear Marchesa,said he,"are we then likely to be near connections?
43368My dear,said Mr. Turveydrop benignly to his son,"do you know the hour?"
43368My dearest Ada,asked Richard, pausing,"why not?"
43368Nature forgot to shade him off, I think?
43368Neckett''s children?
43368Next Tuesday?
43368O yes, his family is all very fine, Miss Summerson,replied Miss Jellyby;"but what comfort is his family to him?
43368O yes?
43368Oh, do you?
43368Old Mr. Turveydrop''s wife, Miss Clare?
43368Probably you came from Niagara?
43368Shall I run''em over, Flite?
43368Shall you go to Lake George?
43368Sir,said Gridley, putting down the child, and going up to him as if he mean to strike him,"Do you know any thing of Courts of Equity?"
43368So you gave him notice?
43368So you kept him, after all?
43368To keep''em safe, sir, do n''t you see?
43368To your sorrow?
43368WHICH?
43368Was Neckett?
43368Was he-- I do n''t know how to shape the question,murmured my Guardian--"industrious?"
43368Was the boy''s name at the Inkwhich, Jo?
43368Well, sir-- well: what prevented the vane from turning?
43368Well, that being the case, would it not be the wisest course not to bring the matter before the House? 43368 Well, what did you do with it?
43368Well, will you throw_ me_ away?
43368Well,answered Randolph,"I do n''t know but I_ am_ mistaken; and suppose we drop the matter, shake hands, and become good friends again?"
43368Well,he said,"to what conclusion have you come?
43368Well?
43368Well?
43368Were you examined at an Inquest?
43368What are you doing here?
43368What are you waiting for, Mr. Robber, Thief, or whatever your Christian- name may be?
43368What are_ our_ lives-- the lives of two poor nuns-- in comparison with_ yours_; in comparison with the life of a priest?
43368What can the fools be about?
43368What does he wish?
43368What does the horrible creature mean?
43368What is it I have heard? 43368 What is that?"
43368What is the matter with you, citizen?
43368What is the matter yonder?
43368What is the matter? 43368 What is the matter?"
43368What of that?
43368What_ did_ you say?
43368Where have you placed the--?
43368Where is Charley now?
43368Where? 43368 Who did you want?"
43368Who do you suppose would teach you wrong?
43368Who has locked you up here alone?
43368Who is that standing upright in the cart?
43368Who lives here?
43368Who''s there?
43368Why a coxcomb?
43368Why not pity them?
43368Why say six months?
43368Why, good gracious me, Miss Summerson,she returned, justifying herself in a fretful but not angry manner,"how can it be otherwise?
43368Without their knowledge at home?
43368Would not the fellow waive his claim for a settled increase of his annuity?
43368Would you like to take any refreshment, madame?
43368Would you though?
43368Wrong?
43368Yet, would you believe that it''s_ his_ name on the door- plate?
43368You are not afraid, then,I remarked,"of taking a farm in these bad times?"
43368You are still in active service?
43368You have been long here?
43368You have n''t read the newspapers?
43368You mean about the man?
43368You will take another farm when one can be had on easier terms than now, I suppose?
43368''Well, sir,''says he,''I wish I had meant the lamb, as you mean the money?''
43368''Why did I eat spring lamb at eighteen pence a pound, my honest friend?''
43368***** Is not the following anecdote of the late King of the French not only somewhat characteristic, but indicative of a superior mind?
43368A little too vehement-- like a bull who has made up his mind to consider every color scarlet?
43368Ada remembers?"
43368After a silence, he is asked"In which room?"
43368And can you seriously contemplate marriage with my young nephew, Frank Hazeldean?
43368And how never confide it to me?"
43368And if he did, what would it be to see a woman going by?
43368And stay, William-- as to this foolish marriage with Madame di Negra, who told you Frank meant to take such a step?"
43368And that''s how I know how; do n''t you see, sir?"
43368And then what would be the feelings of the proud Egerton if his wife were excluded from that world, whose opinion he so prized?
43368And what did it matter?
43368And what does the man show me?
43368And what other opportunity can occur?
43368And what, Mr. Sharp, is the highest penalty for the crime of incendiarism?"
43368And, for consolation, learn that your friend has betrayed you?"
43368Are you ill?"
43368Are you not all the time in the midst of an Iliad?
43368Are_ you_ off now, father?"
43368As for myself, do you suppose that it is solely because I am reputed a great general that I rule France?
43368Assuming, however, all the little suavity at my command, I very politely touched my hat, and said:"My dear sir, is it not rather a hard case?
43368Ay?
43368BARON.--"Certainly, or how could you be induced to buy it up?
43368BARON.--"Ha, ha-- he is young, our friend, Randal; eh, sir?"
43368Blest?
43368Blest?"
43368But how could the_ power_ of Napoleon be increased?
43368But how was Napoleon to be rewarded?
43368But it''s great good fortune, is it not?
43368But the world will become better-- the world is becoming better, it may be said-- and why should not the stage share in the improvement?
43368But to whom was he to do justice?
43368But what is theory?
43368But what of Elizabeth-- the beauty?
43368But what turned out to be the case?
43368But where are those fierce warriors now?
43368But will France, which has consented to be governed by me, consent to be governed by Joseph or Lucien?
43368But you are busy--?"
43368But your age?"
43368But, boys, he continued,''what shall I do_ now_?''
43368Can it be possible?"
43368Can you show me all those places that were spoken of in the account I read?
43368Charley,"said my Guardian, turning his face away for a moment,"how do you live?"
43368Coavinses?"
43368Consequently, multitudes say, What shall we gain by the change?
43368Could Audley say this?
43368Could he ever forgive you?"
43368Dare you undertake such a task?
43368Did Nora already discover this?
43368Did not she know_ that_?"
43368Did you ever feel the want of a home?"
43368Do n''t they, Tom?"
43368Do n''t you, Tom?"
43368Do you imagine even that the bravest stands first in their esteem?
43368Do you imagine that I am solicitous to risk this power, this renown, in a desperate struggle?
43368Do you imagine that it is the tallest of their officers, and the most imposing by his stature, for whom they feel the highest regard?
43368Do you know the place where he was buried?"
43368Do you see those men?
43368Do you think I wished to hear it?
43368Does he wish to be king?
43368EDWARD.--"There, Dearest, do you feel refreshed?"
43368Energetically, he said:"Whom would you have me appoint my successor?
43368From whence do these papers come, you say?
43368GALOUPEAU(_ plaintiff_).--And what did I say?
43368Had she not exquisitely perfected my revenge?
43368Has he not brought his father to the verge of a work- house by low dissipation and extravagance?"
43368Has your son displeased you?
43368Have I the air of disease, I should like to know?"
43368Have you heard of her good fortune?"
43368Have you the face to tell me I have received justice, and therefore am dismissed?''
43368He asked me, first of all, whether I conferred a charm and a distinction on London by residing in it?
43368He continued:"A sailor?"
43368He has signed a post- obit?"
43368He re- collected himself, and added, more coldly,"You would ask my opinion?
43368How could that be?
43368How could you suffer him to entertain an idea so wild?
43368How did he fulfill the trust?"
43368How did he raise the money?"
43368How is it with us all to- day?"
43368How is this?
43368How should he, purposing as he did to be in London at the time?
43368How was this?
43368How would humility, forgiveness, poverty of spirit, meekness, temperance, long- suffering, charity, appear in a stage hero?
43368How, at his age, could he see the distinction between the Poetess and the Woman?
43368I asked,"Does he give lessons in Deportment, now?"
43368I exclaimed,"What is the matter?
43368I hope the young gentleman in question is not in the hands of the Jews?"
43368I must first be wholly ruined before she can want; and if I were so, do you think I should not be by her side?"
43368I must n''t go into Court, and say,''My Lord, I beg to know this from you-- is this right or wrong?
43368I shall either obtain a seat, be secure from a jail, have won field for my energies, or--""Or what?"
43368I suppose it will cost money?
43368I, who have made such sacrifices-- actually doubts whether I, Audley Egerton, an English gentleman, could have been base enough to--""What?"
43368If you had a blue- eyed daughter, you would n''t like_ me_ to come, uninvited, on_ her_ birthday?''
43368In those midnight recitals Herbert used often to stop, and say to me:"I wonder if you would like my sister?"
43368In what way may they be made to minister to the exciting, the sentimental, the melodramatic?
43368Is he a foreigner, too?"
43368Is it possible?"
43368Is man, in the hour of triumphant ambition, so moderate, that we can be willing that he should attain power which places us at his mercy?
43368Is mine less hard to bear, or is it harder to bear, when my whole living was in it, and has been thus shamefully sucked away?"
43368Is she such a woman as a plain country gentleman would like his only son to marry-- ay or no?"
43368Is the hand not always pointing there?
43368Is the soldier guilty of the death of Louis who obeyed the order to guard the scaffold?"
43368It was then resolved to submit a second question:"Shall the First Consul have the power of appointing his successor?"
43368JUDGE(_ to the defendant_).--So you refuse to take the mule?
43368Jarndyce?"
43368LEVY.--"Ay; will she not be in want of some pecuniary supplies?"
43368My brothers?
43368My nephew, Frank Hazeldean, proposes to marry Madame di Negra against his father''s consent?
43368Now, is not that reasonable?"
43368One of the senators went to Cambaceres, and said,"What would be gratifying to General Bonaparte?
43368Or pounds?
43368Or something of that sort?
43368POGUY.--"Don''t I?
43368Property-- property?
43368RANDAL.--"Are you going to Madame di Negra''s?
43368RANDAL.--"I trust I shall hear the result of your interview?
43368ROGUY.--"See that girl looking at me, Poguy?"
43368Randal and the gentleman exchanged a hasty whisper, and the former exclaimed,"What, Mr. Hazeldean, have you just left your brother''s house?
43368Randolph?"
43368SQUIRE( leaving Randal''s arm and seizing Levy''s).--"Were you speaking of Frank Hazeldean?"
43368SQUIRE.--"Can I see the deed with my own eyes?"
43368Says he,''Sir, why did you eat spring lamb at eighteen pence a pound?''
43368Shall I be ashamed to say that emotions uncontrollable overcame me, and I freely wept?
43368Shall I nominate you consul, Cambaceres?
43368Shall I not accompany you?
43368Shall I see him or her?
43368Shall I tell you what_ I_ think?
43368Shall history be blind to such fatality as this?
43368Shillings perhaps?
43368So well- timed, is it not?
43368So, I get a little practice with-- who do you think?
43368Some one, I am pretty sure, it must be,"he presently added,"that owes me a grudge-- with whom I have quarreled, eh?"
43368Some public matter-- some Parliamentary bill that may affect your property?"
43368The place he wrote for, the place he died at, the place where you were taken to, and the place where he was buried?
43368The work of an incendiary, is it not?
43368This child,"he added, after a few moments,"could she possibly continue this?"
43368Was all the iron of his mind worth one grain of the gold she had cast away in Harley''s love?
43368Was wealth to be conferred upon him?
43368We naturally asked how?
43368Well, we''ll manage that before our hair is gray, depend upon it, bad as the times may be-- won''t we, Nance?"
43368Were monuments to be reared to his honor, titles to be lavished upon his name?
43368Were there no Boswells in those days, whose spirits might be coaxed into communicative rappings about the king of the poets?
43368Were there touches by which conjecture grew certainty; and he recognized, through the lapse of years, the boy lover in his own generous benefactor?
43368What am I to do_ next_?"
43368What are you listening at my door for, Krook?"
43368What do they care for their white bell- crowns of ten years ago?
43368What do you require of me?"
43368What do you want, Krook, when I have company?"
43368What does property matter, when a man is struck down at his own hearth?
43368What ghost can the church- yard yield to us like the writing of the dead?
43368What has happened?"
43368What made his heart stand still, and the blood then rush so quickly through his veins?
43368What man ever had stronger claims to the national gratitude than General Bonaparte?
43368What might have been the end, who knows?
43368What on?
43368What woman can interfere in_ business_ matters without risk of censure?
43368What would it be to see a woman going by, even though she were going secretly?
43368What would the world say, if we were to allow a solemn treaty, signed with us, to be violated?
43368What would you have me do?"
43368What, besides, have you found in them?"
43368What, then, is it that causes doubt and mystery to attend the ways of men?
43368When Audley pressed her heart to his own, could he comprehend one finer throb of its beating?
43368When could the marriage be proclaimed?
43368When we repeated, with some surprise,"The sheep?"
43368Which of the two suffered the most?
43368Which of these motives can urge Madame di Negra to marry Mr. Frank Hazeldean?"
43368Who dare justify the spending night after night in such ceaseless pleasure- seeking?
43368Who has not had just this experience, or a similar one, at any Watering- Place?
43368Who the Devil is he?
43368Who the devil is he?"
43368Who would confide to a woman things in which she could do nothing, except to tease one the more?"
43368Who would not once have seen Helen, though he might never see her more?
43368Who would not welcome nowadays any_ bona fide_ contemporaneous account of the meals or dress of William Shakspeare, or of Francis Bacon?
43368Why did he seize upon those papers with so tremulous a hand-- then lay them down-- pause, as if to nerve himself-- and look so eagerly again?
43368Why did she smile?
43368Why do n''t I know him?
43368Why has n''t he thirty thousand a year?''
43368Why is play- acting radically vicious?
43368Why should Mr. Tulkinghorn, for such no reason, look out of window?
43368Why should he thrust his long nose into my family affairs?
43368Why should not I take him up, too, when his grandmother was a Hazeldean?
43368Why should not the_ President_?
43368Why the deuce should you think I came to Saratoga to drink the waters?"
43368Will you allow me to gather up for myself and my half famished friends, the fragments of your recent meal?"
43368Will you come?"
43368Will you have peace, or will you have war?
43368Will you or will you not execute the treaty of Amiens?
43368YOUNG LADY.--"Now then, what is it that you wish to say to me that so nearly concerns your happiness?"
43368You are sure he is a good lad-- and it will please you too, Audley?"
43368You could n''t really mean the lamb without sending it in, whereas I can, and do, really mean the money without paying it?''
43368You did n''t know him, did you?"
43368You did n''t throw it away, did you?"
43368You have not?
43368You know that good- looking, idle, and, I fear, irreclaimable young fellow, George Hamblin?"
43368You remember our friend Coavinses, Miss Summerson?"
43368You''re going back, Charley?
43368You''re not afraid of me, Tom; are you?"
43368You?
43368Your wife, then, does not know the exact state of your affairs?"
43368_ The Tuileries._--"Will Prince Louis Napoleon,"inquired a gentleman, of a French lady,"take up his residence in the Tuileries?"
43368and do you call them_ tongs_?
43368do you want money?
43368he cried with explosive quickness--"what about Annie?
43368interrupted Levy,"to deceive your friend L''Estrange?
43368is that the man who knows my son''s affairs?
43368or what, for marching and counter- marching the Boulevard, with a fat wife on one arm, and a fat daughter on the other?
43368out with it, will you?"
43368said Miss Flite.--"Who''s that at my door?
43368the young fellow we are talking of?
43368though he hath committed great faults, hath he not expiated them by great sufferings?
43368was not respected; is it likely that mine would be?
43368what do I care for either now?"
43368what, the debt he paid for that woman?
43368why, what can you want a hundred dollars so soon for?"
43368will you?"
36516A Royalist?
36516A Royalist?
36516And could_ you_ find no better trade than that of a Mouchard?
36516And did he owe it you?
36516And is France come to this?
36516And is not that better than ours, your Mightiness?
36516And lodge her in your own house?
36516And suppose Albert should not love you?
36516And that career is--"Letters?
36516And that?
36516And the Duke de Bouillon?
36516And unsettle a right ambition for a wrong one? 36516 And what,"asked the astounded magistrate,"was the name of the deceased?"
36516And where is the Ministere?
36516And who is her idol now, for, of course, she has one?
36516And why not?
36516And you call him Nero?
36516Anything amiss in your son''s family?
36516Are you a Predestinarian?
36516Are you going home so early? 36516 Are you quite alone here?"
36516As every Frenchman is?
36516At what hour does monsieur rise?
36516Ay, Lajolais, but who would pardon_ us_?
36516But can you seriously mean to take this child with you abroad?
36516But doubtless, madame, you were acquitted?
36516But how shall I pay the other half?
36516But if the persecution were to cease; if he were at liberty to appear once more in the world--"What if there was no persecution, sir?
36516But it may be an immortality of grief?
36516But we are intruding?
36516But what are you going to do? 36516 But what does he mean?"
36516But what will the world say?
36516But where is your rose?
36516But you can not want me to marry Alfred? 36516 But, my Geraldine,"exclaimed her mother,"are you not behaving very badly to Edouard?"
36516By the same rule,''la''and''dy,''spell''lady?'' 36516 By whom was the plot discovered?"
36516Can I help Albert?
36516Can we go over it?
36516Can you manage with the loaf of bread then, and three- halfpence for to- day?
36516Did I say so? 36516 Did you?
36516Dismissed the service-- and for what?
36516Do I understand aright? 36516 Do you forgive_ me_?"
36516Do you know, child, that to marry this mortal, you must take his religion?
36516Does he really go abroad next week?
36516Does my father disapprove?
36516Give up your immortality?
36516Good news?
36516Has any thing happened to you?
36516Have not you seen him yet, sir?
36516He was married, I think?
36516How came you ever to have heard the name of so humble a person as Jacques Caillon, for you remember you asked for me as you rode up?
36516How can he know our movements so well?
36516How can it concern you?
36516How comes it,asked I, eagerly,"that such a man as you are, is to be found thus?
36516How do you know all this?
36516How is it possible,he wrote to the Directory,"not to pity these unhappy men?
36516How is it possible,said they,"that Napoleon, with thirty thousand men, can resist the combined onset of eighty thousand veteran soldiers?"
36516How long have you been in this state?
36516How much money have you got left, Catherine?
36516How much?
36516How so?
36516How, not wish it?
36516How?
36516I dare not use thy cherished name, Would''st thou accept, were I to draw? 36516 I will not now argue the point, father; tell me rather what are the news from France?"
36516If I wanted a horse, How d''you think I got it? 36516 Indeed?"
36516Is Mr. Norreys at home?
36516Is he really happy?
36516Is he very rich?
36516Is it not as I have said?
36516Is it only in danger that a country is served-- only in war that duty is fulfilled? 36516 Is it too much,"continued he, with all the vehemence of passion,"is it too much that I was master here?
36516Is she rich?
36516Is this child an Avenel too?
36516Is this the road to Belleville?
36516Is this true?
36516Lisette, the miller''s daughter, or the schoolmaster''s niece?
36516Must I, indeed?
36516My God!--what?
36516My dear Herwitz,said the Minister, a little, bowing, smirking man,"what can I do for you?
36516My dear girl,exclaimed her mother,"why did you not tell us this before?
36516My enemies, then, still triumph?
36516My good cousin,said Geraldine, advancing toward him, and taking both his hands,"come here; you will forgive Geraldine, wo n''t you?
36516Now, sir, I ask you how this gentleman is called, whom I alone, of all France, am ignorant of?
36516Oh, sir, can you think it?
36516Oh, then, you do not mean to marry me now?
36516Or suppose another case, Mr. Rich,returns father,"that another act shoulde pass, that God shoulde not be God, would you say well and good?"
36516Qui va là  ?
36516Qui va là  ?
36516Richard-- Richard-- who is he? 36516 Right-- what is he worth?
36516SIR?
36516Scotland, sir?
36516She was not weeping when you left her?
36516Soldiers?
36516Suppose he should become poor-- should fall from his high estate?
36516That''s right: well, now what do''pumpkin''and''pie''spell? 36516 The country is terribly dull, is it?
36516The treaty with the king of Spain?
36516Then you are acquainted with the present owner?
36516This will do; at least it looks practicable,said Fouchà ©, thoughtfully;"is she equal to the part you would assign her?"
36516To what, father, am I indebted for this late visit?
36516Villain that you are,said Grimbard,"will you, for a silly pullet, fall again into your sins?"
36516Was he begging for a small contribution to repair the roof of his little chapel, or was it a fire that had devastated his poor village? 36516 Was it, then, some mere delusion drove him from the service?"
36516Well, Merode, who is it?--who are they?
36516Well, but what is the difficulty of living there?
36516Well, does she care for Moreau?
36516Well, then,''apple''and''pie,''when put together, spell''apple- pie,''do n''t they?
36516Well, well, let us come back; the price-- will that do?
36516Well,said the cat,"if it be your pleasure, I am content; what shall we eat?"
36516What Duchess, my dear father?
36516What am I to do?
36516What are they, without love?
36516What brings him here?
36516What could have poisoned so noble a nature?
36516What distinguished company have we got yonder?
36516What have been_ my_ vicissitudes of fortune compared to_ his_?
36516What have you to tell me?
36516What if the whole were a mere dream, or fancy? 36516 What is it?"
36516What is the matter, good Dennis?
36516What is the meaning of your interruptions during the prayers, Dennis?
36516What means this insult?
36516What''s that?
36516What_ can_ be the matter with old Dennis?
36516When are we to meet again, and where?
36516When did you join-- and where?
36516Where does he not live, monsieur? 36516 Where is he?"
36516Where was that, and when?
36516Who can it be at this hour?
36516Who or what are they?
36516Why not? 36516 Why should she?
36516Why, James,said the preceptor,"do n''t you_ know_ who the father of Shem, Ham, and Japheth was, after I''ve told you so much?"
36516Why, what do you think?
36516Why,said the fox,"love you mice so exceedingly?"
36516Why,they exclaimed,"do we not receive succor from France?
36516Will Albert be happy?
36516Will you convey my respectful compliments, then, to him, and my regrets that I had not seen him before leaving the Chateau?
36516Will you sell this? 36516 Yet his vagrant son has received such gifts from nature-- his youth was so rich in promise-- his boyhood so glowed at the dream of glory?"
36516You a police spy, Jacques?
36516You can tell me, perhaps, where Jacques Caillon, Garde de Chasse, is to be found?
36516You were a quarter- master; perhaps a sous- lieutenant?
36516You were probably with the Army of the Meuse?
36516You will then authorize me to accept him?
36516Your husband is Karl Herwitz, the mechanist?
36516Your own?
36516Your particular friend, Master Frank? 36516 _ Sir?_"said James, inquiringly.
36516''Twas onlie on the last count he could be made out a traitor, and proof of''t had they none; how coulde they have?
36516''What is it?''
36516--"How, my son?"
36516A night- capped head issued from a chamber casement with--"What is the matter?"
36516Ah, monsieur, what secret are you in possession of, that it was worth while to lay so subtle a trap to catch you?"
36516Aha, sir-- very well, very well-- the country is horribly dull, is it?
36516And I can never envy nor comprehend either-- yet my own-- what is it?"
36516And he, what of him?"
36516And if he wanted a third person, was not there his own mother?
36516And is it not better for both of you, that youth should open upon the world with youth''s natural affections free and unforestalled?"
36516And now, the price, Master Lajolais; remember that our treasury received some deadly wounds lately-- what is to be the price?"
36516And pray why, sir?"
36516And so these fellows assume every disguise?"
36516And what could I do?
36516And what does youth want that it should be extravagant?
36516And whom, think you, did they accuse of instigating his murder?
36516And you met him at the''Charette rouge''in the Marais?"
36516Are all my pledges set at naught?
36516Are these walls too luxurious?
36516Art mad to go on this errand?"
36516At the stairs lay a wherry with a couple of boatmen, and one of''em stepping up to me, cries,"Alas for ruth, mistress Meg, what is''t ye do?
36516But I am sure my dear Lord must think that the Duchess should not have made the first overture-- even to a friend and a kinsman?"
36516But after what you have told me, will you share my purse with me for your wife and children''s sake?"
36516But are men-- the mass of men-- really wiser in respect to their truest good?
36516But beholding his mail, his staff, and his shoes, she grew into great admiration, and said,"Dear husband, how have you fared?"
36516But how can that be helped?
36516But how stands the actual fact?
36516But is the movement there to find its termination?
36516But later, if encouraged, would the love be the same?
36516But the King cut him short at these words, and said,"Peace, traitorous Reynard; think you I can be caught with the music of your words?
36516But we, too, named a condition-- Did we not, Lansmere?"
36516But where''s the red horse?
36516But you are going to practice the new variations on_ Pastoris_, are you not?"
36516But, if discovered, what harm can ensue?
36516By- the- by, I suppose he told you where I was, otherwise how did you find me out?"
36516Can not he work-- and can not he eat his meals-- without a Greek book in his vest?
36516Can such a memory influence you even to this day?
36516Did the altar want a new covering, or the curà © a vestment?
36516Dishonored is Affection''s bill?
36516Do any lords spiritual interfere with one''s repose?"
