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 |
---|---|
20762 | 1,868 450? |
20762 | 2,583 500? |
20762 | Buford turned to him and said,"What are you doing here, sir?" |
20762 | Full of enthusiasm and the memory of their past achievements they said to me proudly,_"If we ca n''t hold it, where will you find men who can? |
20762 | He said quickly,''Why not?'' |
20762 | Kress said,"Why, what is the matter, general?" |
20762 | Meade expressed surprise at the information and said,"Why, where is Sedgwick?" |
33585 | ***** It has been asked, what could have been Haskell''s object in so perverting the facts of history relative to the Battle of Gettysburg? |
33585 | As he arrived near me he asked,''How is it going here?'' |
33585 | Call you this"running like rabbits?" |
33585 | Do they call these militia?'' |
33585 | Does the country know any better than the President that Meade, Hancock and Gibbon were entitled to some little share of such credit?" |
33585 | Had he not just received the information from First Lieutenant Haskell that the enemy had been"entirely repulsed?" |
33585 | How do the Survivors of these Regiments regard the statement of the History Commission of Wisconsin, that"they sought to hide like rabbits?" |
33585 | IS THE ASSAULT ENTIRELY REPULSED?'' |
33585 | If the object was to prove that they were just as vainglorious as Haskell, has not this fact been fully established by their published books? |
33585 | Is it anywhere upon record that General Meade sent such an order? |
33585 | Is it not clear that if such an order had been sent and obeyed, the enemy would not have been repulsed? |
33585 | Was not that a fit occasion and those fugitives the men on whom to try the temper of the Solingen steel? |
33585 | What can be the reason? |
33585 | and that the loss usually sustained by the Eleventh Corps was in prisoners? |
33121 | Did not Old Greece, or some tribe from about the sources of the Nile win it? |
33121 | Here, what are these men falling back for? |
33121 | How is it going? |
33121 | Shall we attack the Rebel? |
33121 | Then why tell me what I do not ask or care to know? |
33121 | Will he attack us? |
33121 | Will there be a battle to- day? |
33121 | Will you see your color storm the wall alone? |
33121 | And how look these fields? |
33121 | And my horse can hardly move-- the spur will not start him-- what can be the reason? |
33121 | And what if that invasion should be successful, and in the coming battle, the Army of the Potomac should be overpowered? |
33121 | As he arrived near me, coming up the hill, he asked, in a sharp, eager voice:"How is it going here?" |
33121 | At four o''clock on the morning of the Third, I was awakened by Gen. Gibbon''s pulling me by the foot and saying:"Come, do n''t you hear that?" |
33121 | But where is the infantry? |
33121 | Can you assist him?" |
33121 | Did they not charge him personally, with the defeat at Chancellorsville? |
33121 | Do these thick mounds cover the fiery hearts that in the battle rage swept the crest and stormed the wall? |
33121 | Do you not think that by this time we began to feel a personal interest in this fight? |
33121 | Does the country know any better than the President that Meade, Hancock and Gibbon were entitled to some little share of such credit? |
33121 | Has it vanished in smoke? |
33121 | How? |
33121 | I would ask of a man I met,"Do you know, sir, where the 2d corps hospitals are?" |
33121 | Is it strange? |
33121 | Is the assault already repulsed?_"his voice quicker and more eager than before. |
33121 | Is this a nightmare or a juggler''s devilish trick? |
33121 | Might not the enemy fall upon and destroy the First Corps before succor could arrive? |
33121 | Oh, where is Gibbon? |
33121 | That Corps gone, what is there between the Second Corps, and these yelling masses of the enemy? |
33121 | The artillery fight over, men began to breathe more freely, and to ask, What next, I wonder? |
33121 | Then I would ask sharply,"Did you understand me to ask for the 12th corps hospital?" |
33121 | Thought we, what could this mean? |
33121 | To the question asked the men,"What do you think of this?" |
33121 | Was ever a more absurd supposition? |
33121 | Was ever claim so absurd? |
33121 | Was ever princely couch or softest down so soft as those rough blankets, there upon the unroofed sod? |
33121 | Was ever such a chorus of sound before? |
33121 | Was not that a fit occasion, and these fugitives the men on whom to try the temper of the Solinzen steel? |
33121 | Was there ever anything so fine before? |
33121 | Were they not still burning with indignation against him for that disgrace? |
33121 | What other expression had we that was not mean, for such an awful universe of battle? |
33121 | What sound was that? |
33121 | What was it ever put there for? |
33121 | What would be the result? |
33121 | Where was I? |
33121 | Who can describe such a conflict as is raging around us? |
33121 | Who could sketch the changes, the constant shifting of the bloody panorama? |
33121 | Who of us could tell but that he would be the first to need them? |
33121 | Why does the Western Army suppose that the Army of the Potomac does not fight? |
33121 | Why not go to your regiment and be a man?" |
33121 | Will the country remember them? |
33121 | With his not greatly superior numbers, under such circumstances had Gen. Meade attacked, would he have been victorious? |
33121 | Would it not be? |
33121 | or if stately history fill as she list her arbitrary tablet, the sounding record of this fight? |
