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 |
---|---|
36544 | WHO WROTE CAVENDISH''S LIFE OF WOLSEY? |
36544 | But now we come to the question, Who was the Poet''s grandfather, the merchant''s father? |
36544 | But place these by the side of the ancient aristocracy of the country, who have maintained this position for centuries, and what are they? |
36544 | The question is, Was_ this_ Alexander Pope, of Dr. Barcroft''s will, the Alexander Pope who died rector of Thruxton? |
36544 | To her sister Pope she leaves her mother''s picture,--(what has become of this?) |
34821 | Then pray, dear Madam, if you please, be gone;Come you a Spy to make our Counsels known?" |
34821 | A lady once asked Foote,"Pray, Sir, are your puppets to be as large as life?" |
34821 | Dismist-- The Fantoms hover round the Place, And shew their Crimes in Mirrors to their Face? |
34821 | I confess I have had some Help; but what then? |
34821 | If_ Sallust_,_ Horace_,_ Seneca_, and_ He_ Thus in their Morals then so well agree; By what Ingredient is the Difference known?} |
34821 | _ I grant all_ Courses_ are in vain, Unless we can_ get in_ again: The only Way that''s left us now, But all the Difficulty''s_ How? |
34821 | who''d be a L-- d,"If Worth and Merit only Praise afford? |
33441 | ***** James Bramston(? 1694- 1743) was educated at Westminster School and at Christ Church, Oxford, where he took his B.A. |
33441 | And sweat in cloth, to help the_ woollen trade_? |
33441 | Are not his Brother- booksellers the same? |
33441 | But to give Merit due, though_ Curl_''s the same? |
33441 | Can Statutes keep the_ British_ Press in awe, While that sells best, that''s most against the Law? |
33441 | Does it not merit the beholder''s praise, What''s high to sink? |
33441 | How oft has he a publick spirit shewn, And pleas''d our ears regardless of his own? |
33441 | How oft have I with admiration stood, To view some City- magistrate in wood? |
33441 | How oft, when eminent physicians fail, Do good old womens remedies prevail? |
33441 | I''ll have my Gardens in the fashion too, For what is beautiful that is not new? |
33441 | I''ll please the maids of honour, if I can; Without black- velvet- britches, what is man? |
33441 | Say thou that do''st thy father''s table praise, Was there_ Mahogena_ in former days? |
33441 | Shall I wear cloaths, in_ awkward England_ made? |
33441 | Shame, Pain, or Poverty shall I endure, When ropes or opium can my ease procure? |
33441 | What brought Sir Visto''s ill got wealth to waste? |
33441 | Who in_ Whitehall_ can symmetry discern? |
33441 | _ Are These Things So?_( 1740), and_ The Great Man''s Answer to Are These Things So?_( 1740). |
33441 | _ Are These Things So?_( 1740), and_ The Great Man''s Answer to Are These Things So?_( 1740). |
33441 | and what is low to raise? |
19654 | What''s that? |
19654 | Ah, why, ye gods, should two and two make four? |
19654 | And guide my wavering mind By wand''ring birds that flit with every wind? |
19654 | And if, as now seemed clear, Curll was speaking the truth, the question remained, who was P. T., and how did he get the letters? |
19654 | But why should''st thou suspect the war''s success? |
19654 | Did I not see thee when thou first sett''st sail, To seek adventures fair in Homer''s land? |
19654 | Did I not see thy sinking spirits fail, And wish thy bark had never left the strand? |
19654 | Each dives in a way supposed to be characteristic, Oldmixon with the pathetic exclamation, And am I now threescore? |
19654 | How could any man be angry with a writer of gentle pastorals and versified love- letters? |
19654 | How could they be got before the world, and in such a way as to conceal his own complicity? |
19654 | How were the letters procured? |
19654 | How, then, could Pope obtain even an appearance of success? |
19654 | How, then, should we estimate the merits of this remarkable work? |
19654 | Is Etna to cease an eruption to spare a sage, or should"new motions be impressed upon sea and air"for the advantage of blameless Bethel? |
19654 | Or some old temple, nodding to its fall, For Chartres''head reserve the hanging- wall? |
19654 | Pope asks whether we are to demand the suspension of laws of nature whenever they might produce a mischievous result? |
