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 |
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A51114 | But must frequent Blood- lettings be indispensibly necessary to preserve our Constitution? |
A51114 | If it be enquired, Whether Matters are like to last at the same rate they are now at in Denmark? |
A51114 | If this be the Case of the Gentleman and Burger, what can be expected to be that of the poor Peasant or Boor? |
A51114 | Shall we for ever retain the ill Character they give us of the most mutable and inconstant Nation of the World? |
A51114 | They asked what we desired to buy them for? |
A51114 | What else should we do for a Stock of Generals in such Havock as the present Wars make of them? |
A51114 | What we would do with them? |
A51114 | Which however we do not deserve, no more than England does that of Regnum Diabolorum, so common in unconsidering Forreigners Mouths? |
A51765 | But suppose this second War of the Swedes was unjust, as the Danes alledge, must therefore the Innocent and the Guilty be treated alike? |
A51765 | For what has the Duke of Gottorp to do with it? |
A51765 | For what should hinder the Duke of Gottorp, or by what Law is he prohibited to fortifie a Town, or raise a Fort? |
A51765 | Now, who must restore the Duke unto all his Rights? |
A51765 | VVho would not have thought the King fully satisfied with this? |
A51765 | What if the King of Denmark, for reason of State, excepting against this Court, refuses to restore the Duke? |
A51765 | Who can shew a Duke of Sleswick thus wholly divested of his high Prerogatives? |
A51765 | Who ever saw a Soveraign Prince without Royalties? |
A47431 | And here how few Kings are left to end their days in Peace? |
A47431 | BUT to what end have we labour''d hitherto, in the foregoing Chapter? |
A47431 | Bu ● ● however to try again: What should hinder the Swedes, who have their Eye upon Danmark from introducing Liberty? |
A47431 | But what''s the reason of this plenty, and fertility? |
A47431 | Come we now to the grand Query, Whither matters are like to last at the same rate they are now at, in Danmark? |
A47431 | Do they pay no Taxes? |
A47431 | If this be the Case of the Gentleman and Burgher, what can be expected to be that of the poor Peasant? |
A47431 | In the next place, where was their Freedom? |
A47431 | Is not the King of Spain''s drest after his own manner? |
A47431 | It is more astonishing to me, to see a man write without considering: For in what did these former Riches consist? |
A47431 | Land being worth nothing, how must the Counts and Barons do to live? |
A47431 | Lastly, how were they perswaded intirely to part with their Liberty? |
A47431 | Or what have they gained more than the Burghers? |
A47431 | Pray ● Sir, to be serious, do they in Danmark first search for what a man has by him, and then lay on the Taxes? |
A47431 | Very well, Sir, Pray did your own Knowledge, or Experience confirm this to be a truth? |
A47431 | We''ll suppose the Butchers so mad as to do so: But how came he to know this curiosity? |
A47431 | Well, but again, may not the freshness and newness of this alteration of their condition, produce an alteration in the Government? |
A47431 | What Country can boast of more than Plenty and Neatness? |
A47431 | What are their Revenues enlarged? |
A47431 | What game is permitted by Law to be sold in our English Markets? |
A47431 | What indeed? |
A47431 | What is this but a Contradiction? |
A47431 | What man in England would set up his Coach to avoid the Poll Tax, by which he is to pay five pound more for keeping it? |
A47431 | What then will become of the rest of the Adelen, or native Gentry? |
A47431 | Which in a rational mans opinion, is more honorable? |
A47431 | Who thinks his Estate to have the worse title, because he sees People daily fling their Money away in Stock- jobbing? |
A47431 | did he cheapen lean meat, and stinking meat? |
A47431 | does it proceed from the goodness of the Soil, and the Industry of the Inhabitants? |
A47431 | how comes it to pass, that the Danish Merchants have so good Credit in both those Cities, and how come they to have it in London? |
A47431 | in the mean time what does this Tax do here? |
A47431 | or did some of your sensible grave Persons, p. 2. impose this silly story upon you? |
A47431 | or from any Natural, Moral, or else some Political Account? |
A47431 | or rather as in other Countries, proportion them to his way of living, his estate and employments? |
A47431 | since necessary fresh Fish is wanting? |
A47431 | to be born in a little Dutchy;( as Holstein is) and a Feif holden of the Empire or to be a native of one of the most Antient Kingdoms in Europe? |
A47431 | which had in a manner ruined the People? |
A35311 | ( Jodocus), d. 1713? |
A35311 | ( Jodocus), d. 1713? |
A35311 | An tu, inquit, ● ● unculae vitulinae mavis quam veteri Imperatori credere? |
A35311 | And it is remarkable what is related of the Jesuites in France; who being then asked, What their Opinion was of this Book? |
A35311 | And was not the Emperour, by their Advices, brought to the very Brink of Ruin? |
A35311 | And yet these are some of hi ● admired Philosophers, these his inge ● ● ous Comparisons: is not that taking pain ● for nothing? |
A35311 | But what if the Appeal is pass''d the Council? |
A35311 | But what if we should endeavour to stop the Current? |
A35311 | Can our Author have forgot that successive Off- spring of Heroes, of that illustrious Family, from whence his present Majesty is descended? |
A35311 | Can we then with a safe Conscience openly resist our Supreme Lord? |
A35311 | Could not an impartial Account have been given of the Present State of Denmark, without a Romantick Preface fill''d up with Chimerical Notions? |
A35311 | If we should prove, that the entire and sole dependance of the Lutheran Priests from their Princes, is a Chimera of his own? |
A35311 | Itaque propter hanc avaritiam imperatorum quantas calamitates, quocunque ventum sit, nostri exercitus ferant, quis ignorat? |
A35311 | Quemenim poss ● mus imperatorem aliquo in numero putare, cujus inexe ● rcitu veneant centuriatus, atque venierint? |
A35311 | These are his Words: But must frequent Blood- letting be indispensibly necessary to preserve our Constitution? |
A35311 | Utinam plures arbitramini per hosces annos militum vestrorum armis hostium urbe, an hibernis, sociorum civitates esse deletas? |
A35311 | Was not Avarice as enormous among the Romans as it is among us? |
A35311 | Was not among them also a Lysander so justly accused of Crudelity, and other enormous Crimes? |
A35311 | Were not, by Father Parson''s Means, Seminaries for English Jesuites erected as well in France as Spain, Portugal, and the Netherlands? |
A35311 | What if Judgment is given according to the imperial Laws, and we are cast? |
A35311 | What is the Duty of a Prince against his Superiour Lord, as the Emperour, in such a Case? |
A35311 | and do the most judicious presage any good to the French King, from having followed their Methods? |
A35311 | or whether they did intend to conform themselves according to the Approbation of the same by their General at Rome? |
A35311 | than the House of Austria? |
A35311 | whether they would oppose it? |