36516Do excuse your cousin, will you not?
36516Do n''t you all wonder and admire to see and behold and hear?
36516Do you forgive me?"
36516Do you know what the life of a mortal woman is?"
36516Do you not think the man impenetrably deaf who, professing to converse with Nature, can not hear the tale which Nature is forever telling?
36516Does he not work, honestly and deftly?
36516Does it not flash upon us when we least expect it?
36516EGERTON.--"Whom?"
36516Enough, enough, my child; what mean ye, to weep and break mine heart?
36516For what vantage- ground is so high as youth?
36516Fouchà ©, the Minister of Police?"
36516Gad, I''ll give it him?"
36516HARLEY.--"And that gave you pleasure?"
36516HARLEY.--"Do we ever search for love?
36516HARLEY.--"What was it?"
36516Has it not every thing in itself, merely because it_ is_?
36516Has she not every advantage the position could give her, and her liberty into the bargain?
36516Have I not watched Albert''s mother?
36516Have you no engagements?"
36516Have you not enough of real misfortune without subjecting yourself to imaginary terrors?"
36516He shook his head, and replied:"Oh, my lord, how have I deserved such kindness?
36516He whispered,"Meg, for Christ''s sake do n''t unman me; thou''lt not deny my last request?"
36516How can I hate one so generous and good?
36516How can I marry you when my heart is given to another?"
36516How can an enlightened mind like yours persuade itself that events happen by aught save the will of God?"
36516How could a prudent man who had given hostages to fortune, which Moore by this time had, in a wife and children, act otherwise?
36516I hope he is looking well?"
36516I rise, move the lamp, and say,"Do you see it now?"
36516I shall be with you early, for I suppose you will go in the morning?"
36516I suppose my half- brother will let you come?"
36516I tell you I have met a relation of theirs-- a nephew of-- of--""Of Richard Avenel''s?"
36516If this is not a good French story, we should like to know what it is?
36516In order to interest him, however, I said to him:"Do you love pies?"
36516Is Hymen''s balance- sheet compiled, A bankrupt''s stock of damaged hearts?
36516Is Memory''s schedule coldly filed, On one of Cupid''s broken darts?
36516Is good Kyward the Hare dead?
36516Is it clear that she will love you?
36516Is it not like the inspiration to the muse?
36516Is there the sign of foreign gold in this tasteful furniture and the splendor of these hangings?
36516Is there to be no end to these interminable battles?"
36516Is this a reverse of fortune, I ask you?"
36516Is this his journey to Rome and to the Holy Land?
36516Jude''?"
36516LORD LANSMERE.--"How?"
36516Light and Air, then, being two good things, what happens when they come together?
36516M. Delisle, will you give me your daughter''s hand?
36516My dear father?
36516Not seen my Harry?
36516Now, what do''mince''and''pie''spell?"
36516Now, what does''la''and''dy''spell?"
36516Now, who was the FATHER of Shem, Ham, and Japheth?"
36516Now, who was the father of_ Noah''s_ three sons?"
36516Now, why is the sky blue?
36516O forgive me, Geraldine, if I say too much; but is it possible that you do not hate me?"
36516O my dread Lord, what is he, or who can tender you a better affection, thus to lose himself to save you?"
36516Oh, could your mother''s name have been Avenel?"
36516Oh, where is then Bellin the Ram, or what did he bring to your Majesty at his return?
36516Or are they yet infatuated with that old folly of building a tower, whose top should reach unto heaven?
36516Or passed is Love''s Insolvent Court?
36516Patteson, shuddering, yet grinning, cries under his breath,"Managed I not well, mistress?
36516Presently he asked, in a loud tone,"What does this mean?
36516Recall all the unhappy marriages that have come to your knowledge-- pray, have not eighteen out of twenty been marriages for love?
36516Reynard said,"Truly my store is small; the best I have is a honey- comb, pleasant and sweet; what think you of it?"
36516Rich?"
36516SQUIRE.--"Eh?"
36516Shall we not give him his poor meals and his pallet- bed?
36516Spirit and water combined, says the toper, are two good things spoiled; and how do light and air mix?
36516Still what else to love is there left to me?"
36516Still, are they not a little prejudiced?"
36516Suppose I am de cooper, what you call, and I make de big tub to hold de wine?
36516Suppose I make de round wheel of de coach?
36516Talk-- and what about?
36516The EARL( puzzled).--"Eh-- did we?
36516The first of our race is ever the one we are most proud of; and pray what ancestors had he?
36516The ground had already been freshly manured by sea- weeds, but the village-- where was it?
36516The stern, proud man said,"Then, why, in the name of Heaven, do you not reveal some other remedy?
36516Then quoth Grimbard the Badger, Reynard''s nephew:"It is a common proverb,_ Malice never spake well_: what can you say against my kinsman the fox?
36516Then rose the Panther:"Do you imagine, Tibert,"quoth he,"that Reynard ought not to be complained of?
36516Then said the fox,"My sovereign Lord the King, what say you now to my relation; am I worthy your belief or no?"
36516Then spake Reynard to the King, and said,"Alas, my sovereign Lord, what is that you have said?
36516Then spake the King;"Sir Grimbard, hear you this of your uncle the recluse?
36516Then the fox said,"Know you not where Crekinpit floweth?"
36516There was an expression of almost fear in his face, as, with his hand to his cap, he asked,"What were my orders?"
36516This constant reflection of the blue ray causes the whole air to appear blue; but what else does it cause?
36516This is one offer, what say you to it?"
36516To what end these questions?
36516To whom, then, could Egerton mean to devise his fortune?
36516Was there no place to vent your nonsense in, but in this room, and at prayers?"
36516Was''t less feeling, or more strength of body, enabled me to bide at the Tower wharf with Dancey?
36516Well, now, Monsieur Lajolais, where does all this bring us to?"
36516Well-- in this country-- who should plume himself on birth?"
36516What care we for your English gray clouds without?
36516What could I say?
36516What do you say, Catherine?"
36516What has the Russian, the Dutch or the Hanseatic man, or the Esquimaux, been doing all this time?
36516What is the effect of this law?
36516What man looks out and says,''I will fall in love?''
36516What poet sits down and says,''I will write a poem?''
36516What say you to this course?"
36516What shall I do?"
36516What the devil!--(firing up)--am I a tyrant-- a bashaw-- that my own son is afraid to speak to me?
36516What to do?"
36516What was the cause?
36516What was your corps?"
36516What will be the commercial value of those animals?
36516What, during all this period, has been the real progress of humanity?
36516When I want to see how little those last influence the happiness of wise men, have I not Machiavel and Thucydides?
36516When the Queen heard that dangerous speech, she started, and said:"What dangers are these you speak of, Reynard?
36516When they were alone, she asked,"Father, what has happened?"
36516Where is the man who would not envy such a death?
36516Who can doubt the influence which the celestial bodies have on things terrestrial?"
36516Who has not heard of the Rocher de Cancale?
36516Who is the father of William, Joseph, and Henry Smith?"
36516Who would live on theire breath?
36516Whom-- Richard Avenel?"
36516Why do n''t you instruct Government?
36516Why do you not enlighten all Ireland?
36516Why is the sky blue?
36516Why, Frank is not expensive, and he will be very rich-- eh?"
36516Why?
36516Why?
36516Wicked pride, to what will you lead me?"
36516Will you not call on him while you are in town?"
36516Would you believe it?
36516Would you not take me for Pope?"
36516Yesternighte, he sayth to me half reproachfullie,"Am not I better unto thee than ten sons?"
36516Yet, how can she like me as she ought, if her heart is to be full of you?"
36516You certainly did not always serve in the ranks?"
36516You know Mr. Smith, do n''t you, that lives next to your house?"
36516You know, I hope, that you have good Hazeldean blood in your veins?"
36516You see I can not marry a dream; and where, out of dreams, shall I find this''whom?''"
36516You understand_ that_, do n''t you?"
36516Your name is Leonard Fairfield?"
36516Youth is youth-- what needs it more?"
36516_ Is this right?_ 6.
36516and will you grudge him his books?"
36516are these the fruits of his mail, his staff, and other ornaments becoming a devout pilgrim?
36516can you imagine he shall receive hurt in my house?
36516coulde you not lighte on the letter?"
36516cried Edouard, returning alone to fetch Geraldine, to whom he wanted to show the garden,"what is the meaning of this?"
36516do n''t I love you rather still?
36516exclaimed the delighted author,"have you got so far as that already?"
36516has monsieur fallen in with Paul?"
36516he exclaimed,"where is he?
36516he is not thinking of that, I trust?
36516is such baseness possible?"
36516not mistake gratitude for love?
36516rejoined Napoleon,"where did you get my secret?"
36516replied Johnson, with a lowering brow, and savage expression generally,"Scotland?
36516resumed he, still looking at my agitated face;"is it not as I have said-- monsieur is in the web of the Mouchards?"
36516said the priest, in a reproving tone;"do you attach any credit to this lying astrology?
36516then why did you refuse me?"
36516what ailed thee to refuse the oath?
36516what is to be done?"
36516where could she get that complaint?"
36516will her mother draw her again to nestle within her bosom, when she sees the dark stain upon her breast, once so pure and spotless?
36516would he think it so great a punishment to come home and live with his parents?"
36516yon''s Sir Walter, wi''Lockhart and his wife: and wha''s the wee body wi''the pawkie een?
38409A little girl whom I saw in the church- yard yonder, weeping very bitterly-- is she a relation of yours? 38409 A separation?"
38409Again, I ask you why you come here? 38409 Ah, my father, did I not say so?"
38409Ah, there he is; well, Monsieur Tiernay, do you think General Moreau''s people turned out better than that after the retreat from Donaueschingen?
38409Ah,_ can_ you wonder at noblemen and gentlemen laying out their twenty and thirty thousand a year on them?
38409Ah,_ que voulez vous_?
38409Am I not so still? 38409 And do you mean to say, that the men who gave that advice were serious, or capable of adopting it themselves?"
38409And have you any idea of leaving this country?
38409And it is not a very handsome city either, you say?
38409And now, Mr. Filbert, one delicate question-- What security is there against these horses being drugged, so that they may lose a race?
38409And so this London is really very vast?--VERY?
38409And the gurnet?
38409And why for his sake?
38409And why not, ma belle?
38409And why should we go abroad on that account?
38409And you have not secured a partner? 38409 And you will not tell me where that exile is, or if his daughter still lives?"
38409Are there many jockeys so young as Tommy?
38409Ay, and what?
38409Blame me for sympathizing with an early friend, whose life, like my own, had been blasted to the root? 38409 Blame me?"
38409But do you not think when Bonaparte crosses the Alps he will hasten to our relief?
38409But granted that it is as you say, how can that mend the business? 38409 But his little girl surely remembers the name that he did not finish?"
38409But how does mynheer find his way?
38409But there must be parts that are prettier than others? 38409 But what can you do in Lunnon-- such a big place, Lenny?"
38409But why do you thus put me on the rack? 38409 But why must we fail?"
38409But you have not taken your degree, I think? 38409 But, what is your life, Harley?--the saucer without the storm?"
38409By the way, is not this the regiment that boasts the pretty vivandiere? 38409 Can I have accommodation for the night?"
38409Did he always pay you for what he bought?
38409Do many of these boys become jockeys?
38409Do you drink tea?
38409Do you eat your prepared butter upon bread?
38409Do you not hear the roaring and crackling of the flames? 38409 Do you remember a boy by the name of Bonaparte,"inquired Napoleon,"who formerly attended this school?"
38409Does he mean to marry again?
38409Does one satisfy you?
38409Failed? 38409 For good?"
38409Forget them?
38409Go away-- why do you disturb me? 38409 Have I not occupation?
38409How do you cook it?
38409How do you know that, Lela? 38409 How do you manage?"
38409How do you prepare it?
38409How do_ you_ manage?
38409How long is it since I saw you?
38409How long? 38409 How should they be dressed?"
38409I suppose you often have an omelet?
38409If there be such a deity as Pele, is she worthy of your adoration? 38409 In the next room?
38409In what manner?
38409Is he not cool to talk thus to a general at the head of his staff?
38409Is it over?
38409Is this an inference of your own, drawn from your knowledge of his character, or has he confided his intentions to you?
38409Is this the reason why Mr. Egerton so insultingly warns me against counting on his fortune?
38409Is your redemption, by the strength of your own efforts, so sure, then? 38409 Let''s see, Tommy; what stakes did you win last?"
38409M. Folitton? 38409 Madame Folitton?"
38409Madame di Negra? 38409 Madame is very polite; she has no doubt been in France?"
38409My dear, do you mean still to say that you do n''t know where your husband spends his evenings?
38409Mynheer travels, then, for his own pleasure?
38409Neither could you collect from their conversation any thing which bore upon the number of the Austrian advance guard, or their state of preparation?
38409No brandy, Lela?
38409No relatives?
38409Not for a liberal present, Giorgio: not if I filled that leather pouch of yours with five- franc pieces, man?
38409O, I beg your pardon for not asking before,he says,"but-- how does Mrs. Filbert find herself?"
38409Our''esprit Tapageur,''eh?
38409Pray, Madame Miau, what is the use of that odd- looking iron stand?
38409Pray, what may be your name?
38409Shall we be as happy when we are_ great_?
38409Shall you?
38409So much?
38409Surely,I replied,"there are no thieves in this little village?"
38409Then the boys are never heavily bribed?
38409Then you would not have me call on him, sir? 38409 Then, why--?"
38409There, did you hear that?
38409To what is this intended to lead?
38409To- day is Friday: can you return on Monday? 38409 Traitor,"he cried,"would you persuade us to disown our gods, while we stand gazing on their terrible abode?
38409Well, Tommy, how are you, Tommy?
38409Well, have you ever seen the place?
38409Well-- But you will write to Mr. Dale, or to me? 38409 What do you mean?"
38409What do you mean?
38409What do you want?
38409What hast in the''tonnelet,''Lela?
38409What other Doctor?
38409What signifies that,was Napoleon''s characteristic remark,"if the burning was necessary to the object he had in view?
38409What''s that, sir?
38409What''s the matter? 38409 What?
38409When do the students find time to study?
38409Where is our pleasant friend, who talked to us of the Black Forest last night?
38409Which way-- which way is he gone?
38409Who are you?
38409Who is that very handsome woman?
38409Who is that young man who thus suddenly has gathered such a group around him?
38409Who?
38409Why did I advise the attack?
38409Why do I come here? 38409 Why do I follow you?
38409Why do you follow me thus?
38409Why do you think the poor woman came here?
38409Why have there been secrets between us? 38409 Why not pass the skirmishers out by the embrasures, to the left yonder?"
38409Why not?
38409Why should you? 38409 Why, if this be so, did your mother permit you to join the lawless desperadoes to whom you owe your present unhappy and degraded position?"
38409Why, what answer should I give, but that I knew you would spurn it?
38409Why?
38409Why?
38409Will Mr. Egerton pay the young gentleman''s debts? 38409 With whom should I sympathize-- the wronged, or the wrong- doer?"
38409Wrong? 38409 You ca n''t mean Mrs. Warner''s letter?"
38409You can not understand, eh? 38409 You have not told her?"
38409You think so?
38409You will not leave the room? 38409 (Can I pass the night here?")
38409... Last night, after seeking unto this saint and that, methought"why not applie unto y^e fountain head?
38409After all, what does it come to?"
38409Am I not attending you every where?
38409And I said,''your little girl, sir?''
38409And Leonardo heart rushed to his lips, and he answered to the action, as he bent down and kissed her cheek,"Orphan, will you go with me?
38409And had her father no money with him?"
38409And have I not done so alreadie?
38409And if he had_ not_ discovered it, how could he, Jennings, get at the drawers to examine them?
38409And in what light should I deserve to be regarded if I accepted it?"
38409And the poor little girl seems to have no relations-- and where is she to go?
38409And this warning-- upon which we seem to put very different valuations-- is the result of your friendly interference?"
38409And what of the old one?
38409And what was the host to do with her?
38409And what would he say of her, if he could see her in heaven?
38409And what''s that?
38409And why not?
38409And why?
38409And you?
38409Are they gone?"
38409Are they not cruel gods, who even require human sacrifices?
38409Are we deceived?
38409As I jogged along, the cry of a child, the crowing of a cock, the bark of a dog, floated across the ocean of mist, but whence came they?
38409Astrà ¦ a looked at me, and asked me what I thought of it?
38409At last he said:"I shall take a longer journey to- morrow, Caleb-- much longer: let me see-- where did I say?
38409At last she asked me,''Who is at this moment the first woman in the world?''
38409BLANCHE.--"What is that legend?
38409Before long, however, one of them began again by asking,"What has mynheer to sell?"
38409Bless him?"
38409Born at the top of the social ladder, why should he put himself voluntarily at the last step, for the sake of climbing up again?
38409But he has left the questions unanswered: Will such a faith produce results on the generality of men-- will it_ stand_?
38409But he left some of the tiniest little balls you ever see, sir, to give the child; but, bless you, they did her no good-- how should they?"
38409But if I was not your mother after all, Lenny, and cost you all this-- oh, what would you say of me then?"
38409But was it love that you felt for her?
38409But what had become all this time of the vengeance of the dwarf?
38409But where were the poor Singalese villagers, their families, and their goods, amidst all this wreck?
38409But while we are talking of him, allow me to ask if your friend, Lord L''Estrange, is indeed still so bitter against that poor brother of mine?"
38409By Jove, Randal, how pleasant a thing is life in London?
38409Can we not be superior to Fate?
38409Can you not understand how a man whose life you have laid waste may haunt you with his curse?
38409Can your business be postponed, my child?"
38409Cloud say you?"
38409Cloud that you are forever with Marie Colonne?
38409Cloud?"
38409Could I-- the only light of his eyes-- the last flower left to gladden the winter of his life-- could I leave his old age desolate?"
38409Could he bear to witness it?
38409Could such beings have created that bright pure sky over our heads, or that glorious sun which sends light and heat to ripen our corn and our fruit?
38409Did I not tell you the story of Fortunio?
38409Did her father leave no directions, or was he in possession of his faculties?"
38409Did she comprehend_ them_?
38409Did you suppose he could escape me?
38409Do n''t you find it rather expensive in the Guards?
38409Do you go to Almack''s to- night?"
38409Do you mean to make this young man your heir?"
38409Does the proud man not err?
38409Does this look like a failure of friendship?
38409Each one laid down his spoon, and stared at me vigorously, and for some time my question--"Kan ik hier overnachten?"
38409Enviable man, have you ever loved?"
38409Every year does not some lad leave our village, and go and seek his fortune, taking with him but health and strong hands?
38409Filbert?"
38409Fly from this demon, who first tempted me, and who now wants to triumph over my ruin?"
38409For where is it that we can say London_ bursts_ on the sight?
38409For, after all, what good are academical honors but as the entrance to life?
38409HARLEY( recovering himself with an effort).--"Is it true kindness to bid him exchange manly independence, for the protection of an official patron?"
38409HARLEY( with great gravity).--"Do you believe in Mesmerism?"
38409Had I really won fame without knowing it?
38409Had he abandoned his great plan of revenge?
38409Had he thought better of it, and, finding that Astrà ¦ a was immovable, addressed himself to some more sensible pursuit than that of plaguing us?
38409Has not a mother a right to her child?"
38409Have I not enough to do in waiting upon you from place to place?"
38409Have we ever met before?"
38409Have we not proved it?
38409Have you not shaken them off like dust from your feet?
38409Have you told this youth plainly that he may look to you for influence, but not for wealth?"
38409Have you written to him?"
38409He escaped; and how did he escape?
38409He is on the stairs!--will you not give me your promise?
38409He listened yet more intently, and caught, soft and low, the words,"Father-- father-- do you hear me_ now_?"
38409He made no reply; and on her repeating the question, said angrily-- how should he know?
38409He watch over her?
38409How did you act, then?
38409How?
38409Hush, what''s that?
38409I ask you, in what light must he regard me who could presume to make such a proposition?
38409I exclaimed, as the momently- arrested blood again shot through my heart with reactive violence,"can this be true?"
38409I exclaimed,"surely you are joking-- a great stout fellow like you ca n''t be wanting bheek?"
38409I exclaimed,"what do you do here?
38409I inquired why he also did not fear the wrath of the formidable goddess?
38409I was somewhat surprised on asking,"_ Hoe veel betalen?_"( How much to pay?)
38409I was somewhat surprised on asking,"_ Hoe veel betalen?_"( How much to pay?)
38409I wonder if that makes me an Honorable too?
38409IS THERE ANY THING ELSE YOU HAVE TO SAY, BEFORE I GO?"
38409If a frail tendency, running across my being, has damaged me, what is to become of one whose name is Frailty?"
38409If you are a- going back, sir, would you kindly mention it?"
38409In the name of Heaven, what can have been the cause of your silence?"
38409Is a pick- pocket detected, a thimble- rigger caught, a policeman assaulted?
38409Is it not so?"
38409Is she not ever busy in works of mischief-- destroying the people, devastating our hills, and filling up our fruitful valleys with floods of lava?
38409Is that all?
38409Is that all?
38409Is that batter- pudding you have arranged for frying?"
38409Is that like a man of sense?
38409Is_ this_ a creature to make himself a crown of glory?
38409It was late; but what were hours to us?
38409It would be happier for you?"
38409Keep still, ca n''t you?"
38409LEONARD.--"To the perch, sir?"
38409Laryer Jones says we must pass her to Marybone parish, where her father lived last; and what''s to become of her then?
38409Lazare?"
38409Leslie?"
38409London is to us what the river is to the flowers-- very vast-- very strong;"and she added, after a pause,"very cruel?"
38409Must THEY bear the whole blame?
38409Must not a large portion of it accrue to the age in which they lived, and to that public opinion which they breathed like an atmosphere?
38409Napoleon affected anger, and said,"Yes, you were my writing- master, were you?
38409No fear of Pele; even were there any such, what could that cruel goddess do to one who trusted in Jesus?
38409On what common ground( unless it be a negative one, and that is worth nothing), can the evangelical party and the rationalists take their stand?
38409Revenge?
38409Save us, O Pele?"
38409Shall I find you one?
38409She did not understand its meaning, and went to Talleyrand, inquiring,"What does that mean, Monsieur,_ an old granny_, what does it mean?"
38409Soon I founde him, sitting in a muse; and said,"Will, deare Will?"
38409Staying in town, Randal?"
38409Surelie, this hath some truth if we spirituallize it?
38409The heart of the town, or the suburbs?
38409The old man looked toward her wistfully, and then, as if interpreting her thoughts, asked the somnambule,"Can you read the contents of the billet?"
38409The other things I have got; and you, I suppose, will let me have the drawers for-- say a pound profit on your bargain?"
38409Then releasing herself from me, she grasped my arm, and looking earnestly into my face, she demanded,"And what answer did you give to this proposal?"
38409Then, as to shape and symmetry, is there any thing like them?"
38409There can be no particular objection to that; but she lives further on at Weston, does she not?"
38409They have come up from Ronco, then?"
38409This conflict made her temper unequal and sometimes unreasonable; but in such a situation, what else could be expected?
38409This was all very well so far as the lady herself was concerned; but how could we answer for the view her husband might take of the matter?
38409Time enough for that-- eh?
38409Toleho eagerly inquired if any misfortune had occurred?
38409Was her father ill?
38409Well, and what said Frank?"
38409Well, why not?"
38409What am I?
38409What are the builders of the Pyramids to them?
38409What brings me here?
38409What brings me here?
38409What could public life give to one who needs nothing?
38409What coulde I doe, even in my dreame, but fall at his feet?
38409What coulde I doe, waking, but the same?
38409What day will you fix?"
38409What did she there?
38409What did the writers of the"Arabian Nights"imagine equal to their more magical achievements?
38409What do you imagine I can possibly have to fear from him?"
38409What do you think of that pretty girl in pink?"
38409What do you think of your counsel now?"
38409What do you want?
38409What does he say?
38409What does mynheer do then?"
38409What has alarmed you?"
38409What has all this to do with the matter that has brought us together?"
38409What have I to live for?
38409What have we to fear?
38409What is it you want?"
38409What is it?
38409What is the new one?"
38409What matters it that Fate would seem to demand our eternal separation?
38409What should I do else?"
38409What should you have thought of my friendship if I had done that?
38409What would Moreau''s fellows say of us?
38409What would the Army of the Meuse think?
38409What would you have me do?"
38409What would_ then_ have been thought of the"making of many books,"of which"there is no end"in these our days?
38409What young man could come into life with brighter auspices?
38409What''s that?
38409What''s that?
38409What''s the matter?
38409What''s the matter?
38409What''s the matter?
38409What''s the use of a hundred- pound note to a child of ten or twelve years old?