19654 | Pope''s view of his own career suggests the curious problem: how it came to pass that so harmless a man should be the butt of so many hostilities? |
19654 | The leading sign, the irrevocable nod And happy thunders of the favouring God? |
19654 | These shall I slight? |
19654 | To him then Hector with disdain return''d;( Fierce as he spoke, his eyes with fury burn''d)-- Are these the faithful counsels of thy tongue? |
19654 | What though no sacred earth allow thee room, Nor hallow''d dirge be mutter''d o''er thy tomb? |
19654 | What though no weeping loves thy ashes grace, Nor polish''d marble emulate thy face? |
19654 | What walls can guard me, or what shades can hide? |
19654 | When the loose mountain trembles from on high Shall gravitation cease, if you go by? |
19654 | Who could the thief have been? |
19654 | Who would not weep, if Atticus were he? |
19654 | Who, he asks,-- First taught souls enslaved and realms undone, The enormous faith of many made for one? |
19654 | You think this cruel? |
19654 | who? |
30421 | ''What lady''s that to whom he gently bends? |
30421 | ''When I have seen a pretty mouth uttering calumnies and invectives, what would I not have given to have stopt it? |
30421 | ''Who has not trembled at the Mohock''s name?'' |
30421 | ''_ Hyl._ Supposing you were annihilated, can not you conceive it possible that things perceivable by sense may still exist? |
30421 | But pray,"says he,"you that are a critic, is this play according to your dramatic rules, as you call them? |
30421 | But what means This stinted charity? |
30421 | By a false heart and broken vows, In early youth I die; Was I to blame because his bride Was thrice as rich as I? |
30421 | Can anyone doubt that the believer would be scandalized, and the scoffer find himself in a thoroughly congenial element? |
30421 | Do you not? |
30421 | Give me the world, and ask me, where''s my bliss? |
30421 | Is not life to be over to- morrow? |
30421 | Is not this enough to make a writer never be tender of another''s character or fame?'' |
30421 | Jane and Dudley, it must be premised, are imprisoned in a gloomy hall:''What can they do? |
30421 | Should your people in tragedy always talk to be understood? |
30421 | So he dies, and the first question asked is,''What has he left and who''s his heir?'' |
30421 | The Queen so gracious, mild, and good, Cries,"Is he gone? |
30421 | The duke, though knave, still''brother dear,''he cries; And who can say the reverend prelate lies? |
30421 | Their prudence in a share of folly lies; Why will they be so weak as to be wise?'' |
30421 | Then tell us what is Fame, where shall we search for it? |
30421 | What can preserve my life? |
30421 | What can''st thou look upon unblessed by thee? |
30421 | What is this province of which he is the sole ruler? |
30421 | What more then, it may be asked, can be needed? |
30421 | What then is Pope''s ground? |
30421 | What though no sacred earth allow thee room, Nor hallowed dirge be muttered o''er thy tomb? |
30421 | What though no weeping Loves thy ashes grace, Nor polished marble emulate thy face? |
30421 | Where is the dust that has not been alive? |
30421 | While Cato gives his little senate laws, What bosom beats not in his country''s cause?'' |
30421 | Who knows not her? |
30421 | Why might you not Tell us what''tis to die? |
30421 | Would not any believer shrink from the use of such weapons, even though directed against his enemies? |
30421 | Would you have any more reasons? |
30421 | Yonder I see the cheerful Duchess stand, For friendship, zeal, and blithesome humours known; Whence that loud shout in such a hearty strain? |
30421 | and harping on the same theme in the ninth book, says:''What is the world itself? |
30421 | asks in return,''If Pope be not a poet, where is poetry to be found?'' |
30421 | or what destroy? |
30421 | will none of you, in pity To those you left behind, disclose the secret? |
38275 | Before the Lord and his Anointed sayWhose_ Rights_ or_ Honours_ have I ta''en away? |
38275 | Of what vile_ Contract_ was I e''er the Scribe,Or of whose Hands have I receiv''d a_ Bribe_? |
38275 | Or what_ C-- n----n_ e''re devise abroadBut such as_ Britain_''s Se-- e did applaud? |
38275 | Or what_ Incumbrance_ on her_ Commerce_ laid,But for th''Increase of_ our_ Revenues made? |
