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
39030Are not the wares vended in these places proverbially_ bad_?
39030Do not all manner of imposters from these places deluge the country with their spurious goods, and impose them upon the unwary part of the public?
39030[ 146] State Papers, Domestic, 1566?
39030[ 147] State Papers, Domestic, 1619, Oct.?
39030[ 148]_ Ibid._, 1620, Jan.?
39030[ 149]_ Ibid._, 1620, Jan.?
39030[ 150]_ Ibid._, 1620, Jan.?
39030wool- comber corvisarius, gorwicer, cordewaner, sutor-- shoemaker coupere, hoppere(?)
45425According to the first theory they were the persistence of earlier institutions; but what were these institutions?
45425But first, on what principle were the guilds classified?
45425How could the guilds hope to escape from the consequences of misfortunes which struck at their very roots?
45425How could they be expected to go in search of improvements, when they were so slow in adopting them?
45425Is it to be wondered at that mastership in many crafts gradually became hereditary?
45425Should it aim only at mutual assistance, or should it be competent to act in disputes between members?
45425Should the guild be optional or compulsory, open or closed?
45425Was it according to the vital importance of the needs they existed to supply?
45425What became, then, of the intimate and cordial relations between masters, journeymen, and apprentices?
45425What share should masters and workmen take in it?
45425What was the motive of this limitation?
45425What weight had the old regulations in view of this transformation of methods and appliances?
45425What, then, were the relations of these Craft Guilds to the municipalities and to the State?
45425Who could uphold them?
45425Why so many deaths followed by so many resurrections?
45425[ 116] How, thus mutilated, could they stand against the foreign competition of which their own members had become the most formidable allies?
36934A bag that was too heavy to have silver in it would have gold?
36934Alan, my son,he said presently,"do you know what lead is?"
36934Alone?
36934And are you going to be a goldsmith in Chepe too?
36934And if it is all to vanish in a few years, why do we paint?
36934And so thy mother makes her living weaving wool, does she?
36934And what do you in London?
36934And who taught David?
36934And why are you wasting time on them?
36934And you want to learn my trade-- eh?
36934Are not these the red roses of Provence?
36934Are ye wantin''a stone- mason just now?
36934Are you spying on me again?
36934Aye, I''ll warrant,grunted Simon,"an Eyre would be a born shoemaker, and name him Crispin---- Eh, lad, what be you after with that leather?"
36934Barbara,he said to the girl,"art anxious to get home?
36934Basil Ossorin, an Irish monk from England?
36934Be you wanting the job?
36934But are you going to leave your looms for them to burn?
36934But suppose that a way could be found to make the colors lasting?
36934But what are these prescriptions?
36934But why not come to the Abbey and learn to do the work yourself-- if you can leave your own workshop? 36934 But, father,"said Nicholas, rather puzzled,"what else could I do?"
36934Can not you tell?
36934Can you make it again?
36934Did you find it in Spain?
36934Did you hear him? 36934 Did you see him?"
36934Did you take any red- rose cuttings?
36934Do you know a certain clerk named Simon Gastard?
36934Do you mean to say that you play like that-- on that?
36934Do you see-- there?
36934Do you think it will?
36934Do you think that the man with the dancing bear was a friend of his?
36934Do you want it?
36934Does Master Gerard do his work with elves? 36934 Does the trade like him?"
36934For me?
36934Forest-- no; but why? 36934 Guy,"he said one day,"what''s the heaviest metal you ever handled?"
36934Has Vanni caught anything yet?
36934Have you a share in that ship that you watch her so sharply?
36934Have you any physic for a wasted soul?
36934Have you been here all this time?
36934Have you the world on your shoulders, or only some new undertaking?
36934He likes the trade, does he?
36934Ho there, little one-- what is the trouble?
36934How could they?
36934How do these weavers come here, so far from any town?
36934How does he make his design?
36934How have your father''s ships prospered?
36934How many loads of stone will it take for this wall?
36934How much mortar?
36934How, exactly, does it happen?
36934Is it hard to learn?
36934Is it-- is it thou indeed, master?
36934Is there a boy here named Crispin Eyre?
36934Is there a forest near by?
36934Is this anything like?
36934Like this?
36934Look at the shoes, father, are n''t they pretty?
36934Mary,she queried, as the still- room maid came through the bower,"where is Master Tomaso?"
36934Master Gerard is but absent for an hour or two,he said;"shall I run to the Cathedral and fetch him?"
36934May she keep it?
36934Mistress Mary, will you ask Master Tomaso for some of the spice that he gave to your mother, for me?
36934My boy,he said kindly,"you are Quentin, from Peronne?
36934My venture?
36934My venture?
36934None of your friends live there, I suppose?
36934Ought I to know him?
36934Rebuilt?
36934Shall I call him?
36934Shall we burn the parchment then?
36934Shall we write then of the doings of binds and swinkers?
36934So you believe that, my son?
36934So you changed the ancient course of the flood into that culvert, did you?
36934So you hold it folly to pull down a wall? 36934 That''s like your other dishes, is n''t it?"
36934The Provence rose, is it?
36934Then you like not the plan?
36934There is courtesy, then, among Londoners? 36934 This-- is the cathedral?"
36934Vanni,he said,"you know that thief that they caught?"
36934Vanni,said Mary laughing as she passed through the kitchen on the morning of the great day,"do you always scour your dishes as carefully as this?"
36934Vanni,she said,"will you make some of your lozenges for the banquet?
36934Was that all?