38409What''s this her name is?"
38409What, we ask, would philosophy do for him?
38409When does he come?"
38409When he acts, is he never tempted by pleasures?
38409When he lives, is he free from pain?
38409When he reasons, is he never stopped by difficulties?
38409Where are the holiday roses now-- the exulting lover-- the secret blisses?"
38409Where are the traces of it now?
38409Where shall I find a model?
38409Where?
38409Where?
38409Who are you?
38409Who can imagine the visions which in those hours arose before the expanding energies of that wonderful mind?
38409Who could Lela be?
38409Who is?
38409Who knoweth at sunrise what will chance before sunsett?
38409Who knows the Chiavari road?"
38409Who says so?
38409Why did he do it?
38409Why did you leave to me the pain of carrying home such ill news?"
38409Why did you not communicate this to Astrà ¦ a yourself?
38409Why did you not forsake him, and trust to my generosity?
38409Why do you not die?
38409Why do you talk of suffering?
38409Why have we sought to conceal any thing from each other?
38409Why should I dwell any longer on these painful events?
38409Why, indeed, should I have borne him any ill- will?"
38409Why?
38409Why?
38409You call yourself his wife?
38409You do n''t say so?
38409You know him?"
38409You know the Chiavari road-- what is''t like?"
38409You say there are parks; why should not we lodge near them, and look upon the green trees?"
38409You were then, Forrester, the friend of both?"
38409You will give me a chance for mother''s sake, wo n''t you?"
38409You''ve been dreaming, have n''t you, Rachel?''
38409[ 13] Every man''s brain must be a world in itself, eh?
38409[ Illustration:_ First Old Foozle._--"WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE THE PAPER, SIR?
38409_ Gentleman._--"THERE, LOVE; DO YOU SEE THAT STEAMER?"
38409_ Guest_--"IS THAT YOUR NOTION OF SOMETHING AMUSING?"]
38409_ His_ vengeance?
38409_ Mother._--"AND-- PRAY, DOCTOR, WHAT ARE YOUR TERMS FOR HEDUCATING LITTLE BOYS?"
38409_ Second Old Foozle._--"THEN WHAT THE DEUCE DID YOU KEEP IT SO LONG FOR?"]
38409am I awake, or dreaming still?
38409and did my comrades indeed speak of me with honor?
38409and there lay the lonely dead-- who could dare to say in unconsecrated ground?
38409and what were these reports about me?
38409and who was her father?
38409are you intimately acquainted with this stream, sir?"
38409but when the whitecoats manoeuvre, they write to Vienna to ask,''What''s to be done next?''"
38409cried the general,"are you here again?"
38409cries y^e Duke, as they walk home together,"my Lord Chancellor playing the parish clerk?
38409do n''t you think they bite?
38409do you not really hear me?
38409does he not die?
38409does he not suffer?
38409exclaimed the lad with a renewed burst of passionate grief;"and surely you would not kill_ her_?"
38409exclaimed the old man, as if just awakened to full presence of mind;"you wish to see her?
38409he echoed, and his face grew ghastly pale; but, forcibly controlling his agitation, he went on, in a low voice:"Have you not forgotten them already?
38409he is not here?"
38409said I;"is it over?"
38409said he;"surely the child must have some kinsfolk in London?
38409said her friend,"that''ere''s the move, is it?
38409the 22d, are they?
38409to mock at his fellows, sprung from the dust to which they must alike return?
38409to see her miserable?
38409what have I done that this bitterness should come upon me?"
38409when he dies can he escape the common grave?
38409where shall we look for her equal?
41629''What will you be pleased to have, sir?'' 41629 A nonentity, sir?"
41629Ah, mother,said Leonard, sadly,"it is a long tale; you have heard the beginning, who can guess the end?"
41629Ah,said Mr. Kerber, when his wife had finished her statement;"he threatened to drown himself, then?
41629And Mr. Jellyby, sir?
41629And do n''t_ you_ know, my love?
41629And now, tell me the cause of your melancholy face?
41629And now,said Harley, rising, and with his candid winning smile,"do you think we shall ever be friends?"
41629And shall the haughty infidel Pollute this sacred land?
41629And the money-- the extra two hundred and odd pounds required-- how has that been obtained?
41629And what are you crying for?
41629And what avails it?
41629And what, my dear Las Casas,Napoleon replied,"is more overbearing than weakness which feels itself protected by strength?
41629And when shall I see you again?
41629And why can I not return in any way your devoted attachment, my poor Margaret?
41629And why have you left your home in----shire? 41629 And you do n''t know the lady''s friends or address?"
41629Are you serious?
41629Are you sure?
41629Ay, truly: does that surprise you, Thornton?
41629But how am I to ascertain the value of the jewel? 41629 But in that case what is to become of us?"
41629But knows a quantity, I suppose? 41629 But the lady, Mr. Capel, whom we saw you conversing with not long since in the Park; one Marie-- Marie, something?"
41629But what is the jewel worth?
41629But when one has gone, how can we get the snow- shoes back?
41629But, tell me, did you ever know_ any body_ walk upon it, eh?
41629Can any thing equal the evils of ruined health and a desolated hearth?
41629Can not I go with Miss Digby?
41629Did he? 41629 Did he?"
41629Dinner? 41629 Do n''t that look well, now?
41629Do n''t you know?
41629Do n''t you want to go there?
41629Do n''t you?
41629Do n''t you?
41629Do we know Capel, Marie?
41629Do you dare to insinuate cowardice against me?
41629Do you know my-- guardian, Mr. Jarndyce, ma''am?
41629Do you know, scoundrel, that this is the Vatteville-- the prince of rubies?--the most splendid, the rarest of gems? 41629 Do you think the Austrian government would suffer your estates to pass to this English jackanapes, a clerk in a public office?
41629Do you wish to sell it?
41629Do you, really,said Napoleon, to Gohier, in this interview,"advocate a general peace?
41629Does it give me back my husband, my brave boys, my beautiful girl? 41629 Ellen,"said he,"is that you?"
41629For him-- for whom? 41629 Gentlemen,"said he,"will you help me save the Republic?"
41629Going before the Chancellor?
41629Going to have a son,repeated Harley, looking very bewildered;"how do you know it is to be a son?"
41629Have you got it?
41629Have you nearly concluded your argument?
41629He took my child- angel from me,said Leonard, with visible emotion;"and if she had not returned, where and what should I be now?
41629How came you to be here?
41629How came_ you_ to be here, is the question, I think?
41629How can I get it?
41629How much do you ask for it?
41629Hugh,said she,"are you here?"
41629I have sworn,said she,"never to part with it; yet what can I do?
41629In what money did you pay the two hundred pounds for which you received the acceptance?
41629Indeed, ma''am?
41629Is Beechnut coming to our house this evening?
41629Is it what you people call law hand?
41629Is it you? 41629 Is there no hope, doctor?"
41629It is,emphatically responded the young nobleman;"but what have you to do with it?
41629La, my love,said the good Jemima,"that is not like you; you are not envious of her, poor girl?"
41629Lefebvre,said he,"will you, one of the pillars of the Republic, suffer it to perish in the hands of these_ lawyers_?
41629Lie, do I? 41629 Like him?"
41629Look,_ now_; do n''t you see the color of the shilling there? 41629 May I ask you a question?"
41629May I come in?
41629Me, sir?
41629Miss Ada Clare?
41629Miss Summerson is not related to any party in the cause, I think?
41629Mr. Jarndyce of Bleak House is not married?
41629Nay, that can not be true, or why is it so popular?
41629Nay,she said,"your son and I are such old friends, how could you stand on ceremony with me?"
41629No,said Annie,"you must not go, for then what shall I do with my cart?"
41629Nor who recommended her to your wife?
41629Not of Jarndyce and Jarndyce?
41629Not of one of the greatest Chancery suits known? 41629 Now, what does our young friend say?"
41629Obtained them-- where I obtained them?
41629Of whom?
41629Of----, did you say, ma''am?
41629Oh, Swindon, how can you say so?
41629Oh, why can I not help you, dear mistress?
41629Pardon me a rude question; but what do you know of the world?
41629Perhaps you came with him from Italy?
41629Pressed it? 41629 Pressed upon you!--I?
41629Probably Lady Jane Horton?
41629Several members of the bar are still to be heard, I believe?
41629Shall I read aloud?
41629She is above me now and evermore?
41629Then what made you look so angry, my dear fellow? 41629 Then, of course, you will have no objection to accompany us to your uncle, Mr. Woolridge, of Tottenham?"
41629There,said Griff,"was not that well done?"
41629Unfortunate?
41629Unhappy? 41629 Upon our glorious crescent Shall the Spaniard set his heel?
41629Upon what grave errand has monsieur deigned to favor me with a visit at this unaccustomed hour?
41629Wait a minute till I hide the tools again?
41629Was there an explosion?
41629Well,said Rodolphus,"shall we do it?"
41629Well,said his mother,"what then?"
41629What do you say?
41629What do you want, Rolfy?
41629What is it?
41629What means this folly?
41629What was L''Estrange saying to you?
41629What would become of you if smoking were put down by Act of Parliament?
41629What young man?
41629What?
41629What?
41629When? 41629 Where did you get that money?"
41629Where, in the loftiest houses of Europe, find a husband worthy of such a prize?
41629Where, sir?
41629Where,he indignantly exclaimed,"is that beautiful France which I left you so brilliant?
41629Where? 41629 Why did not father come with you?"
41629Why impossible, fair skeptic?
41629Why should this young man have so sounded me as to Violante''s chance of losing a fortune if she married an Englishman?
41629Why the mischief could n''t he take them somewhere else?
41629Why, Antonio, is it you?
41629Why? 41629 Why?"
41629Will you take me there?
41629Will you tell us, then, if you please, where you obtained the notes in which you made those payments?
41629With the Constitution which is crumbling to pieces?
41629With what will you save it?
41629You are his ward-- Lord L''Estrange''s?
41629You do not know that I am going into a convent?
41629You have not seen Marie Deschamps lately, I believe?
41629You see this jewel?
41629You want a description of my cousin, Jarndyce?
41629You would like some hot water, would n''t you?
41629You?
41629Young Mr. Richard Carstone is present?
41629''Well,''said the bishop,''I have been accustomed to do this, and I can do it very well; therefore, why should you do it?
41629--"Five or six?"
41629--"Two or three?"
41629----.--"So, your Name is Charley, is it?
41629----.--"Well, who am I?"
41629After all, if laughter be genuine, and consequently a means of innocent enjoyment,_ can_ it be inept?
41629Ah, do you suppose that, all the while I have been conversing with you, I have not noticed the watchful gaze of Mr. Randal Leslie?
41629Ai n''t she?"
41629Am I a simpleton now?"
41629And is there not one lingering hope?
41629And now what think you of Helen Digby?
41629And now, what do you say to this history of mine?
41629And talking of that, shall I present you to my Jemima?"
41629And this word"brother,"once so precious and so dear, why did he shrink from it now?--why could he not too say the sweet word"sister?"
41629And was all this the effect of chance?
41629And what do you suppose it''s made of?
41629And where do we go next, Miss Summerson?"
41629And why not come yourself?"
41629And yet how many might I not have been guilty of?
41629And yet, is there not here something more than simile?
41629Are you ashamed to retract?
41629Are you better now?"
41629Are you ill?"
41629Bertram?"
41629Burley?"
41629But do n''t you think Leonard and Miss Digby seem born for each other?
41629But do you know any of her relations or friends?
41629But how often has he been heard to restrain the violent and less reserved expressions of those about him?"
41629But upon what did we rest the creations of our genius?
41629But who made all those worlds, beaming so gloriously above us?
41629But why did my picture fail?
41629But why would you be friends with me?"
41629But why?
41629But you will not leave me any more?
41629But you would know the author of this book?
41629Call you this dying?
41629Can Heaven no aid reveal?
41629Can dance, and play music, and sing?
41629Can the first disappointment of a strong heart rank with the terrible desolation of a wrecked old age?
41629Can they understand or explain even their own characters?
41629Can you not understand that I wish for one minute to think you are at home again under this roof?"
41629Can you suggest any mode of tracing this packet, if it came to her hands?"
41629Can you tell me that?"
41629Can you understand, now, the valuelessness of my riches, and how desolate my splendid house must seem to me?
41629Capel?"
41629Could it be sorrow at my departure?
41629Did you ever learn who that stranger was who, under God, saved your life?"
41629Do we not march with the opinion of the nation, and by its strength alone?
41629Do you know of any generous and clever artist, doctor?
41629Do you know, Miss Summerson, I almost wonder that_ you_ never turned your thoughts to Africa?"
41629Do you like him?"
41629Do you think he wears a_ toupet_?
41629Do you want any thing better than that?
41629Do you?
41629Does it exist still?
41629Does it give rest to this weary heart, or relief to this aching head?
41629Does it soothe my mind or heal my body?
41629Few of them have any aptitude for any other calling, and even if they had, what chance have they, in this overstocked world, of finding vacant places?
41629Four of them-- four fifties-- I have had by me for some time; and-- and--""The two one- hundred pound notes-- how about them?"
41629Guppy?"
41629HARLEY.--"Why, my dear Helen?"
41629HARLEY.--"You puzzle me: what can they be?"
41629HELEN( archly).--"Are you as absent as ever?"
41629Harley conversed with Helen.--"You are not sorry that Violante is coming to us?
41629Has Mr. Tulkinghorn any idea of this himself?
41629Have you just arrived?
41629He laid his hand kindly on Egerton''s shoulder--"Before I speak of my business, tell me how you are-- better?"
41629He professes to like you, I suppose?"
41629Here, from this very rock, on viewing the present disorders in France, who would not be tempted to say that I still reign there?
41629Hospitals and schools?
41629How can Fancy have free play when the Fate- like shears of the_ Censure_ or the mace of the new press- law are suspended over its head?
41629How can I be mistaken?"
41629How could I have favored equally sects so opposed to one another, if I had joined any one of them?
41629How could Napoleon venture, single- handed, to beard this terrible lion in his den?
41629How could he hope to escape them?
41629How did I lose her?
41629How does your honorable worship do?"
41629How is that possible?"
41629I ask you, was it not he that invented them?"
41629I believed in her guilt-- and what could now avail her remorse, if remorse she felt?
41629I broke out sobbing and crying, and I said,"O, dear godmother, tell me, pray do tell me, did mamma die on my birthday?"
41629I felt very ignorant, but what could I do?
41629I hope you are quite well, sir?
41629I know you now, and spit at both you and your promises?
41629I owe so much to him: Would you mind describing him to me?"
41629I shall confer estates on both-- which is not being troublesome, I trust?
41629I tell you, I can not fully realize the idea of poverty; and you think this must make me happy, perhaps?"
41629If I wished to know the retreat of Dr. Riccabocca, in order to render him a great service, would you confide to me that secret?"
41629In order to rest and enjoy, what will content you?"
41629Into whose hands would it have fallen?
41629Is a new dress, a new custom, a new singer, a new dancer, a new form of jewelry, a new dwarf or giant, a new chapel, a new any thing, to be set up?
41629Is it Rodolphus Linn?"
41629Is it from the cruelty natural to the female disposition?"
41629Is it not living rather?
41629Is it possible, thought he as he spoke, that a Randal Leslie could have charmed this grand creature?
41629Is it you who ask if I am a coward?"
41629Is it, thought I, the shadow of a sinister catastrophe that already projects over and awes, appalls him?
41629Is not the communication from soul to soul literally, as well as figuratively_ tele- graphic_, that is,_ far- writing_, or_ writing from afar_?
41629Is not this true, my lord?"
41629Is she the lady I passed a fortnight since, when with him in the Park?"
41629Is the home too mean?"
41629It said,"What the de- vil are you crying for?"
41629It was grandly historical in subject, original in treatment, pure in coloring; what, then, was wanting?
41629Just you go to her and see how nicely she''ll curtshy, how pretty she''ll smile, and how lady- like she''ll say,"''How do you do, sir?
41629LEONARD( evading the word that implied so forbidden an affinity).--"Helen, will you grant me a favor?
41629Look at her hair-- ain''t it neat?
41629Many voices here and there, began to inquire"Where is Bonaparte, the conqueror of Italy, the conqueror of Egypt?
41629May I?"
41629Mrs.----; why do you ask?"
41629My Lady, changing her position, sees the papers on the table-- looks at them nearer-- looks at them nearer still-- asks impulsively:"Who copied that?"
41629Not of Jarndyce and Jarndyce-- the-- a-- in itself a monument of Chancery practice?
41629Now, Charley does n''t know who I am?"
41629Otherwise, how will the narrative illustrate the theory?
41629Ought not the Chevalier WYKOFF to have been a Frenchman?
41629Perhaps you will open the door for me?
41629Peschiera has the property?"
41629Pressed, what?"
41629She can talk French, I suppose, and do geography, and globes, and needlework, and every thing?"
41629She had half a mind to reply,"Is that so strange?"
41629She seemed almost to read my thoughts as her eyes rested on my melancholy face; and saying abruptly:"I fear you are unhappy, young man?"
41629She took a book from the table as she spoke:"Have you seen this work?"
41629Should I not have to listen to regrets, and hopes, and fears that would prick sharp through my thin cloak of philosophy?
41629Sir Leicester dozes, starts up suddenly, and cries,"Eh?
41629Sir?"
41629Sometimes those praises seem to ask ironically,"And what right hast thou to hope because thou lovest?
41629Soon after her marriage, her mother inquired,''How does your husband treat you, my dear?''
41629That, unmatched villain that you are, is false, too, perhaps?"
41629The widow saw the smile, and catching Leonard by the arm, whispered,"But, where before have you seen that pretty young lady?
41629The young and pretty, but very pale mother said,"Since I have come into this room I have never been well, and this I know-- I shall not live long?"
41629Then that young man spoke truly?"
41629This is about a London particular_ now_, ai n''t it, miss?"
41629This, then, accounts for the different gaps-- some of them extending fifty or sixty yards-- in the plantations and groves?
41629Tulkinghorn?"
41629Tulkinghorn?"
41629VIOLANTE( turning to Helen, and in a very low voice, resolved that Harley should not hear this time).--"We can guess why-- can we not?"
41629Was Lord L''Estrange really enamored of the Marchesa?
41629Was there no lady well acquainted with Italian, and with whom, perhaps, for that very reason, your wife become familiar?"
41629Was this_ finesse_ compatible with Randal''s notions of Harley''s character?
41629We inquire what degree of heat they may be in at the present moment?
41629Well, my little friend, what do you wish to say to me?"
41629What are the advertisements on behalf of our own hospitals?
41629What are your sorrows compared with mine?"
41629What concealed skeleton can there be in this house to frighten away one grace of existence?
41629What could the mob do, with Murat, Lannes, and Serrurier, guided by the energies of Napoleon, ready to hurl their solid columns upon them?
41629What did I do to her?
41629What is to become of my wealth--?"
41629What is to become of them?
41629What of their helpless wives and families?
41629What on earth could_ he_ want there-- or with Travers?
41629What was the history of our own country for that day?
41629What will Jemima say?"
41629What_ romance_ writer can be named with HAWTHORNE?
41629When the whole world lies untried before you, and you still live in the golden atmosphere of hope, can you pamper yourself with sentimental sorrows?
41629Whence I came, whither I was going-- what matters it?
41629Where are the hundred thousand men, my companions in glory?
41629Where are you, Caddy?"
41629Where was the harm, honest wagoner?
41629Who has yet fathomed the mystery of human love?
41629Who is to have them when I die?
41629Who knows the horrors of the seas like HERMAN MELVILLE?"
41629Who was ever more ardently and deeply regretted?
41629Who was ever more popular and more beloved?
41629Why am I so different from other children, and why is it my fault, dear godmother?
41629Why ca n''t you speak?"
41629Why can I not tear her image from my heart?
41629Why did it not succeed?
41629Why do you ask?"
41629Why have you so carefully avoided that type in your Juliet and your Heloise?
41629Why is the farmer more excited by an election than by the sale of his wheat?
41629Why should I give you the ludicrous details of the explanation?
41629Why should not SILLIMAN or GUYOT address three thousand instead of three hundred hearers?
41629Why should pride prevent our requesting that this horror should cease?
41629Why should they not unswathe the world from its swaddling- clothes before an audience which would fill our largest halls?
41629Why, where the deuce do you spring from, eh?"
41629Will it then be said that the dominion of the East, and perhaps the subjugation of all Asia, were not worth a_ turban and a pair of trowsers_?
41629Will we not-- say so?"
41629Will you lay aside, for one minute, your shawl and bonnet?
41629Will you, then, have the goodness to give me a loan on this jewel?"
41629With hasty strides, like a chafed lion, he paced his tent, exclaiming,"Why do I love that woman so?
41629Would my wife''s life be safe?
41629Would you, sir, be kind enough to take it?
41629YOUNG REVOLVER.--"Then, Pa, does France turn on its own Axis when it makes its Revolutions?"
41629You can get the real key of it for us, Rodolphus, ca n''t you?"
41629You do not like this begging?
41629You know him?"
41629You know old M. Simon?
41629You remember the anecdote of the bride?
41629You will like to make some change, perhaps?
41629You will not be discomposed by the Lord Chancellor, I dare say?"
41629You''d like to find the nest that has such eggs as those in it, would n''t you?
41629Your wife knew her?"
41629[ Illustration: MASTER TOM--"Have a Weed, Gran''pa?"
41629_ Entendez- vouz?_ miserable agent of Pitt and Cobourg."
41629and why this new change of name?"
41629can you be surprised that I ask it?
41629changed to read"... the color of the shilling there?"
41629exclaimed Ellen;"is this you?"
41629exclaimed Lord Swindon, with a toss of the head;"that fellow, poor milksop?
41629know ye not what they portend?
41629my dear fellow, what is the matter?
41629said Ellen, more and more astonished;"did you undertake to come up in all this storm alone, with only Rodolphus?"
41629said Napoleon,"can I rely upon you?"
41629said her mother;"is it possible that this is you?"
41629that is the fair creature whom Leonard called his child- angel?
41629thrice in one day-- is this wound never to scar over?"
41629what are the collectors?
41629what are the dinners, the speeches, the charity sermons?
41629what do you say?"
41629what events deserving that name could have troubled the smooth waters of her life?
41629with youth and health, can you call yourself unfortunate?
50874Grumbling Sir, or counterfeit Lapland Lady, I admire thy impudence in calling thyself a Lady: Art thou a Lady and hast so much haire?... 50874 Our man in the moon drinks Clarret, With powder- beef, turnep, and carret; If he doth so, why should not you Drink until the sky looks blew?"
50874Why Sir, is this such a piece of study? 50874 ''Tis certain her own hayr, who would have thought it? 50874 ''Tis true was wear him_ Shirkin Frieze_, But what is that? 50874 ( 1650?) 50874 18 Jan. 1656(? 50874 39] cross Humours we will not allow, Sir, out of the King''s own Dominion, pray, what can you say to me now? 50874 A Crow? 50874 A Lyon? 50874 A Man being ask''d whether his friend_ Tom_, that was lately dead, had left him any Legacy? 50874 A Minister going to one of his Parishioners he asked her, who made her? 50874 A Scholar coming home from_ Cambridge_ to his Father, his Father askt him what he had learnt? 50874 A Shoomaker thought to mock a Collier being black, saying, What news from Hell? 50874 A Thiefe came fast, and loose my Bible found: Was''t bound and loose at once? 50874 A Tradesman that would never work by Candle light, was asked the reason why? 50874 A certain Knave asking a virtuous Gentlewoman, jearingly,_ What was honesty?_ she answered,_ What''s that to you? 50874 A certain Knave asking a virtuous Gentlewoman, jearingly,_ What was honesty?_ she answered,_ What''s that to you? 50874 A deaf Man was selling Pears at the Towns end in_ S^t Gileses_, and a Gentleman riding out o''th''Town, askt him what''twas a Clock? 50874 A delightfull Discourse, by George Baron No- Body_ Why do''st thou father all thy Lies On me? 50874 A fat man riding upon a lean horse, was ask''d, Why he was so fat, and the horse so lean? 50874 A lye, quoth the Justice, you saucy knave, dost thou give me the lye? 50874 A mad young Gallant, having rid as he feared, out of his way, overtook a blunt Country fellow, and asked him, which was the way to_ Salesbury_? 50874 A man excused y^e beating of his wife, because she was his owne flesh, saying, may I not beat mine owne flesh? 50874 A man shall come to doe such Dunces good, And can not have his meaning understood? 50874 A melting Sermon being preached in a Country Church, all fell a weeping, except a Country man, who being ask''d why he did not weep with the rest? 50874 A silly old fellow meeting his God son, ask''d whither he was going? 50874 About six months after, this Gentleman was riding that way with his Man, and as they rode, says his Master, Do n''t you see something move yonder? 50874 Alas, said the first, what is foure mile an houre amongst us all? 50874 And call''d the drawer for to shew a room, The drawer did, and what room think ye was''t? 50874 And is not here two, said_ Jacke_? 50874 And on a time he needs would of him know, What was the cause his pulse did go so slow? 50874 And so went his way, and left them: then to the Swan he went, to the good man of the house, and asked if he would buy two loades of Hay? 50874 And this, says the Gentleman, you''ll avouch for Law? 50874 And what at the fourth? 50874 And when he came to them the old man requested him to tel them what beasts those were? 50874 And why so? 50874 Ar''t asleepe Husband? 50874 Are you not sicke? 50874 Art thou sure of it? 50874 Asked his friend if he would find a hare? 50874 At last_ Scogin_ said, doth the fish play? 50874 At the last one of his fellows came and asked him what he sought for? 50874 Being sot at dinner, My host, quoth_ George_, how fals the Tyde out for London; not till the evening, quoth mine Hoste, have you any businesse, Sir? 50874 But at last this man did go, The Doctor''s skill to know, Saying, Sir, can you cure a Woman of the Dumb? 50874 But at the Lords Bar he was askt what he could say, that Judgment should not pass upon him? 50874 But how now Landlord? 50874 But whither shall wee bring them? 50874 By L. P.(?