38275 | WHEREAS it has been generally reported that I am the Author of a Poem, lately publish''d, entitled ARE THESE THINGS SO? 38275 What of my_ Country_''s Money e''er bestow''d"Except in_ secret Service_ for her Good? |
38275 | What then? |
38275 | What_ Scheme_ did ever I at Home proposeBut whence some_ nameless_ Profit would have rose? |
38275 | Whom, speak, have I_ defrauded_ or_ oppress_''d,Or ever pilfer''d_ Forage_ from whose Beast? |
38275 | ( The Second Edition, corrected; with the Addition of twenty lines omitted in the former Impressions) Are these things so? |
38275 | ***** According to the title page,_ The Great Man''s Answer_ is by the same author as_ Are these things so?_. |
38275 | ***** In_ Are these things so?_ Pope is imagined to be speaking throughout, although he in turn imagines what Walpole might say at various points. |
38275 | 1740 THE GREAT MAN''S ANSWER TO Are these Things So? |
38275 | A Supplement to a late excellent Poem, entitled Are these things so?" |
38275 | A proper Answer to Are these things so? |
38275 | A_ sland''rous Picture_ drawn in Soot and Gall? |
38275 | And had they not, pray,_ still_, But that they greatly scorn''d to_ league_ with those, Who were at once their King''s and Country''s Foes? |
38275 | Are these Things So? |
38275 | Are these Things so? |
38275 | Are these things so? |
38275 | Are they, quite lost to Empire and Renown, Bemus''d at Home, or sunk in_ foreign Down_? |
38275 | As for your_ may_ and_ may_, Sir,--_may be Not_, Can my_ vast Services_ be_ There_ forgot? |
38275 | By the author of Are these things so?" |
38275 | Do then her Pow''rs this drowsy Sabbath keep? |
38275 | For Pope''s ironic application of the epithet"sturdy"( l. 164, p. 9) to the London Merchants see the notes to_ Are these things so?_. |
38275 | From this obdurate Rock whence flow those Tears? |
38275 | If so, why lives the Scandal? |
38275 | Is She now sunk to such_ low Degree_, That_ Gaul_ or_ Spain_ must_ limit_ out her_ Sea_? |
38275 | Is there no Trump will rouse''em from their Sleep? |
38275 | It is Walpole who has come to answer the questions asked in_ Are these things so?_. |
38275 | M._ Mighty well; but when are they to go?} |
38275 | M._ Nay then you''ll crush''em quite?--But are you sure, There is a_ Spirit_, Sir? |
38275 | M._ No Sir, I''m_ your Slave_, Or soon shall be.--How then must I behave? |
38275 | M._ That''s Cobweb Sophistry-- Did they not fill The noblest Posts? |
38275 | M._ Well, Sir, but why On my dear Family and Friends this Cry? |
38275 | M._ What He? |
38275 | M._ What Spirit pray? |
38275 | M._ What''s That approaches,_ John_? |
38275 | M._ When? |
38275 | May I my Eyes believe? |
38275 | Must I fall prostrate at your Feet? |
38275 | Occasion''d by two late Poems, the one entitled Are these things so? |
38275 | Occasioned by a Pamphlet intituled Are these things so? |
38275 | Offspring of Disappointment or Disgrace, Of Those who_ want_ or who have_ lost_ a_ Place_? |
38275 | Or is it Fiction all? |
38275 | Or, is it true, what Fame pretends to say, That You, Sir, are the_ Author_ of To- day? |
38275 | Should not so vast a_ Body_ have a_ Head_? |
38275 | Stoop to the_ rough_ Remonstrance of the_ Toe_? |
38275 | THE AUGUSTAN REPRINT SOCIETY Are these Things So? |
38275 | THE GREAT MAN''S ANSWER TO Are these Things So? |
38275 | That She must ask_ what Winds_ her Sails shall fill, And steer by_ Bounty_ who once steer''d_ at Will_? |
38275 | That You''re the fatal Cause of_ Britain_''s Shame, The_ Spend- thrift_ of her Freedom and her Fame? |
38275 | Therefore I put this_ Question_ to your Heart,---- Speak, Culprit--_Are you Guilty_? |
38275 | To the last gasp maintain a baneful Power Only to see your Country die before? |
38275 | Well, What of that? |
38275 | Well, if this wo n''t do, What think you of a_ Pension_? |
38275 | What Things? |
38275 | Whence these big Drops that Ooze from ev''ry Shell? |
38275 | Why should you torture out your Dregs of Life, In publick Tumult, Infamy and Strife? |
38275 | Yes, they are: Being an answer to Are these things so?" |
38275 | [ 19]_ Are these things so?_ has been far more frequently attributed to Miller than_ The Great Man''s Answer_. |
38275 | [ 20] Robert Watt also lists_ Are these things so?_ as Miller''s work in his_ Bibliotheca Britannica_, Edinburgh, 1824. |
