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 |
---|---|
12523 | What were the obligations of the settler who took a grant of land within a seigneury? |
12523 | Why, then, did French- Canadian agriculture, despite the warm official encouragement given to it, make such relatively meager progress? |
6825 | Could the Spaniards or other foreigners claim these discoveries and this wealth on the ground that the discoverer was a Spaniard or foreigner? |
6825 | How could you have been so bold as to lead your chief to believe lies, and so wicked as to be willing to expose his life to so many dangers? |
30145 | ''My kinsmen,''she now cried,''what are you about to do? |
30145 | How far was it westward of Lake Superior? |
30145 | Our misfortune is great, but is it without remedy? |
30145 | Should he tell them of the glory that would accrue to his and their country by the discovery of the Western Sea? |
30145 | Should he turn back? |
30145 | The Sioux had shouted indignantly,''Who fire on us?'' |
30145 | True, he possessed a monopoly of the fur trade, but what did it profit him? |
30145 | What could La Vérendrye say that would have weight with men of this stamp? |
30145 | What will he think of us? |
30145 | Who could tell? |
30145 | Why should you destroy him? |
21543 | Do you love the Algonquins? |
21543 | Do you love the French? |
21543 | What does the Captain say? |
21543 | Who is that man who is eating in our lodge? |
21543 | Why has he so long kept silence about this heroic feat? |
21543 | Why, then, do we live among these people? 21543 And who was so fit for the work among the Indians as Jogues, who knew their language and customs? 21543 But how was a needy adventurer to raise the money to pay for the fort and to do all the high- sounding things that he had promised the King? 21543 But of what use would it be to prolong these horrors? 21543 But where was theGriffin"? |
21543 | But where were Tonty and his men? |
21543 | Could this be the long- desired route to the Pacific? |
21543 | How, then, do we know the story to be false? |
21543 | If Hennepin lied in saying that he descended the Great River, how do we know that he really ascended it? |
21543 | If they saw{ 250} these taking actual form, would they not rage and move heaven and earth, that is to say, Louis the Great,[2] to crush them? |
21543 | Its destination being the mouth of the Mississippi, what was the expedition doing at Matagorda Bay, in Texas? |
21543 | Meanwhile what of the forty promising colonists on Sable Island? |
21543 | Or were these Spanish vessels? |
21543 | Was this the long- expected relief from France? |
21543 | Were these friends or foes? |
21543 | What was the cause of this singular neglect? |
21543 | What was their reception to be? |
21543 | What was this extraordinary man doing there? |
21543 | Whether they would ever return from the dim, undiscovered country into which they were venturing, who could say? |
21543 | Who could these beardless men be but Chinese or Japanese? |
21543 | Why should France be shut up in Canada, with its poverty, its rigorous climate, its barren soil, covered with snow for half the year? |
21543 | Would not one think that Jogues had had enough of the New World, with its deadly perils and cruel pains? |
21543 | [ Illustration: Fort Caroline]"Why does he not lead us out to explore the country and find its treasures? |
6913 | Who am I? 6913 & if you have more witt then we, why did not you use it by preserving your knives, your hattchetts,& your gunns, that you had from the ffrench? 6913 As I was directly coming where the hurrons weare, what should I see? 6913 But mightily mistaken; ffor they would reply,Should you bring us to be killed? |
6913 | But what is it that a man can not doe when he seeth that it concerns his life, that one day he must loose? |
6913 | But, O cursed covetousnesse, what art thou going to doe? |
6913 | Doe not you know the ffrench way? |
6913 | Doe you think that the ffrench will come up here when the greatest part of you is slained by your owne fault? |
6913 | For they spoke to me in this manner:"In which country have you been? |
6913 | From whence did come such excellent castors? |
6913 | From whence doe you come? |
6913 | Have not you seene me disposing my life with you? |
6913 | How will you defend villages? |
6913 | I inquired[ of] him also if he loved the Algonquins? |
6913 | If I am a foe, why did you suffer me to live so long among you? |
6913 | Is there no way to goe there? |
6913 | Moreover it''s night; what dost thou intend to doe? |
6913 | Shall they come to baptize your dead? |