50874By and by one went to_ Scogin_, and said, Sir, is it as it is spoken in the Church of you?
50874By my troth, said_ Scogin_, and I have but two shillings, and how much have you Master Parson?
50874Co. Wench._ Is it possible would_ Bumpkin_ be in love?
50874Co. Wench._ Will you not stay, my Love?
50874Death put a trick upon him, and what was''t?
50874Did I?
50874Did''st tell him, I was not running away?
50874Doctor, doe you heare?
50874Doe you prate, you Slave?
50874Dost think her Country knows not chalk from Cheese?
50874Faire dame( quoth she) why dost thou so?
50874For what cause?
50874For what?
50874Forty pounds( quoth the Gentleman) And what do they profit you?
50874From Sun to Sun are the set times of Pay, But you should have been up by break of Day: Yet if you had?
50874From thence I went to Westminster and for to see the Tombs, Ah, said I, what a house is here, with an infinite sight of Rooms?
50874Garden doore?
50874God Bless you and them both together._ Well, but, Neighbour,( says he) Do you think you can keep these Commandments?
50874Goe leade, sir Knave, quoth she and wherefore not goe ride?
50874Good Lord blesse me, said the Countryman, is shee so big growne in one yeere, what a greatnesse will shee bee by the time she comes to my age?
50874Got a woman with Child, But the Justice did take his part; Then she cry''d and did mumble, Sayes the Justice de''e grumble?
50874Had you but Kept the Watch well, I suppose,''Twas no hard thing to Know how the_ Day_ goes?
50874Hath any one angered you?
50874Have we not Hero''s still who are endu''d With Valor,( Stars of the first Magnitude?)
50874Have you a mind, Sir, to arrest the_ Day_?
50874Have you e''er a Watch you can show, Sir?
50874He answered, where, but in their beds?
50874He said Ten a Penny, Master: Then he askt him agen what''twas a Clock?
50874He thinking it had been a Serjeant which had thus shoulder clapt him, looking back, said,_ At whose Suit I pray you?_[ 105.]
50874Heere is a wond''rous Water for the Eye; This for the Stomacke: Maisters will you buy?
50874How can that be?
50874Hunt._ Canst thou sleep well?
50874Hunt._ Why, what''s the matter?
50874Hunt._ Why?
50874I am content qd the old man, by whom shall we be tryed?
50874I beseech your worship said the man, to pardon mee, for I was afraid: afraid of what?
50874I have liv''d among books, yet am never the better: I have eaten up the Muses, yet I know not a verse, What student is this, I pray you rehearse?
50874I pray thee( quoth she) how doth he doe?
50874I shall tell you, sir, said Jacke: Is not here one?
50874I thank you Sir, answered the Porter, Master_ Peele_, my Master is in the Hall, pleaseth it you to walke in?
50874I thank''d, took, gave my word; say then, Am I at all indebted to this man?
50874I will saies he:& comming to the Steward, Sir, saies_ Tarlton_, where shall our horses spend the time?
50874I wonder then, quoth he, what meaneth these?
50874I''le instruct thee: Cans''t thou be melancholly?
50874If Pride be a sin and a folly, why then Han''t we a far better Example from Men?
50874If you ask why borrowed Books seldom return to their Owners?
50874In the Roxburghe Ballads are three editions of this ballad, catalogued(?)
50874Is dat de Poke?
50874Is it just forty pound?
50874Is it so, said the fellow, a pox upon him, why did he not blow his horn?
50874Is not_ France_, and the Nation still the same, Whom_ England_ did in all Encounters tame?
50874Is''t not, honest_ Nab_?
50874Jack could not get foure herrings but three for his penny; and when he came home, Scogin said, how many herrings hast thou brought?
50874John gathers up all ye pieces: y^e D^r demanded why?
50874Me thought I met( sore discontent) some poore men on the way, I asked one whither he went, so fast, and could not stay?
50874My Lord, said the Survayor, I pray you what shall wee doe with the earth which we digge out of the said pit?
50874Neighbour( sayd he) I have a Sonne, And he doth use to climbe, Pray let me know the same for him Against another time?
50874No, Landlord, No; you now may truly say, And to your cost too, you have lost a Day, By twy- light_ Day_ is neither Day nor Night; What then?
50874Not I, so God helpe me, quoth the Barber, I pray Sir where is the Gentleman Master_ Peele_ that came along with me?
50874O God, O God saies the fellow, is my fault so great?
50874O Lord, replys he, what should be the reason of that?
50874O''my Conscience, if I should woo my heart out, I should never be the fatter for it.--Where''s your promise now?
50874Of mee?
50874One ask''t him what colour his Greyhounds were?
50874One asking a certain Person how his friend came off at the Sessions House?
50874One demanded of a wild yong Gentleman the reason why he would sel his land?
50874One meeting a mad Fellow that was drunk, ask''t him whither he was going?
50874One seeing another wear a Threadbare Cloak, asked him whether his Cloak was not sleepy, or no?
50874Paintings, and beauty spots for faces?
50874Poke, what is dat?
50874Pray Sir, says the Porter, what is that_ Fenester_?
50874Pray what Countryman Are you?
50874Put off your passion, pray; true,''tis a Summe: But do n''t you know that a Pay- day will come?
50874Quoth hee, had you it not againe?
50874Said his Wife did long, And what was it for but Mackrill?
50874Said_ Scogin_, what a lie is this?
50874Say you so, says the Scholar, I pray where is it?
50874Says his Friend, I fear That you have a Worm in your Head; Why de''e praise dead Beer?
50874Says one, why is thy Beard so brown, and thy head so white?
50874See p. 159._][ Music:_ Shall I lye beyond thee?
50874She had both tooth enough, and too much tongue: What should I now of toothlesse_ Scylla_ say?
50874She leaves uncovered still; what''s that?
50874Sir, tell me, and do not deceive me, where have you been playing your part?
50874Sirrah,( said the Justice) must I bid you bee gone so many times, and will you not goe?
50874So when he came before the Judge, he said to the Debter, Dost thou owe this Merchant so much money?
50874Some Gentlemen were sitting at a Coffee- house together, one was asking what News there was?
50874Sometimes when our Husbands are out of the way, Pray tell me what huffing young Gallants will stay, If that a fine Delicate Wife were not there?
50874That is not sufficient, What are you?
50874The Alderman said, When shall I have my money?
50874The Constable and Watch who were within the Gate hearing a bustle, called out, saying, Who goes there?
50874The Cowheard said, Sir, doe you see yonder Cow with the cut tail?
50874The Fellow immediately run after his Master, and ask''d him What he should say to the Gentleman if he should not come?
50874The Fool told him the same again: And what the third day?
50874The Gentleman being driven to a non plus, caught sudden hold of his sword and asked the Jew if hee would not attend till his beard was all shaved?
50874The Ladies above from a window, seeing horses in the Garden Alley call the Knight, who cries out to_ Tarlton_, Fellow, what meanest thou?
50874The Scripture saith there was a certaine man: A certaine man?
50874The jolly Farmer brisk and bold, as soon as he the Sword beheld, He cry''d what is there to be sold?
50874The mad fellow called him, and said, Gentleman, whether go you?
50874The next that came by was a tawny Moor, and the Devil bid him see, And he fleered on his tawny skin, crying, Friend, art thou any kin to me?
50874Then gesse the cause he thus to bed is drawne What?
50874Then said Scogin, what, wilt thou shame me?
50874Then the Ordinary will say,_ Es tu literatus?_ art thou learned?
50874Then the Ordinary will say,_ Es tu literatus?_ art thou learned?
50874Then they askt him how it possibly could be plaid on?
50874Then will he say,_ Quid petis?_ What thing doest thou aske?
50874Then will he say,_ Quid petis?_ What thing doest thou aske?
50874Then, said the Parson, How do you now, Master_ Scogin_?
50874Then_ Jacke_ did tell the first egge againe, saying, is not this the third?
50874Then_ Jacke_ prepared his fish to seeth them: then_ Scogin_ said,_ Jacke_ doth the fish play now?
50874Then_ Scogin_ asked his man how much money hee had in his purse?
50874Then_ Scogin_ came to the Priest, and said Master, here is the woman, will you dispatch her after Masse is done?
50874There goeth a bargain, said the Cowheard: what wilt thou give me?
50874There''s nothing there but holy- days, with musick out of measure; Who can forbear to speak the praise of such a land of pleasure?
50874Thirdly, he smells Intelligence, that''s better, And cheaper too, than_ Pym_ from his own Letter: Who''s doubly pay''d( Fortune or we the blinder?)
50874This caused his friends most strangely to admire, And some of them his reason did require?
50874This is the West, and this the South?
50874Thus away he goes with his Bargain home, but when he comes to look in the Poke, he see the Dog, O de diable,( said he) is dis de Pig?
50874To his friend t''other day, That his sow had lost her life; Sayes one Mr_ Howes_, Now you talk of Sowes, Pray, Neighbour, how does your wife?
50874We''ll come to the purpose, says he, and what the fifth day?
50874Well now, what is to bee done in this matter?
50874Well, quoth the Fryer, have you not a whetstone?
50874Well, says the Prince, and what the second day?
50874What Doctor in the world can offer more?
50874What Master?
50874What Sign, I prithee?
50874What Trade are you, Brewer or Baker?
50874What did I promise thee anything?
50874What do they cost you a yeare to keepe them?
50874What do you with all those Kites and Dogs?
50874What is it that goeth to the water, and leaveth its guts at home?
50874What is it then?
50874What is that goeth about the wood and can not get in?
50874What is that no man would have, and yet when he hath it, will not forgoe it?
50874What is that that hath his belly full of man''s meat and his mouth full of dirt?
50874What is that the more ye lay on, the faster it wasteth?
50874What is that which 20 will goe into a Tankard, and one will fill a Barn?
50874What is that, Gossip?
50874What is the matter?
50874What is the most profitable beast, and that men eat least on?
50874What is your reason for that?
50874What lacke you friend?
50874What man?
50874What saiest thou, knave, doest mocke me?
50874What shall I pay, quoth the In- keeper?
50874What wilt thou give me,( quoth he) if I do?
50874What work is that the faster ye work, longer is it ere ye have done, and the slower ye work the sooner ye make an end?
50874What''s that,( quoth the Priest?)
50874What, beast?
50874What, ca n''t you sleep, you do so long for_ Day_?
50874What, said he, do you mean to undo me by such extravagant Expenses?
50874When he came, his Master said all angerly, Thou knave, come give me my cloak: hast thou not served me well, to let me be thus wet?
50874When only TALBOT''S Name did bear such sway, To make Ten thousand French men run away?
50874When the Girle came up, he demanded the cause why she so lamented, and called upon her Father?
50874When the Ordinary heard him say so, he said_ Quomodo valet Magister tuus?_ How doth thy Master?
50874When the Ordinary heard him say so, he said_ Quomodo valet Magister tuus?_ How doth thy Master?
50874When_ France_ was drown''d with streams of Frenchmen''s blood, And English Valor could not be withstood?
50874Where can shee have more happines than there?
50874Wherefore keep you them?
50874Whereupon hee demanded whether they had ever a Garden?
50874Why do Ladies so affect slender wastes, said one?
50874Why do you ask?
50874Why thou Rogue, says he, did you not tell me it might be past over?
50874Why thou wilt not serve me so, I hope,( quoth the Lawyer) now I have used thee so kindly?
50874Why, Landlord, is the Quarter out I pray; That you Keep such a quarter for the Day?
50874Why, how now?
50874Why, knave, quoth he, didst thou not promise me to beare my charges to London?
50874Why, quoth the Deputy, hast thou no other defence but present death?
50874Why, quoth the other, how did shee ride I pray?
50874Why, said the woman, I can not tarry to reason of such matters, therefore I pray you to pay me my money, that I were gone: Wherefore?
50874Why, saith he, where did your great Grandfather, Grandfather and Father die?
50874Why, says one, how could it live and bloom as you say without some earth, or the Sun''s influence?
50874Why, thou Coxcombe, said the Cardinall, canst thou not dig the pit deepe enough, and bury all together?
50874Why?
50874Why?
50874Will hee not come?
50874Wilt thou?
50874YORKS Duke, Brave ALBEMARLE, equal to those Our Ancestors, who French men did oppose?
50874Yea but( quoth his Master) what if he do pay me?
50874Yea, said she, but what the devil will ye do therewith?
50874Yes, quoth the Inne keeper, where be they?
50874You Dunghill, quoth_ George_, doe you out face me?
50874You Rogue, quoth_ George_, have I not forewarned you of this?
50874You whorson Keeperly Rascall, quoth the fellow, dare you come any honest Gentleman in my Masters house?
50874[ Footnote 159: The date of this ballad in the Museum Catalogue is 1610(?).]
50874[ Footnote 163:?
50874[ Footnote 169:?
50874[ Footnote 205:?
50874[ Footnote 49: Is this legacy a gentle intimation to his son that he may hang himself?]
50874[ Footnote 50: Is this William Onley, who published from 1650 to 1702?]
50874[ Footnote 74:?
50874[ Footnote 93:?
50874[ Illustration] Your Words they are sawcy and evil, this may be a Charge to your Purse; For why?
50874_ 1 Hunt._ Canst thou not guess the reason of this trouble?
50874_ 1 Hunt._ With whom?
50874_ Acteon._ Fie, what mean you?
50874_ And I wish in Heaven his Soul may dwell That first devised the Leather Bottel._ Then what do you say to these Cans of Wood?
50874_ And I wish& c_ Then what do you say these black Pots three?
50874_ And a begging& c_ I fear no Plots against me, but live in open Cell; Why who woud be a King when a Beggar lives so well?
50874_ Bump._ Away you burrs, why do you stick so on me?
50874_ Bump._ Nimble?
50874_ Bump._ Then who shall have me whole?
50874_ Bump._ What''s that to you?
50874_ Bump._ What, to my hanging?
50874_ Corne_,_ Leather_,_ Partrich_,_ Pheasant_,_ Rags_,_ Gold twist_, Thou brought''st all to my_ Mill_, what was''t we mist?
50874_ Drugger._ Yes Sir,_ Sub._ A Seller of_ Tobacco_?
50874_ Englishman._ But_ Monsieur_, have you never heard report Of Poictiers, Crescy, and of Agen- court?
50874_ Englishman._''Tis true, in dancing you do us excel, But can you, as the English, fight as well?
50874_ Englishman.__ Monsieur_, good morn, whither away so faste?
50874_ Face._ Already, Sir, ha''you found it?
50874_ Face._ What, and so little Beard?
50874_ Face._ Which finger''s that?
50874_ Face._''Slid, Doctor, how canst thou know this so soone?
50874_ George_ thus saluted him, My honest Barber, quoth_ George_, welcome to London, I partly know your businesse, you come for your Lute, doe you not?
50874_ Jacke_ said, would you have one play without a fellow?
50874_ John._ Not I, o''my sincerity, mother; she long''d above three houres, ere she would let me know it; who was it_ Win_?
50874_ Maids, where are your hearts become?
50874_ Of Treason._ Treason doth never prosper; what''s the reason?
50874_ On Me?
50874_ On a Watch lost in a Tavern._ A Watch lost in a Tavern?
50874_ Pure._ I meane i''the_ Fayre_, if it can be any way made, or found lawfull; where is our brother_ Busy_?
50874_ Pure._ What shall we doe?
50874_ Quid petis?_ that is to say, what dost thou aske or desire?
50874_ Quid petis?_ that is to say, what dost thou aske or desire?
50874_ Scogin_ said to the Cowheard, what shall I give thee to tell mee, when I shall have raine or faire weather?
50874_ Sub._ Well, Your business_ Abel_?
50874_ Subtle._ What is your name, say you,_ Abel Drugger_?
50874_ Tarlton_, that had his Wife there, offered to throw her over- boord: but the company rescued her; and being asked wherefore he meant so to doe?
50874_ The Queen''s Speech._-- Gallants all of British bloud, Why do ye not saile on th''Ocean flood?
50874_ Then I wish& c_ Then what do you say to the Silver Flaggons fine?
50874_ What''s that?_ says his Master,_ Why Sir_, says he,_ I did eat it.__ Sirrah_, says he,_ I bid you heat it with an H_.
50874and she upon that excused y^e scratching of him, saying, May I not scratch mine own head?
50874another, What lacke you Countryman?
50874do I not see you at home?
50874for soap or butter) and a dredger,(?
50874he) they be sheep, do you not know sheep?
50874heaping Indignities On one that never injur''d thee?_ Some- Body_ My Words and Acts hurt_ No- Body.
50874how can that be?
50874how fares the Devil?
50874how now_ Win the fight_, Child: how do you?
50874is your Room with Rapiers fill''d?
50874may such a hap procure it?
50874my honest_ Abel_?
50874or do you a Waterman ply?
50874quoth the Justice, when didst thou see a Lyon?
50874quoth they, were you so_ drunk_?
50874said the Justice, why wast thou afraid of mee?
50874says she, An Ass spoke for an Angel, and wo n''t you speak under Twenty Shillings?
50874she, what wilt thou do with the door?
50874the other) will you make me a fool?
50874think you I know not Sheep from Swine?
50874think you so?
50874what''s the matter pray?
50874what-- are you mad?
50874where do you dwell?
50874where?
50874why, I pray?
50874without dissimulation, When dost thou home return again, and leave this English Nation?
30943''But,''said he,''what if death have overtaken her?'' 30943 ''Do you mane to insult me,''says the baron, getting mighty red, and throwing down the cards on the table,''Is that what you''re at?''
30943''How much?'' 30943 ''Meaning that you were parted forever?''
30943''Of what country?'' 30943 ''Then this vision torments thee?''
30943''Well,''asked her ladyship,''and what is my name?'' 30943 ''Ye will-- will ye?''
30943A man of your strength of mind, captain? 30943 Acknowledge?
30943And Napoleon?
30943And are dreams never realities?
30943And are his flowers more sacred than those of uncle Fesch?
30943And did he break his promise to the count, or did he really send him any intelligence?
30943And did you return to France?
30943And do n''t you call that unkind, Eliza?
30943And has Jane Fairfield, who married a common carpenter, brought him up to despise small shopkeepers?
30943And if he be not,whispered the other, in a voice which, although low, I could still detect,"why should_ we_, give him up?"
30943And if not a sailor, what am I, then?
30943And if you wished it, would you do it?
30943And so that fat, jolly looking Madame Dufour we saw in Paris, is the beautiful Coralie that bewitched Captain Smith?
30943And so,said he, at last, after a somewhat lengthy narrative of my shipwreck,"and so the Flemish sailors wear spurs?"
30943And what became of you after that?
30943And what can he be doing there?
30943And what do you conclude from that?
30943And what have you heard?
30943And who did take the fruit?
30943And who says I am a prisoner yet?
30943And why did you not then speak to me on the subject?
30943And why?
30943And yet you were afraid to take a pear?
30943And you are a French soldier, then?
30943And you are confident that you can depend upon the firmness of your resolution? 30943 And you trulie believe there was a signe in y''e heavens?"
30943And you, Napoleon?
30943Any relation to the Monsieur and Madame Dufour we saw some years ago in Paris?
30943Are we far from Letterkenny just now, sir?
30943Are you aware,inquired the former,"that the expense of the stamp,& c., is one hundred and twenty pounds?"
30943Are you coming, sir?
30943Are you mad?
30943Are you prepared to risk all other ties, obligations, and prospects, in the consummation of this one object? 30943 Arrah, did n''t ye then?
30943Arrah, what use would it be?
30943But I mean to marry him, Ruth: could you doubt it? 30943 But hast no feare,"quo''I,"of an overdose?"
30943But how can I, when I have not done wrong?
30943But the aristocracy did not sow this piece with rye, I suppose?
30943But to send a boy like that to the university-- where''s the money to come from?
30943But what is this?--Latin too?--Virgil?
30943But what,I asked,"has all this to do with the charming Coralie and your love- adventure?"
30943But why not try to display your really extraordinary strength and dexterity under more favorable circumstances? 30943 But, papa, wo n''t you let him have some cheese with his bread?"
30943By what right?
30943Can you explain what kind of happiness it is?
30943Change? 30943 Did you ever read White''s_ Natural History of Selborne?_""No."
30943Did you not produce this very result yourself? 30943 Did you see that, George?"
30943Do I understand you correctly?
30943Do n''t you beholde,cries he,"that enormous dragon flying through y''e sky?
30943Do you still think that they are hovering about the coast, Tom?
30943Do you think-- I mean from any thing you have yourself noticed-- that they have watched our actions or been inquisitive in our affairs?
30943Do you think?
30943Do you threaten me?
30943Does not the search after wisdom induce desires not satisfied in this small circle to which your life is confined? 30943 Drowned?"
30943For me and for my sake, if it be necessary, to forsake the world? 30943 For_ my_ sake?"
30943Forget our father?
30943Give up her child?
30943Good- morning, uncle,said Madame Bonaparte to the archdeacon,"how are you?
30943Has he any manner? 30943 Has he confessed?"
30943Hate her?
30943Hath she seen a priest?
30943Have you drunk the water?
30943Have you not an implicit confidence in the steadfastness of my love?
30943He does not know all, then?
30943He? 30943 How far do you say it is?"
30943How fares it with you, my dear friend?''
30943How have you settled the object of your journey?
30943How is this,said I, in amazement,"you were not in the French army?"
30943How should ye, mistress,returns she, shortlie,"when ye never comes nigh us?
30943I think you are a boaster, Napoleon; and in your uncle''s presence would be just as great a coward as Eliza or Pauline?
30943IF YOU PLEASE, SIR, MASTER''S SENT BACK THE FIRST VOLUME, AND HE SAYS WILL YOU BE SO GOOD AS TO LET HIM''AVE THE SECOND?]
30943I_ was_ dreaming, then?
30943Is he much liked here by the people?
30943Is it because he is archdeacon of Ajaccio that people are so much afraid of him?
30943It is quite apparent they are not here,observed Mr. Smith;"but why not have proceeded in the cart?"
30943Just explain, will you?
30943Lord love ye,returns Gammer,"what coulde a priest doe for her?
30943Love her? 30943 Me?
30943My poor child,said the archdeacon, embracing Napoleon tenderly,"why did you not undeceive us?"
30943No harm in that-- and then, my boy?
30943Oh, speak not so, beloved,I replied;"have you not a good husband, your error mercifully forgiven?
30943Oh, then, what kind of a horse are you accustomed to?
30943Oh, you think so, do you?
30943Ought they?
30943Richard, have you been listening?
30943Ripe? 30943 Sees who?"
30943Shall I introduce you? 30943 So you are still obstinate?"
30943So you stole the fruit?
30943So you will go, will you?
30943Sole companions?--your child?
30943The room in which Nora slept? 30943 There bides poor Joan and I. Wilt come and looke within, mistress, and see how a Christian can die?"
30943They have a son, I believe; but he''s in America, is not he?
30943This garden belongs to your uncle Fesch: has he given this dark hole to Napoleon?
30943Umbrella against the stars?
30943Was n''t I, though? 30943 Well, Richard-- you have seen him?"
30943Well, and if you were the master, what would you do?
30943Well, but do n''t they?
30943Well, but my good girl, what_ is_ to be done? 30943 Well, mother?"
30943Well, my child,said his father,"I hope you will now ask your uncle''s pardon?"