36934Well, my boy,said Brother Basil in his quaintly spoken French,"what is it?"
36934What are you doing away from your tapestry- frame, wench?
36934What are you going to do with the penny?
36934What art doing, lad?
36934What can you do?
36934What do you think they will do to the one that they caught?
36934What do you think will happen in Lombardy?
36934What have you done?
36934What have you found?
36934What is all this?
36934What is wrong with the picture? 36934 What seemed to be the hitch?"
36934What shall we do with these mysteries?
36934What was the name of him who told you the tale, Simon?
36934What wey is it better?
36934What''s ailin''ye, lad?
36934What''s all that, Ranulph?
36934What''s the trouble here?
36934What''s thy name, by the way?
36934What''s yer name?
36934What''s your price?
36934What? 36934 What?"
36934Where are my spices?
36934Where did tha find him, and what''s his name?
36934Where did they put those ashes?
36934Where did this come from?
36934Where did this shoe come from, now?
36934Where did you get the color for this?
36934Where did you get the pattern?
36934Where did you learn to draw?
36934Which did you lose, Genevieve, child?
36934Who are you, and why are you so fond to go to London, young sheep- dog?
36934Who ever saw a lad like that who cared about weaving?
36934Who gave you that, my boy?
36934Who might she be?
36934Who taught you to build walls, my boy?
36934Why do you stay in this dull sodden England-- you who are free?
36934Why not take turns watching the chest?
36934Will that content you?
36934Will you not tell me,he said hesitatingly at last,"to whom I may offer my thanks-- and service-- if I may not serve you in some way?"
36934Will you sell it?
36934Will you teach me the properties of plants?
36934Work it out as he goes along-- like iron- work?
36934Ye do n''t know who that was, do you?
36934You did not use my spices? 36934 You have no father?"
36934You kept the rule, I hope?
36934You meant to steal them?
36934You''ve been in England some time?
36934Your father has ships, then?
36934And how are they all at home?"
36934And some day, would he find that his dreams had vanished forever?
36934Are we to spread ruin over the world?"
36934As they came abreast of the gate the foremost called out,"Ho, Wilfrid, is there any tavern hereabouts?
36934But what happened this time?"
36934But would it always be so?
36934Can you carve a head on the top-- or two heads, facing one another, man and woman?"
36934Come and see the new- born lambs, Robert, will''ee?"
36934Did ye not know?"
36934Did you grow out of the ground, and have you roots like the rest of them, bumpkin?"
36934Did you use the spice I gave you?"
36934Didst ever hear of sweating gold?"
36934Do your stars tell you foolish tales like that, Master Tomaso?"
36934For the hunting of dragons?"
36934Have you found treasure?"
36934Hear ye that, my lords and councilors?"
36934How didst know the true line for that handle?"
36934How would that be?"
36934How, after all, was he better than Gastard?
36934I suppose you do n''t expect him to steal it, chest and all?"
36934I wonder now what became of that lead?"
36934If men were to write chronicles, why not make them vivid as legends, true, stirring, magnificent stories of the men who moved the world?
36934If the leather should be blue in place o''red, would that matter?"
36934Is he the youth of whom you told me when we met at Canterbury?"
36934Is it for that gate- latch?
36934It shall be a picture-- of what, my son?"
36934It''d never do for the hinges and handles on this coffer to spoil the looks o''the carving, and that''s to be done in London, d''ye see?
36934Latch done, Dickon?
36934Masters, what do ye lack?
36934Might he not grow to be like Brother Peter, who had kept the porter''s lodge for forty years and hated to see a new face?
36934Now then, you lummox, are you going to pick up your goods and go, or do I have to throw them after you?"
36934Now, what next?
36934Or have the fairies taken him and left a changeling?"
36934Saw you ever the like?"
36934Shall we give the Plantagenets to eat of the Tree of Knowledge?"
36934So, is that the end?
36934Suppose we nail it up by the market- cross for a warning to others?
36934The figure of Our Lady would be more impressive if you were to add a gold border to the mantle, would it not?"
36934The new man smiled at the boy with his big roll of cloth, and said,"What have you there, my fine lad?"
36934The river ca n''t get our apples now, can it?"
36934There must be a child in trouble, but what child could there be in this wild place, and neither Norman nor Saxon?
36934Was there no more need for such work as theirs?
36934Were you asking him the day of my death?"
36934What do you want for it?"
36934What hast been doing to make it shine so?"
36934What if Audrey should want the bowl?
36934What if I find thee a liar and send thee back from the inn, hey?"
36934What if we let him and his mother live in the little cottage beyond the sheepfold?
36934What sort of folk are you?"
36934What would he do?
36934What?"
36934Where did you get it?"
36934Where have you been all this time?"
36934Who would care, in a thousand years, what rent was paid by the tenant farmers of the Abbey, or who received a certain benefice from the King?
36934Who''s your father, lad?"
36934Why hold we here these demons in the light Of the High Altar, by God''s candles cast?
36934Will you sell the cloth to me?
36934Will your father let you stay?"
36934Would Giovanni come?
36934Would Mary undertake to go there and make herself useful, either in ways that might aid the cook, or in any other duties that she saw?
36934Would he at last obey the Church, or not?
36934Would you?"
36934Yes?
36934You are one of us, are you not?"
36934You have been thinking yourself a writer, have you?
36934You have heard of Archiater''s apples?
36934You take them and do not use them?"
36934You tell me you did it?"
36934[ Illustration:"''HAVE YOU BEEN HERE ALL THIS TIME?''"]