33121 | were my senses mad? |
33121 | where is Hancock?--some general-- anybody with the power and the will to support that wasting, melting line? |
55627 | ''Bout time to begin, ai n''t it? |
55627 | Ach, Emmy,cried Mrs. Schmidt,"will we ever get to your gran''pop and my brother?" |
55627 | And who,drawled the tall man,"who may Emmyline Willing be?" |
55627 | Are n''t you afraid that there biscuit''ll p''isen you? |
55627 | Are we going to give them water? |
55627 | Are you going away? |
55627 | Are you going to give we- all some of them real biscuit? |
55627 | Are you really going away from me? |
55627 | Can I ask? |
55627 | Can I go down to the woods to find my brother? |
55627 | Can you bake? |
55627 | Can you see up there some mounted officers? |
55627 | Could n''t she be got out of this? |
55627 | Did n''t we win? |
55627 | Did you find Willing? |
55627 | Did you have wounded rebels here? |
55627 | Did you see this? |
55627 | Do men like to fight? |
55627 | Do you see the white horse? |
55627 | Does this end the war? |
55627 | Emmyline,he said gently, when she brought him the things for which he had asked,"do you suppose you could help me?" |
55627 | Emmyline,said he, in his pleasant drawl,"how about them biscuit?" |
55627 | Goin''to pull out? |
55627 | Got a man here by the name of Willing? |
55627 | Grandmother, where are you? |
55627 | Has blood been shed here? |
55627 | How are they at home? |
55627 | How did_ you_ get here? |
55627 | I wonder what they are gunning? |
55627 | Is Bertha safe, mother? |
55627 | Is n''t the battle over? |
55627 | Is the battle over? |
55627 | Is there going to be_ more_? |
55627 | Is there to be a battle? |
55627 | Leetle Emmyline,he shouted,"you get some warm water in a basin and some old cloths, will you, Emmyline?" |
55627 | Like to fight, Emmyline? 55627 Like to fight?" |
55627 | Little Emmeline, is it you? |
55627 | May I go down to the square now, mother? |
55627 | Sissy, do you know any way to get this door open short of breaking it in? |
55627 | Well, sissy,he drawled,"and who may you be?" |
55627 | Well, you find out for me, will you, Sam? 55627 Were you in the battle, Emmeline?" |
55627 | What are they doing? |
55627 | What can it be? |
55627 | What in the world is the matter? |
55627 | What is it? |
55627 | What is that noise over there, say? |
55627 | What is that noise? |
55627 | What shall I do, then? |
55627 | What shall we do? |
55627 | What will become of them? |
55627 | What will they do to him? |
55627 | What will they do with them? |
55627 | What''s the matter? |
55627 | When did you come out here? |
55627 | Where are you going, Emmyline? |
55627 | Where are you? |
55627 | Where are you? |
55627 | Where have they gone? |
55627 | Where have you been? |
55627 | Where is your baby? 55627 Where will they get them?" |
55627 | Where''s the colonel? |
55627 | Where,--Henry looked about, startled,--"where are grandfather and grandmother?" |
55627 | Why do n''t they take them, too? |
55627 | Why not? |
55627 | Will it last after to- morrow? |
55627 | Will there be more wounds to- morrow? |
55627 | Will they get them? |
55627 | Will they take him away? |
55627 | Will you let me go if I bake you some? |
55627 | Without_ me_? 55627 You wo n''t go out of the kitchen, will you, sissy?" |
55627 | A battle? |
55627 | Above all, where was Henry? |
55627 | And where may the owner of this place be?" |
55627 | And where was Emmeline, her darling, her little girl, whom she had un- wittingly sent into greater danger? |
55627 | Are you going to miss_ me_?" |
55627 | Could she bake? |
55627 | Could you leave her brother here? |
55627 | Do you hear me?" |
55627 | Emmyline, would you"--Private Christy blushed like a boy--"would you give me a kiss?" |
55627 | Had Bertha been taken into the cellar as the soldier advised? |
55627 | Had there been fighting in quiet, peaceful Gettysburg? |
55627 | Henry had seen the object toward which his sister''s erratic steps were turned and had finished his sentence,"Is it mine, mother?" |
55627 | How had she got to bed? |
55627 | How had these men come up so quietly? |
55627 | How was poor Bertha? |
55627 | I suppose she could n''t come down and talk to him?" |
55627 | Illustration:_ Page 93_"EMMELINE,"HE SAID GENTLY,"DO YOU SUPPOSE YOU COULD HELP ME?"] |
55627 | Like layin''up there with arms and legs ruined? |
55627 | Like livin''their days without half a body? |
55627 | Noise ca n''t hurt ye, do n''t ye know that? |
55627 | Not one of those sick men could even raise his head-- who was it who came upon her so stealthily and suddenly? |
55627 | THE TERROR PAST 130 ILLUSTRATIONS"EMMELINE,"HE SAID GENTLY,"DO YOU SUPPOSE YOU COULD HELP ME?" |
55627 | Was he lying wounded, bleeding, alone? |
55627 | Was the army still here? |
55627 | What shall we do?" |
55627 | What would she see to- morrow? |
55627 | Where had they taken him? |
55627 | Where was Emmeline, Emmeline who was forever getting into mischief of some kind? |
55627 | Where was Mary? |
55627 | Where was her mother? |
55627 | Where was she? |
55627 | Where were the elder Willings? |
55627 | Where were they? |
55627 | Where were those thousands of blue- coated soldiers? |
55627 | Why did not the blue- coated soldiers come and drive them away? |
55627 | Why did they permit this great army to camp on these hills, to occupy her grandfather''s house, and his fields, and the other fields round about? |
55627 | Why was she still dressed? |
55627 | Would she bake? |
55627 | You would n''t bake me a real biscuit, I suppose?" |