30943Were it otherwise, should I be now standing here questioning you, or should there be need of questions of this kind between us? 30943 What about?"
30943What are you doing there, Napoleon? 30943 What could I do?"
30943What do you suppose, Astrà ¦ a,I inquired,"can have happened since I saw you?"
30943What has brought you to Egypt?
30943What has he done?
30943What is his name, and why should he care for me, grandmother?
30943What know I?
30943What was his crime, sir?
30943What was it, Luise?
30943What were you doing?
30943Where can these children have gone to?
30943Who is your authority?
30943Who would be the gin''ral?
30943Why should I not ask him, Ruth?
30943Why should I? 30943 Why should you hope so?
30943Why, Gabrielle,I said,"you are not seventeen yet-- it is not too late, is it, for you also to be educated?"
30943Why, this is a French book-- do you read French, Leonard?
30943Why? 30943 Why?"
30943Will you not accept my own authority, without seeking further?
30943Will you read it, sir? 30943 Yes, it is Lansmere; you stop there, I guess?"
30943You are a monstrous tall girl of your age, then, I declare: and you have learned to read from Nelly, have n''t you?
30943You have reason to believe this?
30943You think I am a coward?
30943You will forgive us, mon cher capitaine?
30943You''re a stranger in these parts, I see, sir,rejoined he, with a cunning glance at his friend, while he added, lower,"Was I right, Hill?"
30943Your wife?
30943''And woulde you, my wife,''he returned,''have me die guilty?''"
30943''Have ye, scape- graces indeed, brought your gallants hither?
30943''taters, Sir?
30943( Aside to Riccabocca)--"Push on, will you?"
30943(_ and a look._) I should drive you?
30943(_ and an have had to eat, Sir?
30943(_ calling._) Permit me to ask you what you Now, Sir?
30943(_ from every driver on my cabriolet?
30943*****--Was there ever anie- thing soe perverse, unluckie, and downright disagreeable?
30943--"Are those Lord Bacon''s words?
30943AND WHAT''S THE MATTER WITH MY YOUNG FRIEND, ADOLPHUS?"
30943After a moment, I asked,"Where lies your dwelling?"
30943Again I ask you, did you, or did you not, promote these attentions by every artifice and suggestion in your power?"
30943Am I not now on speaking terms with an earthquake?"
30943Am I not thine only son, the rightful heir of Arragon, Castile, and Navarre?
30943Am I right, young gentleman-- you do n''t go very often to confession?"
30943And again, what is at best their prospect for old age?
30943And had I not my desire?
30943And now, to speak with entire frankness, am I sure that the world would be happier even if all my plans were put in execution?
30943And oh, if you thus speak of knowledge, why have you encouraged me to know?"
30943And pray, in what age have philosophers governed the world?
30943And since knowledge is compatible with good and with evil, would it not be better to say,''Knowledge is a trust?''"
30943And the Parson, sliding into her chair, said:"But you are dejected, then?
30943And what was there in it, after all?
30943And where are Napoleon and Pauline?"
30943And would you not say he who regards religion as a power, intends to abuse it as a priestcraft?"
30943And you?"
30943Are dreams so much varied as is generally supposed?
30943Are these the phrases with which you taunt me?
30943Are they not always grumbling that nobody attends to them?"
30943Are you satisfied?"
30943Arn''t I right now?"
30943At last the baron stops and asks,''What is it he''s saying to himself?''
30943At length the pent- up rage found vent, and burst forth like a bombshell which explodes,"Comedian, say you?
30943At the end, Mr. Brooke lost every thing, and in the last game, by way of generosity, the baron says to him,''Double or quit?''
30943Become rich and great?
30943But again it may be asked-- what then do dreams portend?
30943But how was the deception carried on before the higher tribunals?
30943But is it a crime in them, or their parents, if their talents have lifted them into such rank or renown as the haughtiest duke might envy?
30943But it may be asked why, with such capabilities and powers as we have stated Mr. Wolfe to possess, he did so little?
30943But now, what is it that rises up in perspective before me?
30943But what are dreams?
30943But what was the cause of all these stratagems and concealments?
30943But with what or whom?
30943But, after all, a throne, what is it?
30943By knowledge, do you mean intellectual cultivation?--by the reign of knowledge, the ascendency of the most cultivated minds?"
30943Can you hope to bestow upon the vast mass of your order the luminous intelligence of this''Lord Chancellor of nature?''
30943Can you wonder that I smiled?
30943Cecy sayth,"To die is not soe fearfulle, Meg, as I thoughte, but shoulde_ you_ fancy dying without a priest?
30943Could I have lived on as I have done without prophetic hope to support me?
30943Dale?"
30943Did you not seek it, urge it, fan it to its height, and even glory in the flame you had nursed so cunningly?"
30943Did_ he_ not live in a garret, and save money too?
30943Do not the descendants of St. Louis continually dispute the independence and the conquests of the people?
30943Do they admit of any rational interpretation?
30943Do you know he has a great look of poor Nora?--more like her than Jane?"
30943Do you never get a whipping yourself, Panoria?"
30943Do you not see, padre, that Paris is the real capital of the world?
30943Do you think that I can not sometimes read your thoughts?"
30943Does it prove much in favor of knowledge?
30943Grant that you do so-- and what guarantee have you for the virtue and the happiness which you assume as the concomitants of the gift?
30943Had Gabrielle really gone?
30943Has it ever been so?
30943Have I not always been sincere and frank with you?"
30943Have the family of Orleans laid aside the claims of their birth?
30943Have the wise few been so unerring and so happy?
30943Have they rendered homage to the sovereignty of the nation?
30943Have we a righte to believe noughte but what we can see or prove?
30943Have ye got the consent of your parents to propose for those two chits; and are ye ready to affirm the same on your word of honor, as gentlemen?''
30943Have you observed any change in their manner toward you?"
30943Have you passports?
30943He added point- blank,"Pray what was it?"
30943He repeated"Friendlesse?
30943Here, however, it may fairly be asked, how happens it that the same person will at one time remember, and, at another, forget his dreams?
30943His confusion was so evident, that the canon said,"I hope you are not telling a falsehood, Napoleon?"
30943How can I?
30943How is she off?"
30943How much he saved each year who shall say?
30943I sayd,"Gammer, to what purpose gather that weed?
30943I sayd,"Is there aught we can doe for thee?"
30943I think I have heard you say that you once had a narrow escape of a prison?"
30943I will drive Vere?
30943In his garret, alone and unfriended?
30943Instead of snags, why not blow up the Muggers?"
30943Is Severia afraid of him, too?"
30943Is he a reptile?
30943Is he genteel?
30943Is it not natural that he should be so?
30943Is it so sure there lives a man equal to such trials?"
30943Is not enough said here, to rescue frogs from our contempt?
30943Is that a state to be envied?
30943Is your love strong enough to bear the hazards I have pointed out?
30943It ai n''t reasonable what you ask, sir?"
30943LEONARD( recovering his surprise).--"But why so?"
30943Look you, Mr.---- what''s your name, sir?"
30943May be, ye have hidden them in your chambers?
30943Meanwhile,''Darling Dorel''did ask the damsels where they had gotten the rings which they had presented to their gallants in return for theirs?
30943Must I needs go and fetch another?''
30943My child- sister married?
30943Nations, you say, may be beaten by other nations less learned and civilized?"
30943Now, who shall divide us?
30943Or that it pained me when I awoke, and found that the bright angel and the sweet promise were only-- a dream?"...
30943Or, taking into consideration our different mental and physical constitutions, is there not rather a remarkable sameness in them?
30943PARSON.--"All evil is power, and does its power make it any thing the better?"
30943PARSON.--"In the first place, is it true that the class which has the most knowledge gets the most power?
30943People would stare; some would ask,''Is this the great Lord Duncan who won the Battle of Camperdown?''
30943Pray, is not ignorance power too?"
30943Pray, then, who would have spoken of the pope?
30943RICCABOCCA.--"What?"
30943Sacrifice, my Astrà ¦ a?
30943Shall I suffer two such angels of joy to depart, without tasting of my food and my drink?
30943Skinflint( startled)._--How do you know that?
30943Tell me, foolish young things, ought I not to take the rod to you?
30943Tell me, young girls, have ye already kissed the gallants?
30943Tell us now, young damsels, where are your lovers hidden, and what is the signal ye have agreed upon?''
30943Thank you, Sir, I am very much obliged Vot''s this?
30943That is Lansmere before me, is it not?"
30943That would answer better for rye than grass; but then, what would become of my Lord''s deer?
30943The duke did then ask her, jestingly,''But which flag shall it be?''
30943The prophetic dream refers generally to some event which, in the course of nature, is likely to happen: is it, then, wonderful that it should occur?
30943The question therefore recurs, What are Dreams?
30943There was less war than rapine; but what could you expect?
30943Therefore my astonishment was overwhelming when she seriously answered,"Why can not Lord Treherne be a father to my child, Ruth?"
30943These being our reptiles, are they proper objects of abhorrence?
30943They are already hull down; besides, who''s to assist his escape, Tom?
30943Think you, if Lord Treherne were double the age, I would refuse rank, wealth and power?
30943Three or four years ago, who would pronounce aloud the name of the founder of your system?
30943To change their hated name, what would I not do?"
30943To do this, without repining, without looking back with anguish and remorse upon the sacrifices you had made, without a regret or a reproach?
30943To me what are such things?
30943To the queen Don Garcia bore his complaint and his petition:"Oh, my mother, wouldst thou see me dishonored by a menial?
30943Waiter, Sir?
30943Waiter, how much have I to pay?
30943Waiter, what have you for dinner?
30943Was I awake, or were my senses misleading me?
30943Was it then an engagement?
30943Was not Etna once as still and dark as yonder great rock?
30943Was this all a dream?
30943Was_ he_ such a fool as to marry before he could keep a wife?
30943We have Adders?
30943We''ve all the same cut of the jib-- have not we, father?"
30943What can he be talking about alone in the grotto?"
30943What do they portend?
30943What do you say?"
30943What is it?
30943What is the reason of your silence?"
30943What is your aim in thus coming with your curses between us?"
30943What mattered it?
30943What might he not hope to be and do now, Susan says, if he had but the knowledge that every man may be said to have the right to be possessed of?
30943What shall I do with it?--what do I want with it, too?
30943What thought I of him?
30943What was Bacon himself?
30943What was the matter?
30943What would you have more, sir, from folks like us, who have kept shop ourselves?
30943What''s the room you give him?"
30943When I returned home, I went out on a hill, and called,''where''s my Tussa?''
30943Whence come they?
30943Whence do they arise?
30943Where is my theatre, pray, and what?
30943Where was he to learn the gentler feelings of his kind-- affection, sympathy, benevolence?
30943Wherefore do you make this monstrous demand?
30943Which of those mighty peaks was to open the fire of hell''s artillery upon us?
30943Who aided_ him_?
30943Who dared to awaken the mother?
30943Who would believe her to be pure and innocent when such lips pronounced the tale of her guilt?
30943Why do you ask?"
30943Why do you not offer your services to some theatrical manager?"
30943Why not?
30943Why should I either acknowledge or deny it?
30943Why should he make so much theatrical parade about so very simple a business?
30943Why should you desire any explanation on the subject?
30943Why shoulde Polus not see a dragon?
30943Why stand they in such great necessity of pushing their suit?''
30943Why, you''re not afraid-- are you?"
30943Will madame get out and walk?"
30943Would not that be a base and sordid view of its advantages?
30943You acknowledge that it is so?"
30943You can get on some learned subject together, and then he will not miss so much his--""His what?"
30943You can not be a servant; and what are we to do without education?
30943You say the boy''s a''cute clever lad?"
30943You see that great park yonder, on the other side of the road?
30943You take to the boy then?"
30943You understand me, sir?"
30943You will surely see the propriety of not suffering your curiosity to meddle any further in the affair?"
30943_ Alfred._"I SAY, FRANK, ARN''T YOU GOING TO HAVE SOME SUPPER?"
30943_ Conductor._--Would any gentleman mind going outside, to oblige a lady?
30943_ I_ love_ Astrà ¦ a?_ If there be a mortal I hate in the core of my heart, it is Astrà ¦ a.
30943_ What the Book said.__ What the Man said._ Do you wish, Sir, to ride in C''b?
30943am I the only craven here?
30943and what is your will?''
30943are you not surrounded by blessings?"
30943between the enlightened scholar and the dunce of to- day, than there was between the monkish alchemist and the block head of yesterday?
30943can neither of ye say''yea or nay?''
30943cried another gentleman, who sat on the opposite side of the vehicle;"did you remark that fellow''s salute?
30943cries he, looking up,"are there indeede Hamadryads?"
30943darest thou compare me with the base- born Ramiro?
30943exclaimed Mrs. Avenel, fiercely--"why?
30943his curly tail?"
30943his horns of fire?
30943how can you think of exposing madame to such hazard?"
30943interrogative look._) St''k, Sir?
30943knowest not''tis evill?"
30943of course not; why should they?"
30943or a mere country lout?"
30943said I;"or are you only playing off some new freak upon me?
30943said the Parson,"if I wished to prove the value of Religion, would you think I served it much, if I took as my motto,''Religion is power?''
30943said the elder of the two,"or are you not convinced, at last, that I am right?"
30943set myself against your thews and sinews?
30943shall I ever forget how I bathed it my with tears, and covered it with kisses?
30943she said truly, that"early shadows had darkened her soul,"and what had she left but_ pride_?
30943that''s one shilling: one- and- eight and five, thirteen, Sir, the price of all that is two that''s two- and- six; and cheese?
30943the foreigner''s English._) What is your fare?
30943the rank, and as many fingers held up as there are Cabmen._) Where do you wish, Sir, that Vere to?
30943to dedicate yourself in solitude to her who, in solitude, would be content to find her whole world in you?
30943to relinquish friends and kindred?
30943was not the green branch so often stuck in your window at Crossen; also a white flag?
30943what else_ can_ be done?"
30943what would you have, then?
30943who has taken the fruit?"
30943who may command here, if I may not?
38952''And what was that, Felix?''
38952''Child, we know of naught but justice; who art thou-- what dost thou want?'' 38952 ''Found_ what_ out, jewel?''
38952A cross, George? 38952 A terrible face?"
38952Again? 38952 Ah, dear father,_ that_ then, was your thought?
38952Ah, why not also confide in her? 38952 All goes well, Baptista?"
38952And Mr. Levy was there, eh?
38952And does her arm pain her?
38952And for what end?
38952And how long has that bill to run now?
38952And now, my lords, have you any thing to say why the justice of your monarch should not have its course?
38952And perhaps,resumed Mrs. Hazeldean, with a very sunny expression of countenance,"you have noticed this in Frank since he was here?"
38952And the distance?
38952And were you broke? 38952 And what have you found, sir?"
38952And what mean you by an act?
38952And what means have you for meeting them?
38952And what regiment have you served in?
38952And what work interests you so much?
38952And why does it trouble her?
38952And you will not have the Hope?
38952Are the planets inhabited?
38952Are the three hours then out?
38952Are they coming?
38952Are they still there?
38952Are you a fool, child? 38952 Are you in the service?"
38952But had you not the night also?
38952But have I not atoned it? 38952 But if she had rank and title?"
38952But if the Count is in town?
38952But in what direction,said another;"who knows if we shall not be rushing into worse danger?"
38952But is not our confessor already with him, according to our order?
38952But is she no better, mother? 38952 But why?
38952But_ do_ you feel so very tired?
38952Can the heart die?
38952Character-- ah, that is indispensable?
38952Did he die like a Christian?
38952Did you endorse it?
38952Do n''t you keep your hope in_ your_ heart too?
38952Do you call her''Ella''over there?
38952Do you know, can you guess, what my cross in this life is? 38952 Do you mean to tell me, Miss Snape, that you will write down the names of three parties who will accept a bill for one hundred pounds for you?"
38952Do you remember a half- drowned wretch that was laid down at your feet in the Annunziata Church one morning during the siege?
38952Do you remember the day when we two had a pic- nic here, and gathered moss from the rocks, and made those crosses?
38952Do your grenadiers say so?
38952Doctor, I left a little book on my desk, will you bring it to me?
38952Does he know that the Salle de Police first, and the Prevot afterward comprise my gratitude?
38952Does the dream come back?
38952Eh, are you not a Piedmontais?
38952Ella, have you forgiven me for robbing you of the cross your mother gave you?
38952George, you do n''t believe_ I_ feel as you say people do about being seen walking or talking-- with-- you? 38952 Have you circulated any other bills made by the same drawer?"
38952Have you read Thiers''speech? 38952 Have you told him how I am accustomed to reward people who occupy my time on false pretences, Lestocque?"
38952He has been condemned by our royal council, what more would the traitor have?
38952How came_ you_ in advance?
38952How can a man know general principles unless he has first studied the details? 38952 How haunted?"
38952How is she, mother?
38952How is this? 38952 How so, pray?"
38952How so-- where was that?
38952How was that?
38952I say, Lestocque,cried a large, burly man, from above,"have you picked up Robinson Crusoe, there?"
38952If I did n''t care about her being nursed every minute, would I ask you to go back, when I know you''re tired? 38952 In what army of brigands was it then,"said he, laughing,"for, assuredly, you do not recall to my recollection any European force that I know of?"
38952Is all prepared?
38952Is he alive?
38952Is he dead?
38952Is it so uncommon to take interest even in a stranger who is menaced by some peril?
38952Is it so? 38952 Is that all?"
38952Is that all?
38952It can not fade.... You spoke of my writing books... what should I write them for?
38952Let us row,said they,"what signifies it?"
38952May I, without indiscretion, listen also?
38952Meet it?
38952Miracle?
38952Mistress, Carolina?
38952Money?
38952Mother,he said, abruptly interrupting her,"did you see El-- the sick girl, to- day?"
38952My enemy, sire?
38952My mother--(so Violante always called Jemima)--my mother, you have spoken to her?
38952No!--have you?
38952No, dear-- but-- he terrifies me: are you sure that he need come again?
38952No,she said, resolutely,"I''m not afraid it will hurt me, but the mark, will it not last always?"
38952Nor heard of him?
38952Now, Clara,master said, in a low voice,"you see that it is nothing?
38952O father, can you resist this? 38952 Of course?"
38952Of what then?
38952Oh, Ella-- how?
38952Our rights and privileges?
38952Out with what, my dear madam? 38952 Pray, how is Baron Dash?"
38952Pray, sir,I said,"could you meet that one hundred pounds bill, supposing it should not be paid by the acceptor?"
38952Pray,said I, interrupting his excuses,"does your young lady''s name begin with S?
38952Shall I make an ANCHOR on your arm?
38952Sir, I thank you sincerely,said Riccabocca, with emotion;"but am I not safe here?"
38952So all goes well, Baptista?
38952So we are acquaintances, it would appear, my friend?
38952So you think that you have news that might affect me? 38952 Speak- a you Italian?"
38952Suppose he was to marry?
38952The story of the English bride?
38952The untasted cup before me lies-- What care I for its sparkle now? 38952 Then how am I to gain the new road?"
38952This second bill, you say, is urgently required to enable Miss Snape to leave town?
38952This? 38952 Was she_ grieving_ about the cross?
38952Was the poor wretch your cousin,exclaimed one of the sheiks, contemptuously,"that you are in such a rage at his death?"
38952Well, but Leonard Fairfield?--you have seen him since?
38952Well, sir,exclaimed our young Munchausen who had listened to the narrative with almost breathless attention,"well, sir-- well?--what was the result?
38952Well,said he,"what''s to be done now, as to opposition in the journals-- in our articles?
38952What are the comparative merits of Christianity and Moslemism?
38952What did you call it? 38952 What do you call_ that?_"said the German courier, triumphantly;"Ghosts!
38952What does he want, then?
38952What dream?
38952What good does it do you? 38952 What horrid things?"
38952What is the age of the world?
38952What news?
38952What now?
38952What of the child?
38952What rends my head with racking pain? 38952 What seek you?"
38952What shall I be now if I live? 38952 What stops you?"
38952What then? 38952 What''s the condition, then?"
38952What, Tiernay-- this you?
38952What, is your master ill?
38952Where is Napoleon bound?
38952Where is the Anchor, Ella?
38952Where''s the''Etat Major?''
38952Who might, perhaps,observed Randal-- not truly, if he referred to Madame di Negra--"who might, perhaps, speak very little English?"
38952Who says so? 38952 Who the devil would?"
38952Who''s that?
38952Who?
38952Whose else can he be? 38952 Whose work is this masterpiece?"
38952Why do you wear that gold thing attached to the gold chain hung around your neck? 38952 Why repeat our words?
38952Why, you do n''t mean--?
38952Will Genoa not give the clew, sir?
38952Will he-- will he ever come again?
38952Will the earth be destroyed by fire or water?
38952Will you let me mark the anchor on your arm then, Ella?
38952Will you pledge your word to close the game in half an hour?
38952Woman, are you mad?
38952Would you believe it,whispered Massena to a colonel at his side,"the fellow has just guessed our intended movement?"
38952You are quite certain of what you assert, Tiernay?
38952You consent, I see,said the young nobleman;"but what shall we do for chessmen?"
38952You do n''t like a foreigner and a Catholic?
38952You must have an Englishwoman?
38952You never told me about this-- what is it?
38952You, madame?
38952Your name is Tiernay, monsieur, or I mistake much?
38952_ Vous, monsieur?_"But this is very strange,continued the gentleman,"is it not?
38952_ Vous, monsieur?_"But this is very strange,continued the gentleman,"is it not?
38952( In parenthesis, let us ask, when shall New York civilization reach such a kind provision for life?)
38952***** I have often asked myself, is that sister now happy?
38952--and when that sister_ is_ dead at the moment-- what do you call that?"
38952All useless is my unstrung hand: Why does this weight o''ershade my brow?
38952Am I not your daughter-- the descendant of men who never feared?"
38952And a world all dying because I am, and shew myself to be, and to have long been, even that?
38952And how were these three hours passed?
38952And then had I visited the Düsseldorff Gallery?
38952And what are the virtues which distinguish the Mamelukes, that entitle them to appropriate all the enjoyments of life to themselves?
38952And where was her husband then?
38952And why from yonder brimming glass Of wine untasted have I shrunk?
38952And, besides, would it not be cruel to accept from her so great a sacrifice?
38952Are these papers ready to be signed?"
38952Are you a French soldier?"
38952Are you as changed as my fortunes?
38952Are you cold?"
38952Besides, do I not know your nature?
38952Besides, does not the state accord to him the privilege of going to the theatre for twopence?
38952Bourrienne, you''re starting for head- quarters?
38952But how is it instructive?"
38952But if you ask me, Why heroes are not born now, why heroisms are not done now?
38952But what can be your reason?
38952But who can describe the deep anxiety of the ensuing hour, the hour on which the fondly- cherished hopes of a lifetime seemed to hang?
38952But why did you take her from me?
38952But yet, would it not be better,"added Levy, with emphasis,"to borrow it, without interest, of your friend L''Estrange?"
38952But you mean the loftiest?"
38952But you will let us know when he comes?"
38952But, did you ever know any thing like the prejudices that must prevail against you?
38952But-- who can tell the heaviness of that cross he bore?
38952By the by, what do you suppose the Hazeldean rental is worth-- net?"
38952Can I see General Vandamme?"
38952Care you neither for me nor for chess?"
38952Come, but for me what would you have been-- perhaps a beggar?"
38952Could it be possible, if he obtained any interview with the Signora, that he could win her affections?"
38952Could you lend me half a sovereign till Saturday?"
38952DALE.--"Is the author known yet?"
38952Dark, handsome man in black, reserved and secret, with black hair and gray mustache, looking fixedly at mistress out of darkness?
38952Did I know that palace?
38952Did a pang never strike into the heart of that cruel woman, as the child would lift its little eyes to hers, and lisp"My mother?"
38952Did he not?
38952Discharged, forsooth, to what?
38952Do books help?"
38952Do n''t you know there are_ some_ persons who do n''t write for money, and who do n''t care for fame?
38952Do n''t you see that it was for your sake only I feared-- and would be cautious?"
38952Do you believe me?"
38952Do you know the Count of Peschiera?"
38952Do you not trust your secret to me?"
38952Do you really want to know what this other mark here is?"
38952Do you say your prayers over it?"
38952Do you see the crowds assembled?
38952Does the stone lie forever useless?
38952Fearful of bad roads, or brigands?
38952Ghosts?
38952Good heavens, sir, does he mean to marry a Hindoo?"
38952Had I heard this Opera, and that?
38952Has he seen the girl yet?
38952Has she been in her right mind to- day?"
38952Has she forgotten Edward Nordheimer?
38952Has she not a very pale face, and cold gray eye?"