6913 | Shall your children learne to be slaves among the Iroquoits for their ffathers''cowardnesse? |
6913 | The fish and the sauce invite us to it; is there no meanes to catch it? |
6913 | The great effect that the flemings shewed me, and the litle space was from us there; can I make that journey one day? |
6913 | There is the question who was most fearfull? |
6913 | Thou art master of my Goods; this Dogg that spoke but now, what doth hee heare? |
6913 | What can we do? |
6913 | What hath that poore nation done to thee, and being so far from thy country? |
6913 | What is that, that interrest will not do? |
6913 | What weare those beasts? |
6913 | What will it be if wee heare yeatt cryes& sorrows after all? |
6913 | What will your ennemy say when you perish without defending yourselves? |
6913 | Where is the plentynesse that yee had in all places and countreys? |
6913 | Where is the time past? |
6913 | Who has given you your life if not the ffrench? |
6913 | Who then will come up and baptize our children? |
6913 | Will you have your brethren destroyed that loves you, being slained? |
6913 | Will you make me believe now that he is good, as the black- coats[ the ffather Jesuits] say? |
6913 | You know, my uncles& brethren, that I hazarded my life goeing up with you; if I have no courage, why did you not tell me att my first coming here? |
6913 | am I a foe or a friend? |
6913 | how will you defend your wives& children from the ennemy''s hands?" |
6913 | with castors''skins? |
40143 | But what shall I say of his riches? 40143 So you will not give them to me?" |
40143 | Where are all your Illinois warriors, and where are the sixty Frenchmen that you said were among them? |
40143 | ''And how would you have me tell you,''said I,''when you never tell me what you mean to do?'' |
40143 | --_Lettre de la Salle, 22 Août, 1682_( 1681? |
40143 | --_Lettre( à Thouret? |
40143 | And in what spirit did he embrace these designs? |
40143 | And now, while I am speaking, could we not put your old men to death, while your young warriors are all gone away to hunt? |
40143 | As La Salle surveyed this scene of havoc, one thought engrossed him: where were Tonty and his men? |
40143 | But how was La Salle employed in the following year? |
40143 | But were not the Illinois jealous? |
40143 | But what did this new Paraguay mean? |
40143 | But where was the"Griffin"? |
40143 | Did he bend before the storm? |
40143 | Do n''t you know that this man is impenetrable, and that there is no knowing what he thinks of one? |
40143 | Do you not see that when we first came among you, and your camp was all in confusion, we could have killed you without needing help from the Iroquois? |
40143 | Had they not been deluded by lies? |
40143 | Here, then, was the town; but where were the inhabitants? |
40143 | His colony had sprung up, as it were, in a night; but might not a night suffice to disperse it? |
40143 | How can it be that I do not talk with them? |
40143 | If he told the truth, why did he skulk away in the dark? |
40143 | Marie.--The Mystery of La Salle: he discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he reach the 19 Mississippi? |
40143 | Marie.--The Mystery of La Salle: he discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he reach the Mississippi? |
40143 | Motantees(? |
40143 | Of what avail to plant a colony by the mouth of a petty Texan river? |
40143 | Pah- Utahs(? |
40143 | Pahoutet( Pah- Utahs? |
40143 | The Wisconsin, the Illinois, the Ohio, the Des Moines(? |
40143 | The extracts given in the foregoing chapter are from La Salle''s long letters of 29 Sept., 1680, and 22 Aug., 1682( 1681?). |
40143 | Through what regions did it flow; and whither would it lead them,--to the South Sea or the"Sea of Virginia;"to Mexico, Japan, or China? |
40143 | What did he do after he left the two priests? |
40143 | What manner of man was he who could conceive designs so vast and defy enmities so many and so powerful? |
40143 | What manner of men were these who had pierced the secret places of the wilderness to riot in mutual slaughter? |
40143 | What now remains of the sovereignty thus pompously proclaimed? |
40143 | What was this purpose? |
40143 | What were the Jesuits doing? |
40143 | Who could doubt that these strangers were Chinese or Japanese? |
40143 | Why did he not show himself by day? |
40143 | [ 171] FOOTNOTES:[ 163]_ Lettre de La Salle à un de ses associés_( Thouret? |
40143 | [ 200] Why had he not told it before? |
40143 | [ 205] Such being the case, what faith can we put in the rest of Hennepin''s story? |
40143 | [ 288] But why did he not examine it? |