38952Has she recovered her wonted cheerfulness?
38952Have you any other commands?"
38952He confided that which I told him this day?"
38952He has been a republican and a monarchist by turns: who knows but to- morrow he may be a Red?
38952He knows_ me_, does he say-- he knows_ me_?
38952He saw at once that she had been weeping, and his assumed indifference vanished in an instant; he cried out,"_ Is_ she dead?"
38952He who forsakes that business, and, wasting our divinest gifts, sings the praise of Chaos, what shall we say of him?
38952His trade fell off, and his credit declined; and why?
38952How are we to- day for the musquitoes?"
38952How can I think of farm- yards when you talk of Frank''s marriage?
38952How can you talk such nonsense?
38952How did it end?"
38952How does one learn it?
38952How then is our great Guest to derive really tangible aid in the furtherance of what lies so near his heart?
38952How will our matter- of- fact tendencies answer to the calls of Kossuth?
38952How?"
38952Hum-- were you in your own room or the ante- room?"
38952I asked la bella Carolina, the pretty little one, Was mistress unwell?
38952I grant, sir, that I know the Count di Peschiera; but what has Dr. Riccabocca to do with the kinsman of so grand a personage?"
38952I instantly detected a forgery; by whom?
38952I need not attempt to describe the effect( for who can portray the extreme bitterness of the human heart?)
38952I replied,"Pray, sir, from whom did you get this bill?"
38952I say to every man,''Do n''t come to me-- I can get you money on much easier terms than any one else;''and what''s the result?
38952I''m glad you don''t-- if I called''the whole world a cheat, and all men liars,''you would n''t say yea and amen to that?"
38952If he was a potter like me, why should not I become an artist like him?"
38952In what have I distrusted you?
38952Is it thy belief_ Our_ thoughts shall ever in such shadow lie?
38952Is she living?
38952Is she married?
38952Is the picture overdrawn?
38952Is there a beautiful slave, a fine horse, a good house?
38952Is there a fine estate?
38952Is there one who_ will_ conquer?
38952It is true, she loved the child; but was it not a selfish love to see the bereaved mother mourn its loss, yet never soothe her troubled heart?
38952It was rude, I own; but who could have helped it?
38952Italian!--that''s all, is it?"
38952Its organization, as it is called, or life, ends, and then-- what?
38952James?"
38952John Grey, a most comely youth; but what is that to me?
38952Leslie?"
38952Leslie?"
38952Lestocque, have we any spare cattle?"
38952Let that content him; what more does he desire?
38952My lord constable, where is the nearest bishop to be found?"
38952Nor in Spain?
38952Now, tell me, Giacomo, is this Count really unprincipled and dangerous?
38952Oh, why did you_ kill_ my child?"
38952Oh, would the dull, insensate clod Give forth its yearly store, If our great FATHER and our GOD Had thought not of the poor?
38952One old man asked me if it were not true that the"French were coming?"
38952Out of spirits?
38952PARSON( overjoyed).--"Power!--the vulgarest application of it, or the loftiest?
38952PARSON.--"How should they be read in order to help?"
38952PARSON.--"Pray, Mr. Leslie, what does intellectual power refined to the utmost, but entirely stripped of beneficence, most resemble?"
38952PARSON.--"So is the_ Vicar of Wakefield_; yet what book more instructive?"
38952PARSON.--"What of?"
38952Perhaps there was something in the expression of my countenance which Mr. Axminster did not like, for he said,"It is good for the amount, I presume?"
38952Pray, sir, what knowledge is in power?"
38952RANDAL( in his turn interested and interrogative).--"What do you call the loftiest, and what the vulgarest?"
38952RANDAL( startled).--"Do you mean the Devil?"
38952RANDAL.--"Allow me to inquire if, had the kinsman no child, the Count di Peschiera would be legitimate and natural heir to the estates he holds?"
38952RANDAL.--"Does that thought suggest no danger to the child of the kinsman?"
38952RANDAL.--"Miss Sticktorights?"
38952RANDAL.--"Must an author be handsome?"
38952RANDAL.--"Would you be as averse to such a notion as Mr. Hazeldean is?"
38952RICCABOCCA( startled).--"How?"
38952RICCABOCCA.--"You come from London?
38952Ranuccio had been but two days in Rome-- might he not fairly be supposed ignorant of the new enactment?
38952She created a sensation, no doubt, when she was received at your court?"
38952She was a burden on you, was she?
38952Such would be the true use of books to him who has the practical world to subdue; let parsons and women construe it otherwise as they may?"
38952Tell me, how many of these things have you put afloat?"
38952The cross his mother lifted to his shoulder, which, from the moment of Ella''s death, he bore in uncomplaining silence?
38952The next question was to equip me with a uniform-- but what should it be?
38952Then retreating a step, but laying his hand on the exile''s shoulder, he added--"Need I say that your secret is safe with me?"
38952Then what becomes of the soil?
38952Then you would not listen to the Count if he proposed some amicable compromise; if, for instance, he was a candidate for the hand of your daughter?"
38952Then, violently pulling the check- string,"Stop,"she gasped:"and_ will you_ have the goodness to get out?"
38952There are no ghosts_ there!_ What do you call this, that I am going to tell you?
38952There''s no such painted good- for- nothing creature in Frank''s eye, eh?"
38952To the question"What''s in a name?"
38952Was he too late?--had his stratagem succeeded?
38952Was her spirit broken?
38952Was it a dream?
38952Was it remorse that made Don Ramirez tremble for the moment, and draw back involuntarily?
38952Was it that in the veins of both flowed noble blood?
38952Was it that they had been old and intimate friends?
38952Was mistress quite forgetful of that dream?
38952Were you not the rival of Don Guzman in the affection of Donna Estella-- and can rivals be friends?
38952Were you on the Meuse, then?
38952What becomes of art, and poetry?
38952What business has any one to wear a_ golden_ cross?
38952What can any instruction do more?
38952What cared Sixtus?
38952What danger?
38952What do you think of_ that_?
38952What if a man fails in one effort?
38952What is to be done by these poor nobles-- shut out from commerce, law, and physic?
38952What manner of good can come of it?
38952What meaning in"progress,"and"ideas,"and the"_ rights of man_?"
38952What then?"
38952What was it bound him thus closely to Don Guzman?
38952What were you saying about prejudices?"
38952What''s the matter?"
38952What''s the reason you wear it_ there_?"
38952What''s to be done now?
38952What''s to be done now?
38952When do you want the £5000?"
38952When shall we go?"
38952Where have you put her?
38952Where is my child?"
38952Where was it, may I ask?"
38952Who ever knew, until comparatively late years, what was the origin of the cautionary saying,"Mind your P''s and Q''s?"
38952Who ever thinks of Petrarch as the old time- worn man?
38952Who is he-- what is he?"
38952Who knows any thing authentic of the leanness of"Job''s turkey,"who has so many followers in the ranks of humanity?
38952Who so true?
38952Who, for example, was"DICK,"who had the odd- looking"hat- band,"and who has so long been the synonym or representative of oddly- acting people?
38952Why do you take this interest in him?"
38952Why doth my every vein expand?
38952Why flow my tears like scalding rain?
38952Why look my eyes like molten brass?
38952Why these words,''_ The body of_?''"
38952Why through my heart do sorrows pass?
38952Why?"
38952Will any man tell me what?"
38952Will you forgive me?"
38952Will you go?"
38952Will you hear it?"
38952Wo n''t she recover?"
38952Would I ever ask you to go, if I could sleep while you are talking about HER?
38952You are a Vendà © an?"
38952You do not mean to imply that this man, infamous though he be, can contemplate the crime of an assassin?"
38952You have no designs upon_ that_, too?"
38952You should have volunteered with some corps, eh?"
38952You spoke of forestalling danger?
38952You trust to me now?"
38952You understand?"
38952Your daughter is alive still?"
38952Your master confides in you?
38952_ Gentleman._--"How can I ever replace her fondness?"
38952_ Gentleman._--"What home will now receive me?"
38952_ Lady._--"Ah, what must it be for me, then?"
38952_ Lady._--"To whom can I confide my griefs?"
38952_ Lady._--"Upon whose arm can I lean?"
38952and did I ever see any thing so comical as the Student?
38952and did n''t I admire this passage and that?
38952and did n''t the tears start to my eyes when I saw the Silesian Weavers?
38952and was it not a cruel love, to see a household broken up, affections desolated, and all to gratify a selfish whim of hers?
38952and was n''t I in love with those little Fairies?
38952and was n''t the Wine- Tasters admirable?
38952and what did I think of the Nativity?
38952did you desert?
38952exclaimed Napoleon,"dost thou forsake me now?
38952have I forgotten you all this time?
38952if that were what, here and every where in God''s Creation, I_ am_?
38952no--_did_ you write_ verses_ about it?"
38952oh, say, Dearest, will you be mine?"]
38952or what was it?"
38952quietly inquired his wife;"here is my wedding- ring: if it can help to make you happy, what better use can I put it to?
38952repeated Riccabocca, startled and conscience- stricken;"why do you say''trust?''
38952said John Hunter, the first of English surgeons, originally a carpenter,"Is there a man whom difficulties dishearten, who bends to the storm?
38952said Randal, inquisitively,"you told me you had come in contact with him once, respecting, I think, some of your old parishioners at Lansmere?"
38952says another,"who believes in what Thiers says?
38952so good?"
38952tell me, where''s your pipe?''
38952that snuffy, tiresome, prosy professor?
38952what am I to do?
38952what to?"
38952what''s the use of killing yourself just to get a little learning?
38952where is my mistress?"
38952where?"
38952who had wrought it?
38952who put such a thing into your head?"
45764''Brummell,''said one of his club friends, on one occasion,''you were not here yesterday; where did you dine? 45764 ''Mascus,''Mascus?"
45764''Which of the lakes do I admire?'' 45764 About myself, sir?"
45764And does the donkey,resumed the muezzin,"believe in the One GOD, or in Mohammed, the Prophet of GOD?"
45764And how is it, uncle, that after_ that_, you do n''t believe in ghosts?
45764And now, señor, what do you advise me to do?
45764And pray, Señor Clà © rigo, how do you mean to feed that child? 45764 And she will accept Frank?"
45764And these debts do n''t startle you?
45764And what then?
45764And why not?
45764And you feel sure that the Squire can not be coaxed into consent?
45764And your own_ protà © gà ©_, this Randal Leslie, whom you forbid me to dislike-- hard task!--what has he decided?
45764Any gentleman for Joppa?
45764Are there? 45764 Are these your nephews?"
45764Are you afraid?
45764Are you afraid?
45764Are you afraid?
45764Are you afraid_ now_?
45764Are you not going in, sir?
45764Audley, my dear, dear Audley, is it you who speak to me thus? 45764 Ay, I understand-- the_ post obit_?"
45764Because I thought there warn''t enough of you, perhaps?
45764But he meant to be?
45764But how do you and your neighbor get on about the disputed right of way?
45764But how then does it happen,we replied,"that this burying- ground is exclusively for the blind?"
45764But it was, sir,said I, to bring him back, for he began to rub his head,"about a Will?"
45764But who is the man whom the fair Beatrice has thus honored? 45764 But would you allow me the favor of a minute''s private conversation?"
45764By your honor, sir?
45764Can you show me the place as I go back?
45764Captain, is this the land of Pharaoh?
45764Captain,one called out,"what ship is that?"
45764Could I not have a half- dozen, the exact counterpart of these, excepting the initials?
45764Could I sit down any where till he comes?
45764Dale? 45764 Did Frank tell you I was next of kin?"
45764Did he do it on purpose?
45764Did the lady die?
45764Did you notice,he resumed,"a female sitting in the bar?
45764Did you wish to see him, sir?
45764Do you go on to Egypt, sir?
45764Do you mean to imply that there are such things as ghosts?
45764Do you mean your husband?
45764Do you want to get the sharks upon us again?
45764Doubtless you have heard of the Count di Peschiera?
45764For religion? 45764 For what are you fighting?"
45764For what sum?
45764Ha!--is this indeed so? 45764 Have you a grief, and under the shelter of my father''s roof?
45764Have you any personal interest in the question?
45764Have you given this man work before?
45764He dines with you at your hotel, Squire? 45764 How can you suppose that I will hear of such a proposition?
45764How can you tell?
45764How can you tell?
45764How did you find out that?
45764How do you do, all of you? 45764 How do you know that?"
45764How does it strike you, Lady M----?
45764How harm?
45764How is that?
45764How was that?
45764I beg your pardon, miss?
45764I have not; but what if I had?
45764I only wish--"That you had one or two friends within hail, eh? 45764 I safe-- and from what?"
45764I think not, Esther?
45764I-- when?
45764In stature, sir?
45764Indeed,said Napoleon,"so bad as that?
45764Is Baron Levy still waiting?
45764Is Jamie come?
45764Is it_ possible_,inquired Napoleon,"to cross the pass?"
45764Is that Bill Simpson?
45764Is that you?
45764It''s you, young ladies, is it?
45764Male or female, sir?
45764Master at home?
45764Master at home?
45764Me, young ladies?
45764More what, Guardian?
45764Mr. Hazeldean,said the latter, in a low tone,"will you come into the drawing- room?"
45764Must I go?
45764My dear, will you be so kind as to tell one of the lads to look after the shop, while I step across the lane with Mr. Tulkinghorn? 45764 My prudent Mother Hubbard, why not?"
45764No other way?
45764Nor the man to allow his junior to be walked over, either?
45764Not half a glass?
45764Not me, I hope?
45764Not quite so far, I hope?
45764Now, is it finished? 45764 Now, will you come up- stairs?"
45764Of course, Esther,he said,"you do n''t understand this Chancery business?"
45764Oh, has it come to this? 45764 Place, date, hour correct, and thoroughly to be depended upon, you say, eh?"
45764Poor Richard?
45764Pray, is your lodger within?
45764Sha n''t I give you a piece of any thing at all, miss?
45764Shall I call him down? 45764 Table- spoonful?"
45764Teeth, you mean?
45764That is very right and good, no doubt,said Margarita;"I only want to know how we are all to live?
45764The Brent-- you know that brook? 45764 The Mr. Jarndyce, sir, whose story I have heard?"
45764The trader to St. Michael''s for oranges and other fruits?
45764There an''t,growled the man on the floor, whose head rested on his hand as he stared at us,"any more on you to come in, is there?"
45764There are others, then?
45764This has been without prejudice?
45764This is where he lives, is it?
45764Those fumes so oppressive from puffing, Say, what is the solace that flows? 45764 Ticket, please, sir;""Tyre or Sidon?"
45764To go back to that place-- there-- there-- where-- Courage, courage-- what is another pang?
45764To whom do these pocket- handkerchiefs belong?
45764Under what strange taboo am I placed?
45764Well,said Dick slowly,"I suppose he_ is_ pleasant, but make the best of it-- and still--""Still what, my dear Avenel?"
45764What do they say of him?
45764What do you see?
45764What do you see?
45764What follows is without prejudice, miss?
45764What gent or lady''s for the Nile? 45764 What is the matter, doctor?"
45764What is the sum?
45764What new way, sir? 45764 What of him?
45764What passions? 45764 What signifies a day or two more or less?"
45764What the furies can this mean? 45764 What will you take yourself, miss?
45764What''s this infernal row going on for?
45764Where is it? 45764 Who copied this, sir?"
45764Who would have thought it?
45764Whom are you talking of? 45764 Why, how can I tell?
45764Will any Lady have the Politeness to ride outside, to accommodate a Young Gentleman?]
45764Will he not?
45764Will you oblige me by spelling the word_ feeling_?
45764Would a contest there cost very much?
45764You accept me-- you accept me-- and of your own free will and choice?
45764You can not mean that the scoundrel contemplates murder?
45764You have brought your bird with you, I suppose?
45764You here?
45764You would n''t allow me to offer you one, would you, miss?
45764You''re caught, scoundrel!--nicked, trapped, found out, and by whom, think you? 45764 You, my dear Hazeldean?
45764_ Are_ you coming, there?
45764_ What_ do you call him? 45764 ''Little old woman, and whither so high?'' 45764 ''Nothing can be better,''did you say, sir?
45764''What''s become of your poor donkey?''
45764A grief that you will not tell to me?
45764A part?
45764A"Sonnick,"by Thackeray; What is Pleasure?
45764Ah, Helen, if I am at times cold or wayward, bear with me-- bear with me; for you love me, do you not?"
45764Ah, where was Helen?
45764Am I awake, or do I dream?
45764An''t my place dirty?
45764And I dare say we all thought, too-- I am sure I did, for one-- would Boythorn at all interfere with what was going forward?
45764And had he been Harley''s son, would not Harley have guessed it at once, and so guessing, have owned and claimed him?
45764And how did my wife get that black eye?
45764And how is Madame Permon?"
45764And if, in a few months, these seats were swept away-- were annihilated from the rolls of Parliament-- where was he?
45764And now, who were these three officers of the Italian army?
45764And was Harley L''Estrange a man capable of such wrong?
45764And what am I?
45764And what felt Dianora when her votaries left her?
45764And what, Leonard-- what do you think had mislead him?
45764And whence the enjoyment of stuffing A parcel of dust in your nose?
45764And who are you, signior?
45764And who shall paint the return from death to life of poor Hyppolito?
45764And you do not know her heart, then?
45764And, for mercy''s sake, who are these children?
45764Any more wine?
45764Are you at present engaged in any work?
45764As soon as Rachel ceased reading, Mr. Drysdale looked deprecatingly in his friend''s face and murmured,"You hear?"
45764As soon as the servant vanished on this errand, Frank seized the thin man by the arm:"What is this?
45764Bless me, do you see a ghost?"
45764But Hate-- how detect, how guard against it?
45764But for Frank Hazeldean''s mode of getting rid of the dross, when gone, what would be left to tell the tale?
45764But how is it to be done?
45764But my poor cousin( he was never a Solomon) has got hold, he says, of a homely-- homely-- what''s the word, Parson?"
45764But now, where is Hate?--who ever sees its face?
45764But shall we allow our audacious enemies to violate with impunity the territory of the Republic?
45764But sweeter shines the sun than e''er he shone before, For now I''m Jamie''s wife, and what need I say more?
45764But tell me, sir, do you intend walking from here to Hythe?"
45764But what can one do with a stomach that has not a rag of its coat left?
45764But what could they hope?
45764But what is your notion about Frank?
45764But when I ask,''_ Is_ that your advice?''
45764But when he awoke the next morning, he said to himself,"What-- what will they say at the Hall?"
45764But where have you seen me?"
45764But why?
45764But will such means alone secure the desired result?
45764But you really think I might come in for Lansmere-- against the L''Estrange interest, too, which must be strong there?"
45764But you think you could talk her out of the Pope, and into the family pew?"
45764But, come, let us in: you will go with me?"
45764But, then, what harm does the Hate do us?
45764But,"continued Bernardin, delighted at being understood;"but tell me, do you yourself write?
45764By the habits you thus are pursuing, There_ can_ be no pleasure conferred, How irrational, then, is so doing-- Now,_ is n''t_ it very absurd?
45764Can there be a doubt as to who is likely to be the useful man, the healthy- souled man, the_ sound_ man, in the best sense of the terms?
45764Can there be any thing in such a theory?"
45764Can you not advance the requisite sum?"
45764Child!--child!--what is this?
45764Could she ever, ever again be his child- angel?"
45764Curiosity induced Anne Moody to follow, and she heard, just as the door closed upon them, Mrs. Moody say,"You have not been to Exeter, I am sure?"
45764Dear me, sir, why did n''t you send your young man round for me?
45764Did he not tell you so?"
45764Did no thought cross Hyppolito''s clear mind, that he was throwing away, in weak passion, a life given to him by God for noble ends?
45764Did you say there was no hope?"
45764Do his generals gather around him with love and homage?
45764Do n''t I never mean for to go to church?
45764Do we not feel, instinctively, that the lowest intemperance is less degrading than such a use of the body and the body''s health?
45764Do you fear that your guardian would not consent?
45764Do you really think Randal Leslie calculated for public life-- for a Parliamentary career?"
45764Do you think, sir, that he ever knew-- ever saw-- my mother?"
45764Do you wish to guard against revolutionary principles?
45764Does he retain his intellectual supremacy?
45764Does the public know what is implied in this?
45764EGERTON( observing the Baron, with a curl of his lip).--"Well, Levy, how shall it be?"
45764EGERTON( wincing).--"I propose to do so?"
45764EGERTON.--"Ay-- and how?"
45764Esther, my dear, do you wish to ask me any thing?"
45764FRANK( lazily).--"From whom?"
45764Forgive me-- but why is this wicked?
45764Gusher?"
45764Has his pensive spirit sunk down into gloom and despair, or has it soared into cloudless regions of purity and peace?
45764Hast thou not often been duped by that pale visionary simulacrum of thought which goes by the name of_ reverie_?
45764Have I read the little book wot you left?
45764Have you any thing further to say?"
45764Hazeldean?"
45764He inclined to confide to her the danger which her father had concealed; but had he the right to do so against her father''s will?
45764He said with some embarrassment, holding the handle of the door,"Shall I have the honor of finding you here, Miss?"
45764He to whom she had humbled herself loved another; whom but Violante?--whom else, young and beautiful, had he named in the record of his life?
45764Helen, by the way, have you mentioned to Violante the bond between us?"
45764Hesitating still?
45764How about the matter you wot of?"
45764How could she?
45764How could the faithful followers of the Prophet manage to employ him?
45764How have I been conducting of myself?
45764How much of that leaven of a_ sound mind_ which has characterized New England may be traced to this one source?
45764How shall we best employ the residue?
45764How?"
45764I do not even know where to find my sword,"said he, looking around the room;"do you see it?
45764I know nothing now, certainly; but what_ might_ I not, if I had your confidence, and you set me on?"
45764I ought to go down to the governor''s; but then if he gets into a passion and refuses his consent, where am I?
45764I saw her heart was sore-- why did I take her hand?
45764I say, Parson( whispering slily), if a small dose of what hurt the Captain is to cure him, do n''t you think the proper thing would be a-- legacy?
45764I understood you to say, Mr. Sims, that Mrs. Drysdale declares her husband was at home at twenty minutes to one?"
45764I-- arbiter of my father''s destinies?
45764If you wished to warm the lower stratum of air, would you heat the upper stratum first?
45764In a low solemn voice he began to chant the following lines:"What riseth slow from the ocean caves And the stormy surf?
45764In how much higher a sense does the analogy hold good in respect to our spiritual organization?
45764In what States of our Union are common schools most flourishing?
45764In what respect?"
45764Is it because he is below you in birth?"
45764Is it for the balance of Europe?
45764Is it not so?"
45764Is it possible?"
45764Is it that bowing, grateful dependent?--is it that soft- eyed Amaryllis?
45764Is it that smiling, good- tempered creature, that presses you by the hand so cordially?
45764Is my daughter a washin?
45764Is there any thing I can order for you?"
45764Jellyby''s?"
45764LEONARD.--"But did his books teach him to burn ricks, and smash machines?"
45764LEONARD.--"Nay, sir, would not that be a great liberty?"
45764Let this then be our general answer to the question-- What is education?
45764Let us change the subject You were asking my doctor''s name?
45764Love?"
45764May I ask his name?"
45764Might he calculate on reaping help by the bushel if he sowed it by the handful?
45764Miss Summerson, I hope I shall have your assistance in my visiting rounds immediately, and Miss Clare''s very soon?"
45764Model Presentation Verses; Modern Dictionary; Governor Chittenden and the Thief; The Puzzled Publican; How do you like the Doctor?
45764Nemo?"
45764Not Lord L''Estrange?"
45764Now, who was Boythorn?
45764On whom is it turned, and why does her cheek flush so quickly?
45764Once more the solemn question:"You, who would see revealed the mysteries of the tomb-- what do you see now?"
45764Or Pyramids?"
45764PESCHIERA.--"And your father, since then, has taught you to hate this fancied foe?"
45764Pilgrims, holy Red- Cross knights, Had you e''er the least idea, Even in your wildest flights, Of a steam- trip to Judea?
45764RANDAL( with his soft hollow laugh).--"You mean borrowing money upon more than five per cent?"
45764SQUIRE.--"Where-- what-- where?
45764See, this is to be the vicarage; and here, divided by this paling--""What does this mean?
45764Shall they sacrifice themselves to these?
45764She sunk her voice into a whisper:"How could Leonard fail to be dear to you-- dear as you to him-- dearer than all others?"
45764So you have thought of my little discourse on Knowledge, have you?"
45764Something yet remained to be established: was this perfection permanent, or was it only temporary?
45764Surely your name''s Hazeldean?"
45764THE BARON( with a forced laugh).--"Perhaps to defend yourself against the actions you apprehend from me?"
45764Tell me-- when did the devil teach thee to stuff coat- collars with the spoils of murdered men, eh?"
45764That is true, is it not?"
45764The Captain now, highly disgusted that so much attention was withdrawn from his own case, asked in a querulous voice,"And as to diet?
45764The fact is, I have just heard that a fellow is lurking about here-- You have not, I hope, asked for me of any one?"
45764The other took up his purse, saying, in a contemptuous tone:"Young gentleman, you wish to draw back?"
45764The question still remains-- What is the truest utility?
45764Think there could be too much of it?
45764To ask a poor sick gentleman how he is?
45764To part-- what was the world to them if they were parted?
45764VIOLANTE( twining her arm round Helen''s waist).--"How have I wounded you?--how offended?
45764VIOLANTE.--"But why will you not tell me more of that early time?
45764VIOLANTE.--"I-- Count?
45764VIOLANTE.--"Take the child Beatrice from Dante''s life, and should we have a Dante?
45764WHAT IS EDUCATION?
45764Was it sufficiently obvious that Levy counted on an adequate return?
45764We all looked at each other, but my young neighbor, still in the same mocking manner, replied:"You will do that, will you?"
45764We were going on in this way, when one morning at breakfast Mr. Jarndyce received a letter, and looking at the superscription said,"From Boythorn?
45764Well, Mademoiselle Loulou( you see that I do not forget the names of my old friends), have you not a word for me?"
45764Well, what did he say_ had_ become of the donkey?"
45764Were there ever such barbarous villains as these Arabs?
45764What are ye, dark waving bands That, beneath the maiden''s hands, Sweep around her graceful head?
45764What are you talking about?
45764What can he reply?
45764What could be detaining him so late?
45764What did_ he_ think about, or laugh about?
45764What divided them?
45764What does she make a sham for, and pretend to give me money, and take it away again?
45764What had become of a large sum in notes paid, it was well known, to Mr. Bradshaw three or four days before his death?
45764What have you done, señor?
45764What is a poet''s genius but the voice of its emotions?
45764What is the measure of its value?
45764What is the name of your doctor?"
45764What is there in all this?
45764What might I not get to know, nearly concerning you?
45764What next marvel Time will show, It is difficult to say:"Omnibus to Jericho, Only sixpence all the way?"
45764What of this?
45764What shall I have for dinner?"
45764What should we say of a rose- tree in which one bud out of every three dropped to the soil dead?
45764What was he doing there?
45764What was to be done?
45764What would you further say?"
45764What would you say?
45764What''s to be done with him?"
45764What, then, can be the population of a lake or of the ocean?
45764What, till then, had Harley L''Estrange been to Violante?
45764Where are they confined?"
45764Where is the book of the Oratorio?"
45764Where now is our metaphorical argument?
45764Where was I?"
45764Where''s that party for Engeddi?"
45764Wherefore send your pallid ray, Streaks of cold, untimely gray, Through the locks whose burnish''d hue Hath but seen of years a few?
45764Wherefore such emotion?"
45764While she maintain''d ye a''was you not heard to say, That you would never marry wi''Auld Robin Gray?
45764Who are you?
45764Who could have believed it?
45764Who is she?"
45764Who will venture to charge the Pilgrim Fathers with anti- popular tendencies?
45764Who would ever have expected to find a lover of nature with a republican epaulet?
45764Who would not bid high for some kind and sympathetic expression in the ink, and from the pen of Henry Clay?
45764Who''s off to London to- night?"
45764Who''s the man?
45764Why didna Jamie dee?
45764Why do you ask?"
45764Why do you call it my allowance, and never let me spend it?"
45764Why is bodily health desirable?
45764Why is it, that thus far we have no Virgil, or no prose pastoral to tell of the wondrous things which adorn the American spring and summer?
45764Why must it not be?
45764Why not arrange that, out of this sum, your anticipative charge on the Casino property be paid at once?
45764Why not?
45764Will that gentleman take a chair?"
45764Will the mere insertion of an item in the supply- bill create this magical power?
45764Will those whose eyes have been gladdened by this choice work of nature, deem our eulogy aught but well- merited enthusiasm?
45764Will you not arrange that he call on her?"
45764Will you permit the army to escape which has carried terror into your families?
45764With an unobservant bow to the visitors, he went straight to the patient, and asked,"How go the symptoms?"
45764Would he walk up- stairs?
45764Would you believe it?
45764Would you suppose him to have a head and a heart full of romance yet?"
45764You are weeping?"
45764You can fear Harley-- Lord L''Estrange?
45764You can not forget Sprott?"
45764You can now tell us where the young lady is?"
45764You do n''t deny that?"
45764You do not, I daresay remember me?"
45764You have seen him?"
45764You know the kind of document, sir-- wanting employ?"
45764You know the_ Fair Rosamond_, now lying off Marchwood?"
45764You know what they say of my lodger?"
45764You weep; lean on me, whisper to me; why-- why is this?
45764You will stand for Lansmere?"
45764You would n''t like it, I think?
45764You would save me from disgrace, from a prison-- and what can I give you in return?
45764You''ll take a morsel of something?"
45764You''ve done, have you?"
45764You, my school friend, my life''s confidant-- you?"
45764_ Question._--"Have you attended any, and, if any, what Law Lectures?"
45764_ Question._--"How is the property of a bankrupt disposed of?"
45764_ Question._--"How would you file a Bill?"
45764_ Question._--"How would you proceed to make a man a bankrupt?"
45764_ Question._--"What are a Bill and Answer?"
45764_ Question._--"What are original writs?"
45764_ Question._--"What are post- nuptial articles?"
45764_ Question._--"What is Grand Larceny?"
45764_ Question._--"What is Simple Larceny?"
45764_ Question._--"What is a real action?"
45764_ Question._--"What steps would you take to dissolve an injunction?"
45764an execution?"
45764and are these its first sheets?"
45764exclaimed Leonard,"are you speaking of John Burley?"
45764for their sakes, will you marry me?"
45764here it is!--I looked in to ask you who copied this?"
45764how should you like to resemble A smoky and snuffy old man?
45764is it possible?
45764mon cher_, do you think I am a blockhead?"
45764or that dignified figure of state that calls you its"right honorable friend?"
45764said Mr. Guppy;"quarter?
45764see that smile-- forgi''en I''m sure is he, Wha could withstand temptation when hoping to win thee?"
45764she said, clasping her hands,"is this true?
45764to remember the Bond- street Lounger and his incomparable generation?
45764what do you think has happened?
45764what is_ your Excellency_ thinking of?"
45764you, too, like Virgil-- do you know he is my poet of all poets?"
45764your mother?--Nora?"
16583''And I take no amelioration to my people?'' 16583 ''Of the chosen?''
16583''Of the faith?'' 16583 A confederate thou must have,"she complained;"and whom dost thou trust more than Ta- user?"
16583A runner among the nobility?
16583Afoot?
16583Again would I ask, when wilt thou advise me concerning the statue? 16583 Ah?"
16583Alas, Ta- meri, and wilt thou droop again?
16583Am I forgiven?
16583Am I no longer worthy the robe of festivity?
16583Am I not left?
16583Am I not surely suffering for the sins of my fathers? 16583 Am I over- credulous?"
16583Am I so fallen from thy favor, shut out and denied thy confidence?
16583And I have not won thee?
16583And I take the message?
16583And dost thou remember that while I live my commands are yet law over thee?
16583And having given him the span, thou didst yield him the cubit also when he asked it?
16583And how shall it come to pass in the face of the Pharaoh''s denial and the might of Egypt''s arms? 16583 And how shall they appease Athor?"
16583And it was thou singing?
16583And leave me?
16583And shall we quarrel about him, also?
16583And she came not back?
16583And the message?
16583And there is naught in it of evil intent?
16583And there is not one of thy blood-- not one guardian kinsman left to thee?
16583And there shall be no death nor any of the world- sorrows therein?
16583And this?
16583And thou art a friend of the oppressed?
16583And thou art at thy wits''end?
16583And thou art ready for the tent and shepherd life of Israel?
16583And thou canst sleep this night in an open boat?
16583And thou hast no more sympathy for me than any alien would have?
16583And thou hast not named him in the writing?
16583And thou hast warmer regard for the stir of Memphis than the quiet of the north?
16583And thou takest up arms for Israel?
16583And thou wilt permit no eye to see thee enter or come forth from the valley?
16583And thy messenger, sir? 16583 And wilt thou say that to Nechutes and put him in the highest heaven?"
16583Are not the gods omnipotent and everywhere?
16583Are the Hebrews warriors? 16583 Are the fastenings secure?"
16583Are there any sick in the camp?
16583Are they to be sent forth?
16583Are ye lepers?
16583Art still as reluctant, Kenkenes?
16583Art thou a knave as well as a tyrant?
16583Art thou armed?
16583Art thou come to vex me with thy doubts and scout thy sovereign''s pious intentions?
16583Art thou mad?
16583Art thou not thy father''s eldest born?
16583Art thou seasoned? 16583 Art thou so troubled, then?"
16583Art thou, too, deserting me-- thou, who art the last to befriend me? 16583 Art vanquished?"
16583At the Hebrew''s sending?
16583At this hour?
16583Atsu?
16583Atsu?
16583Aye, I had heard-- but-- but hath it become of any import?
16583Aye, but what signet, Kenkenes?
16583Aye, but why rebel? 16583 But the prophetess bade the men at the poles to continue, saying:''Shall we cheat Jehovah in his intent and rescue an oppressor?''
16583But who art thou?
16583But who art thou?
16583But why? 16583 By Osiris--""And the Lady Masanath?"
16583Came some one, of a truth?
16583Can you avoid a knave if he hath designs on you?
16583Canst thou discover the name?
16583Canst thou force a woman to love thee?
16583Canst thou open the gates?
16583Come, dost thou want to marry Atsu?
16583Comfort? 16583 Did I not tell thee?"
16583Did I not warn thee from the first?
16583Did Rameses tell thee I loved him?
16583Did he tell thee?
16583Did they not profit by superstition? 16583 Did you speak, Rachel?"
16583Didst bring me aught, my son?
16583Didst go?
16583Didst love me, then, of a truth? 16583 Didst thou sleep well?"
16583Do we not leave the aged behind?
16583Do ye call yourselves men?
16583Does it not trouble thee when I, whom thou hast but lately known, am in sorrow? 16583 Does my father know of this?"
16583Dost Thou hear me, O Holy Mystery? 16583 Dost thou believe me so blind as to think thee sincere?
16583Dost thou believe that they would return?
16583Dost thou espouse the cause of thy nation''s enemy?
16583Dost thou follow me into Goshen, Caleb?
16583Dost thou forgive me?
16583Dost thou keep an unsleeping eye on the Pharaoh?
16583Dost thou know Rachel, the Israelitish maiden?
16583Dost thou know him?
16583Dost thou know him?
16583Dost thou know me, my son?
16583Dost thou know the amount of his share?
16583Dost thou leave us, Ta- user?
16583Dost thou miss the generous levels of the Delta in our crevice between the hills?
16583Dost thou mock me, Ta- user?
16583Dost thou remember how many dead the Incomparable Pharaoh left in Asia? 16583 Father, what manner of sending is this?"
16583Fearest thou?
16583For all time?
16583From whom art thou sent?
16583From whom dost thou bring this?
16583Gathering witch- weeds for an incantation, sorceress?
16583Go we to On?
16583Hadst thou no thought at all?
16583Has the Hebrew sorcerer already become a bugbear to the children?
16583Hast been in search of the Nile wind, Rachel? 16583 Hast caught the infectious terror of the infant- scaring, bugbear Hebrew?"
16583Hast lived out of the world, O Son of Mentu? 16583 Hast seen Hotep in Memphian revels since Kenkenes died?"
16583Hast thou caught some great idea on the wing or hast thou the round of actual labor to perform?
16583Hast thou come from afar?
16583Hast thou come to trouble the king with thy petty loves, during this, the hour of war?
16583Hast thou forgotten God''s promise to Abraham concerning the wicked cities of the plain? 16583 Hast thou forgotten the efficacy of the lemon in the removal of stains?"
16583Hast thou guessed why I sent for thee?
16583Hast thou had an eye to the master?
16583Hast thou not been among us often enough to discover?
16583Hast thou not called me wise in thy time?
16583Hast thou not heard that we may compel the gods?
16583Hast thou not something more to tell me?
16583Hast thou not this moment heard Memphis pine for him? 16583 Hast thou seen Athor?
16583Hast thou words with me?
16583Hast won the sanction of the Pharaoh for this betrothal?
16583Hath an ill befallen Israel?
16583Hath he a grudge against us?
16583Hath he departed,Kenkenes wearily asked,"or came he not hither?"
16583Hath he forsworn us?
16583Hath he kin in the city?
16583Hath much soft persuasion surfeited thee into deafness?
16583Hath she given thee her word?
16583Hath some one put thy slavish love of toil under ban? 16583 Hath the sun shone on architecture or sculpture since Meneptah succeeded to the throne?"
16583Hath the taskmaster set him to making brick?
16583Have I clothed thy kinsman with more grace than he owns?
16583Have I erred in crossing his will? 16583 Have I not said they are organized?
16583Have I not said? 16583 Have I not said?"
16583Have I not spoken truly?
16583Have ye also joined yourselves with Har- hat to run that hard- pressed child to earth?
16583His name?
16583How came they upon you? 16583 How comes it that thou art not afraid?"
16583How couldst thou tell this story to Deborah? 16583 How did they find it?"
16583How dost thou know these things,he asked hurriedly;"all these things-- sculpture, religion, history?"
16583How dost thou know?
16583How far wilt thou trust in me, Rachel?
16583How goes it with the statue?
16583How hath Egypt been helped of her gods, these grievous days?
16583How is he favored?
16583How is it that thou art ready to serve me? 16583 How long hath it been since the halls of my father''s house knew thy steps?
16583How long,she would say,"since thou didst reject the good Atsu because he is an idolater and an Egyptian?
16583How may I know thou art not mine enemy?
16583How may we?
16583How much?
16583How often does Nechutes come?
16583How shall I ever think of him without the bitterness of shame? 16583 How shall the elders keep of good heart if the young surrender?"
16583How swift art thou?
16583How?
16583I did but remark this thing; and I have spoken truly, have I not?
16583I espouse the cause of the oppressed, and which, now, is more oppressed-- Egypt or the Hebrew?
16583If he comes shall I send for thee?
16583If he means to blast us, wherefore hath he not spoken the cabalistic word ere this?
16583If thou art that son of the murket,he asked,"how is it thou art not dead?"
16583If thou lovest Bedouin warfare so well, wherefore dost thou join thyself to the Israelite who fights not at all?
16583Is a man less likely to be a patriot because he is of blood, or less fleet of foot because he is noble?
16583Is it Rameses who hath beset thee?
16583Is it known in the north what Mesu''s purpose is? 16583 Is it not also thine?"
16583Is it not enough, O Rameses?
16583Is it not so?
16583Is not its portion truly grievous if its single palm complain?
16583Is not the whole north a seething pot of lawlessness; and by the demons of Amenti, is not the Israelite the fire under the caldron? 16583 Is she also gone?"
16583Is she wedded?
16583Is that not yet gone?
16583Is the place far?
16583Is the son of Hofa away?
16583Is there any other sympathizing alien with whom I may compare and learn?
16583Is there anything more?
16583Is there not a patriot in Egypt? 16583 Is this place safe?"
16583Is thy heart then so firmly set on this thing?
16583Kenkenes, have I prayed in vain for the light to fall on thee?
16583Knowest thou aught of this game, in truth?
16583Knowest thou not that every first- born in Egypt died last night at the Hebrew''s sending?
16583Knowest thou not what they will do with thee? 16583 Land of mine?"
16583Leave it there to betray thee to the vengeance of the priesthood one day?
16583Let it all pass?
16583Mentu, the royal sculptor?
16583Must even the most loving hand in Egypt be lifted against thee?
16583Must we bide that time?
16583My father? 16583 Name?"
16583Name?
16583Nay, art thou losing spirit?
16583Nay, but am I also even with Ta- meri?
16583Nay, but how shall that restore my pride in my father?
16583Nay, but if there be but one therein?
16583Nay, but what have I done to vex the gods?
16583Nay, dost thou hear him?
16583Nay, hast thou done that, and hast thou not been heard? 16583 Nay, hath my lot been sterner than the portion of all Israel?"
16583Nay, now, how came a lamp in this tomb?
16583Nay, now, saw ye the like before?
16583Nay, now, what have I done?
16583Nay, now,he exclaimed;"where in this is divine disfavor?"
16583Nay, now,she protested,"wherein art thou better than Nechutes, save in the manner of telling thy calumny?
16583Nay, now; may I not guess, also?
16583Nay, what of him?
16583Nay, why not say that the Lord God will interfere before that time?
16583Nay,Hotep protested,"why wouldst thou perpetuate the affront to the Pharaoh?"
16583Nay,he said sullenly,"but since thou didst love the girl, how came it that thou didst not we d her long ago and save her this shame and danger?"
16583Nay; hast thou not heard of the Israelitish unrest?
16583Nay? 16583 Not yet gone to thy rest?"
16583Now, by Horus,he began,"am I to be denied by an Israelite that which the favoring Hathors designed I should have?
16583Now, what is contained herein?
16583Now, wilt Thou heed an alien''s plea; wilt Thou know a stranger petitioning before Thy high and holy place? 16583 O, seest thou not?
16583O, wilt thou put me aside for Masanath? 16583 Of Mesu''s sending?"
16583Of a surety, thou canst guess it, for are there many of thy tribe like thee-- without a kinsman?
16583Of a truth, dost thou not know? 16583 Of a truth, dost thou not know?"
16583Of a truth, was thine the fiat?
16583Of a truth? 16583 Of a truth?
16583Of a truth? 16583 Of a truth?"
16583Of a truth?
16583Of late?
16583One? 16583 Or shall we bring it about?"
16583Our gods, and the gods of every nation like them?
16583Rameses, how far wilt thou go in this trifling with the Lady Masanath?
16583Said he that? 16583 Said they aught concerning their intents-- this pair, who set upon you?"
16583Saith not thy faith,''Fear not; the Lord shall fight for thee?''
16583Saith not thy faith?
16583Sayest thou these things in prophecy?
16583See here, the scarab of Ptah,he said, tapping the bow with a paddle,"and the name of Memphis?"
16583Seeing that thou dost live, tell me what sheltered thee in this harvest of death?
16583Seeing that thou hast won the pardon of thy father, am I not also included in the restoration of good feeling? 16583 Seest thou, O my King, the sorrow of thy people?
16583Shall I give the story in full?
16583Shall I hold thee in thy position at the expense of Egypt''s peace, if not at the expense of the dynasty?
16583Shall a man summon further difficulty in the form of his self- esteem to stand in the way of his love? 16583 Shall we drop the ape first, my Lady?"
16583Shall we forego this thing?
16583Sit beside me?
16583So long, so long, Kenkenes, and not any change in thee?
16583So the same end is accomplished, wherefore quarrel over the motive? 16583 So to raise me to this office it is needful that something more than my deserts must have urged the king?"
16583So? 16583 So?
16583So? 16583 So?
16583So?
16583So?
16583So?
16583Surely thou dost not question his fidelity-- his power?
16583Ta- user,he continued, as she opened her lips to speak,"what wouldst thou have me do?"
16583That I was dead? 16583 The Israelite?"
16583The Israelites?
16583The fan- bearer charges him with slave- stealing?
16583The fan- bearer did not find thee?
16583The house of Atsu?
16583The new adviser?
16583The son of Mentu? 16583 The spirit?"
16583The yellow- haired Judahite?
16583Then if he is not dead,she said, searching for something to say,"why weepest thou?"
16583Then thou art Horemheb, the new taskmaster over Pa- Ramesu?
16583Then, being of the house of Mentu, thou hast no fear of my steadfastness, O my Sovereign?
16583Then, what hast thou done?
16583There is need for the signet now--"The noble Mentu, in trouble?
16583There was no frieze of bondmaidens-- naught of anything thou hast told me?
16583There were three of you and one man overthrew you all?
16583Thinkest thou so of a truth?
16583Thou art Seti- Meneptah?
16583Thou art he who found Jehovah in Egypt?
16583Thou art mystic, Father Jambres,he said persuasively;"what does thy heart tell thee of me?"
16583Thou art not a slave--"Nay, am I not?
16583Thou bringest us tidings, holy Father?
16583Thou dost not tell me that ye abide in this place?
16583Thou good Atsu,she said in a voice subdued with much weeping,"Wilt thou add more to mine already hopeless indebtedness to thee?
16583Thou hast a grudge against the conventional forms and the rules of the ritual?
16583Thou hast come to conduct me to court?
16583Thou hast found it so?
16583Thou hast told no one?
16583Thou madest all speed?
16583Thou wilt go with her, out of Egypt?
16583Thy faith?
16583Thy name?
16583To the king?
16583Vain hope, is it?
16583Was an Israelite maiden brought here? 16583 Was it not a masterful one?"
16583Was there a guest with the fair- haired Israelite maiden last night?
16583Was there ever such consummate misfortune? 16583 Wast thou taught?"
16583Wast thou, then, so impatient? 16583 Well,"he cried, stamping his foot, when the three before him kept silence,"have ye no word to say?"
16583What a tattling face is mine,he said,"Is her name written there also?"
16583What art thou called?
16583What brings thee here?
16583What can they do against us?
16583What cover may I offer thy dear head this night?
16583What did Egypt to Israel for a hundred years before these miseries came to pass?
16583What did I tell thee?
16583What do ye here?
16583What dost thou away from Goshen?
16583What dost thou tell me?
16583What dost thou with thy voice?
16583What especial labors is he planning?
16583What evil humor possesses Egypt?
16583What had they done?
16583What has befallen thee?
16583What has happened? 16583 What hast thou done in thy life?"
16583What hast thou done with the Israelite?
16583What hast thou to ask of the gods that thy king can not give thee?
16583What have I done?
16583What have I profited by this council? 16583 What have I said?"
16583What have we to do with them? 16583 What if the priesthood had learned of the deed?
16583What is amiss between the heir and the fan- bearer?
16583What is it, Nari?
16583What is it, Rachel? 16583 What is it, father?"
16583What is it? 16583 What is this concerning the Israelites?"
16583What is thy game?
16583What knowest thou?
16583What matter?
16583What matters it to me, his temper or her hurt?
16583What mean you?
16583What meanest thou?
16583What meanest thou?
16583What more have I to do of which to accuse myself, O Rameses? 16583 What possessed thee to go?"
16583What said Atsu?
16583What sayest thou?
16583What sayest thou?
16583What sheltered thee in last night''s harvest of death?
16583What want ye?
16583What was it, a palsy or the sun which kept thee at home this day?
16583What weighty things absorb my prince?
16583What were Egypt without thee, save a great darkness haunted and vacant? 16583 What wilt thou do with it when it is done?
16583What wilt thou do with it when it is done?
16583What wilt thou?
16583What wouldst thou have me do?
16583What?
16583When did he depart?
16583When hast thou broken thy fast?
16583When have I offended against the Hebrew?
16583When wilt thou we d me, my love?
16583When?
16583Where are my servants? 16583 Where dost thou keep thyself?"
16583Where dost thou say we go?
16583Where doth she live?
16583Where go we to- morrow?
16583Where hast thou been?
16583Where hast thou been?
16583Where hast thou these tidings?
16583Where is Har- hat?
16583Where is Kenkenes?
16583Where is he? 16583 Where is she?"
16583Where? 16583 Wherefore dost thou retreat, Io?"
16583Wherefore, I pray thee?
16583Wherefore, then, these frequent consultations with the wolf from Midian?
16583Wherefore? 16583 Wherefore?"
16583Wherefore?
16583Wherefore?
16583Wherefore?
16583Wherein doth that make me useful?
16583Whither shall we flee?
16583Who art thou, Lady?
16583Who art thou, my son?
16583Who art thou?
16583Who art thou?
16583Who hath the ear of Meneptah?
16583Who is this?
16583Who may these distracted women be?
16583Who of Memphis will think I come to Masaarah, save to look after the taking out of stone? 16583 Who said the word in the Pharaoh''s ear?"
16583Who succeeds him over Bubastis?
16583Who was that man?
16583Who was thy good friend in this?
16583Whom wilt thou trust and imperil instead of Ta- user?
16583Why camest thou not sooner with this to the king?
16583Why is this called the Marsh of the Discontented Soul?
16583Why may I not as justly doubt thy knowledge of thy heart?
16583Why may I not require of thee the services of a higher minister?
16583Why should your awful God destroy the innocent and the friend of Israel among the people of Egypt?
16583Why wait ye? 16583 Will he be there?"
16583Will they return?
16583Wilt thou forgive me?
16583Wilt thou humiliate him with thy notice, meddler?
16583Wilt thou not come up with him?
16583Wilt thou open thy heart further and give us thy meaning?
16583Wilt thou reproach me, Ta- user, for my son''s wilfulness?
16583Wilt thou rob me of the one balm to my humiliation? 16583 Wilt thou slander my father to me?"
16583Wilt thou swear fidelity by the holy Name?
16583Wilt thou tell us again what thou hast said, O Prince?
16583Wilt thou wager?
16583Wilt thou we d Rameses?
16583With the licensed forwardness of an old friend, I would ask what thou hast to crave of the lovers''goddess, O thou loveless?
16583Wouldst have him for a mate?
16583Wouldst thou have me stay and see him restored to favor under my very eyes? 16583 Wouldst thou have proof?"
16583Wouldst thou put thy nation to shame?
16583Wouldst use me for a price, my father-- wouldst barter thy daughter for something?
16583Ye may call me forth,Kenkenes replied,"but how shall ye return me to my banks?
16583Your authority?
16583''Vengeance?''
16583A man hath his better moments, and how shall they be entirely pure in the presence of shame?
16583After a silence Kenkenes asked in a lowered tone:"Hath he made demonstration?"
16583Ah, Ta- meri, where is thy womanly compassion?"
16583Ah, who is mine enemy?"
16583Am I harsh?
16583Am I not good to look upon?
16583Am I not pardoned?
16583Am I rough- spoken?
16583Am I to become a messenger for the gods?"
16583An accident?
16583And a question began to trouble him: What hand had marshaled the stars?
16583And again, wilt thou descend on them with arms now when they may with Justice cry''What have we done to thee?''
16583And further, did not Jambres, the mystic, who readeth men''s souls, trust me?"
16583And he said:''Of a truth?''
16583And if, of a surety, he is greater than the Power I have made, will he need my adoration or listen to my prayers?
16583And need any of these unhappy creatures in Masaarah see me except as it pleases me to show myself?"
16583And now, who is it that is full of sighs and strange conduct?
16583And seeing that she is born of slaves, how shall she be pampered above her parents?
16583And yet would such justice restore to Rachel the love she lost, the comfort that should have been hers?
16583And yet, no wall-- no statue-- no sign of--""How did you find it yesterday?"
16583And yet, wilt thou wait till all Israel shall crowd into thy presence and defy thee before thou actest?
16583Another opportunity for good and what would come of it?
16583Are these men dead?
16583Art thou assured that he hath an honorable purpose in mind for her?
16583Art thou blind to the ill- use thou invitest upon thine own head in thy care for me?
16583Art thou in trouble?"
16583Art thou indeed typical of thy race?"
16583Art thou not quite breathless?"
16583Art thou not shrewd enough to know how well I understand thee?
16583Art thou so little versed in the ways of men that thou dost wonder why we love or how we love or whom we love?
16583Art thou stubborn or blind, that thou dost not pity me and spare me the avowal?"
16583Art thou weary?
16583At the thought he paused and asked himself:"Am I suffering for the sacrilege?"
16583Atsu?"
16583Behold, am I not also oppressed because I may think to the upsetting of idolatry and the overthrow of mine oppressors?
16583But am I to tell thee in words what I would have thee know?
16583But doth the lion prey upon the carcass?
16583But how came it they did not entomb her nearer On?"
16583But how couldst thou know?
16583But if we fail--"she flung her head back and bewitched him with a heavy eye--"will it be hard for me to persuade the king?"
16583But is it not true, my Princess, that one may make his own content even in the sorriest surroundings?"
16583But tell me this: was he noble or a churl?"
16583But tell me-- what is the journey''s end?
16583But what need of my tongue''s abashed interpretation of that which I would say, since even the future''s history is open unto Thee?
16583But what personal grudge hath Mesu against Egypt or the priesthood or Meneptah?"
16583But what says he of her?"
16583But what shall keep him from searching for thee-- and are there any like to defend thee, if he find thee, seeing I am not there?
16583But what would have employed these ten youthful Hebrews in the event of such improvement?
16583But when thou speakest of Israel''s sake, which, by the testimony of past events, is now the more imperiled, Egypt or Israel?"
16583But would Rameses stay the chief adviser''s hand, seeing that the winning of Masanath depended on the prince''s neutrality, as Hotep had explained?
16583But would not the noble Hotep enter and await him?
16583But-- but how did he die?"
16583But-- hast thou no fear?"
16583But-- shall I?"
16583Came he by divine summons or did he seek the great god?
16583Came they not after me when I fled?"
16583Camest thou forth to meet me?"
16583Can I not surrender for thee as well?"
16583Can it endure longer?
16583Canst thou endure?
16583Chastisement of a people whose murmurs brought down consuming fire upon the land?
16583Could he hope to change Egypt when a king might not?
16583Could it be that this soulless man had scruples against giving him Masanath?
16583Destroy it?"
16583Did I not tell thee how good he is?"
16583Did Merenra come?"
16583Did it clothe the fields and bring them to harvest every revolution of the sun?
16583Did it hang the moon like a sickle in the west or lift it over the Arabian hills like a bubble of silver every eight and twenty days?
16583Did it spread the Nile over Egypt and call it again within its banks every year?
16583Did not the same God do each of these things in His wisdom?
16583Did she applaud or rebuke herself?
16583Did she pity or despise him?
16583Did she speak of the taskmaster?
16583Did you not return to camp?"
16583Didst find her?"
16583Do I take her?"
16583Does it not seem that since a maiden will not love one winsome man there must be another already installed in her heart?"
16583Does that oppress thee?"
16583Dost dream what thou didst miss through a malevolent caprice of the Hathors?
16583Dost know the Lady Miriam?"
16583Dost thou go on as sculptor, or wilt thou follow thy father into the art of building?"
16583Dost thou know a more princely prince, and is my father more of a king than I shall be?
16583Dost thou know that I have sorrows?
16583Dost thou love me, Rachel?"
16583Dost thou not love me enough to make me secure with the prince, and so, secure in mine advisership to the king?"
16583Dost thou remember me?"
16583Dost thou remember that I may have sleepless nights and unhappy days-- discontents, heartaches and oppressions?
16583Dost thou remember?"
16583Dost thou--?
16583Doth it not appear to thee, Egyptian, that there approaches a marvelous time?"
16583Faith?
16583For are there not pitiful shrines to Ra, Ptah and Amen within the boundaries of Goshen?
16583For are they, being small, less wondrous than the heavens, His handiwork?
16583For had it not been promised that out of Israel nations should be made, and kings should come?
16583Furthermore, dost thou not remember Deborah''s words while the spirit of prophecy was upon her?
16583Furthermore, if all Israel were like unto her, what heinous injustice had been perpetrated upon an able people?
16583Furthermore, why should the princess have taken up his cause?
16583Gazing down into his eyes, she said with sudden solemnity:"My Prince, may I give my life into thy hands?"
16583Had Rachel gone that way too far and beyond retreat?
16583Had she repented?
16583Had the same or a series of such events brought forth the earth and man?
16583Had the spiteful Seven, the Hathors, used him as a tool whereby mischief should be wrought between the nation and her slaves?
16583Has he confessed?"
16583Hast lost much to that gambling pair-- Ta- meri and Nechutes?
16583Hast quarreled with the gentle Seti?"
16583Hast thou any simpler plan to offer, holy Father?"
16583Hast thou any vanity?"
16583Hast thou ever heard an Israelitish harangue?"
16583Hast thou not heard of Canaan?"
16583Hast thou not plagued me, and may I not tease thee a little in revenge?
16583Hast thou spoken truly?"
16583Hath Egypt won any honor in this quarrel with Israel?
16583Hath Miriam a compelling glance, or Moses a power that came not from Jehovah?
16583Hath he any more right to her than I?
16583Hath he forgot the place?"
16583Hath he put him to torture yet?"
16583Hath she not beauty, hath she not wisdom, hath she not great winsomeness?
16583Hath the Lord God prepared thee against them?"
16583Hath the army of the Pharaoh availed him aught against these afflictions?
16583Hath thy father delivered to him his inheritance?"
16583Have I not been sufficiently explicit?
16583Have I not said I am sated with submission?
16583Have I not said, O my King?
16583Have I not served thee with hand and heart all thy life, asking nothing, sacrificing much?
16583Have I sinned in loving and protecting her whom I love?"
16583Have I won thine enmity, my Prince?"
16583Have the gods afflicted thee with madness, or have they given thee into the compelling hands of a knave?
16583Have we entered Canaan as God sware unto Abraham we should?
16583Have we possessed the gates of our enemies?
16583He knew that Ta- meri loved thee and he nobly surrendered, but was the hurt any less because he submitted?"
16583He looked at the statue furtively and murmured:"O Kenkenes, what madness made thee trifle with the gods?"
16583He overthrew the world, did he not?
16583He took no public part in the people''s affairs, yet who shall say that he was not near when Bezaleel wrought the wondrous angels for the ark?
16583Hear them confess it?"
16583Heard ye not what he said concerning a husband?
16583How came ye here?"
16583How can I mold thee, my King?"
16583How can she, who is not even a stately subject, be a stately queen?
16583How could he ask for Masanath?
16583How could he know that any thought had led her to do that thing save an impulse actuated by indifference or real dislike?
16583How had the Rebu war ended had it not been for Har- hat?
16583How is it with my father?"
16583How long since thou wast full of wrath against the chosen people who wedded Egyptians and became of them?
16583How many perished of thirst in the deserts and of cold in the mountains, and of pestilence in the marshes?
16583How may all these things be?"
16583How may we guess the motives of anything too great for us to conceive?
16583How may we know of a surety if it be gone?"
16583How much more did he know?
16583How shall I find God in an hour?"
16583How shall I tell her thou findest thyself?"
16583How shall I win Thine ear?
16583How shall it be with him if he is bequeathed from Pharaoh to Pharaoh of an intent like unto the last three?
16583How was he fortified?
16583How, then, shall she be fallen in their sight if she we d with an idolater?
16583I am a lovable lover, am I not, Masanath?
16583I doubt not there is''one''therein, but why shall we demand what manner of''one''it is when she may not even confess it to herself?"
16583I would people Egypt with a host of beauty, grace and naturalness--""Just as if they were alive?"
16583I, too, have spoken truly, have I not?"
16583If I yielded up everything, to my very cloak, should I have done more than return to them what they have given me?
16583If Rachel fled to Mentu, as Kenkenes had bidden her, could the murket protect her, even at his own peril?
16583If all Israel-- nay, if but part, if but its leaders were as able and determined as she, did Meneptah guess his peril?
16583If it were omnipotent, infinite and omnipresent, could it be an accident?
16583If it were, why not worship it and call it God?
16583If she had further information to impart, Mentu did not give her the opportunity, for had she not said that Kenkenes was well?
16583If the heaviest penalty overtook us is it not a result worth achieving at any cost?
16583If thou art to succeed, wilt thou selfishly keep thy success to thyself?"
16583If thou, their staff, art broken, who shall bear them up in their sorrow?
16583In the dark?"
16583Is he not a friend to Israel still?"
16583Is it for this that every day I have sent two fat ducks to the altar in thy name?
16583Is it not a problem worthy the study to ponder how he might have fared in battle with a god?"
16583Is it not lucid, O Son of Wisdom?"
16583Is it not part of my craft?
16583Is it not so, my Rachel?"
16583Is it not so?"
16583Is it that I must be separated from my beloved and wedded to the man I hate, that I have prayed to thee day and night?
16583Is it the ultimate goal of all flesh?"
16583Is it true or did I go mad?"
16583Is it-- Wouldst thou have me aid thee?"
16583Is she not the embodied essence of Beauty?
16583Is there a taboret near?"
16583Is there another?"
16583Is there anything further?"
16583Is there more of evil than of good wrought by the mind working silently?
16583Is there more, of a truth?"
16583Is there no other way?"
16583Is there no other way?"
16583Is there no sign, no manifestation that Thou dost attend?
16583Is there none in need?"
16583Is there not enough of Egypt''s women who are willingly loose that he must destroy the purest spirit on earth?
16583Is thy hand made strong with resource?
16583It is an essential in the make- up of the great of heart-- wilt thou put it out of thy fine nature?"
16583Kenkenes''face wore a startled expression; how had the Israelite divined his purpose?
16583Knowest thou that the Egyptians pursue thee?
16583Lady Masanath,"he exclaimed;"where in all Egypt hast thou hidden thyself these fourteen days?
16583Lo, is it not written in the early tombs?
16583Make him thy murket[2] as well, and with him dost thou know what thou canst do with these slaves?
16583May I not know, now?
16583May I not visit the crypt?"
16583Meanwhile, what might not be happening to Rachel in this chaos of gloom and clamor?
16583Men have lived in constant fellowship, but no nearer to the women whom they love, and am I less able than my kind?
16583Might he not go forward, on his way after Israel, till he found one of these?
16583Might not Har- hat at this hour be descending with his veterans, seasoned against the simoons of Arabia, upon Israel, demoralized in the storm?
16583Might not the heavy hand of the powerful favorite fall also on the head of the king''s architect?
16583Must I turn a spear upon mine own?"
16583Must I, too, lay bare my heart in words?"
16583Must ye go mounted, in litters, in chariots, afraid of the harsh earth and a rough mile?
16583Nay, now, dost thou fear me?
16583Nay, now, is that not like the boy?
16583Nay, there was conspiracy laid against her by the Pantheon, and what had she done to deserve it?
16583Nay, why vex thee with matters of state?
16583Nay; and wilt thou play the barbarian and put two and a half million at once to the sword?"
16583None of loyal Egypt will espouse their cause, and without money how shall they get them mercenaries?
16583Not here in this haunted cave?"
16583Now, for what one dost thou concern thyself?
16583Now, hast thou not guessed my mind by this?
16583Now, in the name of the mystery- dealing Hathors, how came it that he died not with the first- born?"
16583Now, was anything more brutal?
16583Of her, what would thy heart say?
16583Or, indeed, were they not prejudiced against her as all the world was?
16583Osiris, whom Set destroyed?
16583Power, wealth or a wife?
16583Presently she lifted his face and said with sudden impulsiveness:"Dost, of a truth, believe everything that is told thee?"
16583Promised she not peace for us, and happiness and long tranquillity to follow these days of sorrow?
16583Rachel--"his voice sobered and his face grew serious--"Rachel, wilt thou we d me this day?"
16583Rachel?"
16583Rameses?"
16583Saw you any sacrilege, or was it a phantom of your stupid dreams?"
16583Saw you not the temper of the assembly to- night?
16583Sawest thou not the Hebrew''s gaze upon thee?
16583Say, who is it, thou or another, who playeth a perilous game with Israel, this day, when its God hath already rent Egypt and consumed her in wrath?
16583Say, wilt thou accept?"
16583Seb,[1] whom Toth had supplanted?
16583Seest thou not, O Kenkenes, that the ancestor is terribly responsible?
16583Seest thou, my son?"
16583Shall He condemn us who only have held steadfast?
16583Shall He forget His daintiest, frailest works for His mightiest?
16583Shall He stamp us out, with His promise yet unfulfilled?
16583Shall He then fail to hear the voice of His sons in whom He hath taken greater pains?"
16583Shall I bring them upon thy head, also, my Kenkenes?"
16583Shall I go on?"
16583Shall I go with thee into slavery?
16583Shall I learn thy tongue, turn my back on my people, become one of Israel and hate Egypt?
16583Shall I let one go, seeing that I am holding the body at the sacrifice of Egypt?"
16583Shall I pray thy prayers, kneel in thy shrines?
16583Shall I take the army or leave it distributed over Egypt?"
16583Shall I take thee to Atsu, or wilt thou stay with me?"
16583Shall I, being a believer in Israel''s God, be willing for the Pharaoh to pursue Israel?"
16583Shall it fail because thou wast envious for my safety above Egypt''s?
16583Shall the last remnant of the unhappy family be stamped out in dishonor?
16583Shall we invoke the king in the blameless name of the holy One, and demand forgiveness in the name of Him who forgiveth no sin?
16583Shall we not go on, my master?"
16583Shall we put any great sin past the knave who sinneth monstrously, or divine his methods who is a master of cunning?
16583Shall we say that the spinner of the gossamer, the painter of the rose is not fine?
16583Should he dismiss his charioteer and journey to the nomarch''s mansion in the companionable luxury of the litter?
16583Something in his attitude seemed to say,"What profiteth all Thy care, O Lord?
16583That I had played thee false?
16583The Hebrew will not betray us, and who else will know of it?
16583The irrepressible Menes observed to Io in one of his characteristic undertones, but so that all the company heard it:"What makes us surly to- night?
16583The sculptor lifted a stern face to his son and said, with emphasis:"Wilt thou further offend the gods, thou impious?
16583Then, after a pause, she asked:"Does the murket follow the court?"
16583They had turned a deaf ear to him, and why should he render them further homage?
16583Thinkest thou I cared aught for the dreamer and his loves?
16583Thinkest thou not, good Hotep, that, if they must go, we may by right require their flocks of them to replenish the pastures of Egypt?"
16583Thou art a good child, Ta- meri; how canst thou hurt him so?"
16583Thou believest this Hebrew to be honest in his show of interest in his people?"
16583Thou hast received no letter as yet which was not intended for thee?"
16583Thou knowest better than I. Wilt thou aid me?"
16583Thou knowest the end of Israel?"
16583Thou knowest the punishment which will overtake me?"
16583Thou, in trouble?
16583Thou, the light- hearted?"
16583Through thee?
16583Thy vanity?
16583Vengeance upon a God who hath blasted a nation with His breath?
16583Was Israel to escape, or Har- hat to be destroyed?
16583Was it the face of Miriam or the fear of Moses or the might of the Lord that tamed them?
16583Was it the storm or the army that had frightened them?
16583Was not Egypt most ominously menaced?
16583Was not this a slave?
16583Was not this a tomb?
16583Was the accident continuously attendant?
16583Was there ever such intrepid lawlessness?"
16583Was there not eloquent testimony in her every feature and in every act of that hour he had been with her?
16583Was this the spirit of the tomb?
16583We may discipline the soul and chasten the body, but how may we govern the mind and its disorderly beliefs?
16583Were they to make his shame more poignant by pitying him and punishing him not at all?
16583What aileth thee, sweet Io?
16583What did he?"
16583What had he done, indeed?
16583What had my father''s man to do with thy hasty resolution to depart?"
16583What hand had marshaled the stars?
16583What have I done that thou shouldst desert me?"
16583What have I not offered and what hast thou given me?
16583What have I won therefrom?
16583What if it came from the lips of an hereditary slave of the Pharaoh-- a toiler in the quarries, an infidel, an alien nomad?
16583What if one of these women had it in her power to take thee against thy will?
16583What is amiss, Rachel?"
16583What is her little dark beauty compared to mine?
16583What is she, a slave, to thee?"
16583What is the boon that thou mayest justly ask of me?"
16583What is thy pleasure, Rachel?
16583What knowest thou?"
16583What manner of man was he about to look upon,--a sorcerer, a trafficker in horrors, a confounder of men?
16583What monarch before thee had them?
16583What more?"
16583What more?"
16583What more?"
16583What must the world think of him-- of me?
16583What need for him to wait for the word that gave assent?
16583What need of further adornment when she was mantled and crowned with a glory of golden hair?
16583What of Kenkenes?
16583What of him?
16583What of him?"
16583What of that unapproachable, unfeeling Omnipotence he had created in their stead?
16583What proof had he to offer against this impeachment?
16583What sayest thou?"
16583What shall I do with the Hebrews?"
16583What shall I do with this?"
16583What should I do?"
16583What strait brought you to seek such asylum as this?"
16583What then of Rachel, of his own father, of the faithful ministers, of all whom Kenkenes had loved or befriended?
16583What thinkest thou of these people?"
16583What thinkest thou?
16583What thinkest thou?"
16583What was he like?
16583What were the thoughts that came to her then?
16583What wilt thou with her?"
16583What would avail him, then, to defend himself?
16583What would be his next play?
16583What would prevent the beauty from seeing it also and preempting to herself the honors of his disheartenment?
16583What, other than the reclamation of the signet by the Incomparable Pharaoh, even as Mentu had said?
16583What, then, O Rameses?"
16583When did an Egyptian desert his gods for the faith of the Hebrew he took in marriage?
16583When?"
16583Where are my servants?"
16583Where are they?
16583Where do I fail thee in thy little ideals?
16583Where does he dwell?"
16583Where had this young visionary, new- released from prison, found evidence to impeach this powerful favorite?
16583Where hast thou been, these many months?
16583Where hast thou been-- what are thy fortunes, Kenkenes?"
16583Where is she?"
16583Where is thy brother?"
16583Where is thy pride?"
16583Where lies the land?"
16583Where shall I find that refuge from the pitying smile of the nation?
16583Where was the sea?
16583Where, indeed, are any faithful, save in Israel?
16583Where, then, was any need of a superfluity of powers?
16583Wherefore am I taken?"
16583Wherefore would he have thee overtake these people?"
16583Wherefore?
16583Wherein hast thou rebuked him, in casting away the trinket?
16583Wherein was the murket more immune than his son?
16583Which is in distress-- in need of allies?"
16583Who can call death by hard labor, murder?"
16583Who doubts it?
16583Who hath been more faithful to thee and whom hast thou served more cruelly?
16583Who is it that hath forgotten the idols and the abominations and the bondage of her people and mourneth after one of the oppressors?
16583Who knows but there is somewhat of the vulture- nostril in man, tickled with a vague taint?
16583Who knows?
16583Who reached thee with them before me?"
16583Who shall say that his purest jewel did not enter the breast- plate of the high priest?
16583Who, then, offered him this wise counsel?
16583Whom dost thou mean?"
16583Why didst thou not go?"
16583Why do we carve at all, if not to show how we appear to the world or the world appears to us?
16583Why does he not marry honorably?"
16583Why had not the Hebrews protected her in the beginning?
16583Why may I not go with thee?"
16583Why need he hide his escape?
16583Why need we go hence?
16583Why should I take up the private concerns of my subjects when I am already burdened with heavy cares?
16583Why should she stay when Kenkenes was gone?
16583Why wilt thou thrust me aside?"
16583Why-- thy bed-- have I slept under it?"
16583Will He bless the land, then, with such a queen as thou wouldst be?"
16583Will the vengeance befall all Egypt, the good as well as the bad?"
16583Will thine interests go to wreck if thou bidest till dawn?"
16583Wilt thou come?"
16583Wilt thou defeat me also in the one good deed I would do?
16583Wilt thou deny the Hand that led thee to me, here, in this hour-- that cared for me during the season of distress and peril?
16583Wilt thou execute Israel one by one as it raises up a leader against thee?
16583Wilt thou fling up thy hands and open thy gates to thine enemy, while yet there is plenty within the realm and men to post its walls?
16583Wilt thou give me up, after a single effort?
16583Wilt thou go with me into Memphis-- if this sending is withdrawn?"
16583Wilt thou keep his secret also, my Prince?"
16583Wilt thou leave this and proceed in the other?"
16583Wilt thou not give her to me to wife?
16583Wilt thou not permit me?
16583Wilt thou not prove thy love for Kenkenes and aid him?"
16583Wilt thou restore it and use it first in this short- lived conflict with a mongrel race of shepherds?
16583Wilt thou set the crown upon her unregal head, invest her with the royal robes, and yield thy homage to a scowl and a bitter word?
16583Wilt thou take it as a peace- offering from my hands and wear it always?"
16583Wilt thou tell him, when thou canst?"
16583Wilt thou tell me upon whose persuasion thou hast gathered thine army and set forth to pursue Israel?"
16583Wilt thou tell us when and from whom the maiden fled?"
16583Would I have brought thee thy warning, knowing it such, were I thine enemy?
16583Would he smile upon the purposes of the Pharaoh?
16583Would the sun look upon the king through a veil, or openly?
16583Would ye hear me deny, protest, deprecate?
16583Would ye see me cringe?
16583Wouldst thou go against a host of trowel- wielding slaves with an army that levels lances only against free- born men?
16583Wouldst thou sleep?"
16583Yet what right have I to deal alms to them from whom my riches come?
16583Yet, canst thou be happy being wroth and at odds with the world?"
16583[ 1]"How am I to reach it?"
16583after three years?"
16583but dost thou not guess what he will do?
16583do you distribute them now?
16583has my news outridden me?"
16583he mourned to himself,"why may I not tell her how much I love her?"
16583he was saying,"why didst thou not go to my father as I bade thee?
16583seest thou not, Masanath?
16583she broke off,"did Atsu name him?"
16583what have I done?"