38275 | [ 32] In choosing Pope for his spokesman the author of_ Are these things so?_ showed a full awareness of the political realities. |
38275 | [ Illustration: Decoration] Are these Things So? |
38275 | [ Illustration: Decoration] Are these Things So? |
38275 | [ Illustration: Decoration] THE GREAT MAN''s ANSWER TO Are these Things So? |
38275 | _ Are these things so?_, for example, is listed in the Monthly Catalogue for November. |
38275 | _ FINIS_[ Illustration: Decoration] THE GREAT MAN''s ANSWER TO Are these Things So? |
38275 | _ Qui capit_---- By the Author of_ Are these Things So?__ LONDON:_ Printed for T. Cooper, at the_ Globe_ in_ Paternoster- Row_. |
38275 | mere stuff-- What would be done? |
38275 | should not the_ Blind_ be led? |
38275 | what Tempest shakes my Cell? |
38275 | yet nothing,_ nothing_ done? |
33080 | ( May I not believe by yourself?) |
33080 | ------_Take it for a Rule, No Creature smarts so little as a Fool._ Now if this be true, to what purpose did you correct them? |
33080 | And pray, Sir, why my Name, under this scurvy Picture? |
33080 | And what Part of this Play, Sir, can you charge with a Theft either from any_ French_ Author, from_ Plautus_,_ Fletcher_,_ Congreve_, or_ Corneille_? |
33080 | But as he seems, notwithstanding, to have taken Offence from it, how well does this Soreness of Temper agree with what he elsewhere says of himself? |
33080 | But if Solitude pleases you, who shall say you are not in the right to enjoy it? |
33080 | But pray, Gentlemen, said I, if, as you seem to believe, his Defamation has more of Malice than Truth in it, does he not blacken himself by it? |
33080 | But what''s all this to you, Mr._ Pope_? |
33080 | But why am I answerable for that? |
33080 | Come then, let us see what your mighty Mountain is in Labour of? |
33080 | Did he at all intrench upon your Sovereignty in Verse, because he had now and then written a Comedy that succeeded? |
33080 | How comes it then, that in your Works you have so often treated him as a Dunce or an Enemy? |
33080 | How easily now can you see the Folly in another, which you yourself are so fond of? |
33080 | I hope your Temper is not so unhappy as to be offended, or in pain, when your Insults are return''d with Civilities? |
33080 | If either of us could be_ good_ Company, our being professed Poets, I hope would be no Objection to my Lord''s sometimes making one with us? |
33080 | If this is not a greater Tyranny than that of your_ Atticus_, at least you must allow it more ridiculous: For what have you gain''d by it? |
33080 | In a word, you seem in your_ Dunciad_, to have been angry at the rain for wetting you, why then would you go into it? |
33080 | Is a Tailor, that can make a new Coat well, the worse Workman, because he can mend an old one? |
33080 | Might it not have been taken in a more favourable Sense by any Man of the least Candour or Humanity? |
33080 | No, you could not, sure, believe, the World would take it for granted, that_ every_ low, vile Thing you had said of me, was evidently_ true_? |
33080 | Now let us enquire into the Justness of this Pretence, and whether Dulness in one Author gives another any right to abuse him for it? |
33080 | Or could not you bear, that any kind of Poetry, but that, to which you chiefly pretended, should meet with Applause? |
33080 | Or do those alter''d Plays at all take from the Merit of those more successful Pieces, which were entirely my own? |
33080 | Or had it not rather been a Mark of your Justice and Generosity, not to have pursued me with fresh Instances of your Ill- will upon it? |
33080 | Or would any sober Reader have seen more in the Line, than a wide mouthful of Ill- Manners? |
33080 | Or would my Impudence be less Impudence in Verse than in Prose? |
33080 | Or would my professing myself a Satyrist give me a Title to wipe my foul Pen upon the Face of every Man I did not like? |
33080 | Ought I, for this, to have had the stale Affront of_ Dull_, and_ Impudent_, repeated upon me? |
33080 | The question then becomes: why did he continually provoke Cibber, knowing the latter had such a story at hand? |
33080 | This I grant may be Vanity in me to say: But if what I believe is true, what a slovenly Conscience do you shew your Face with? |
33080 | Under this Class at least, you acquit him of having ever provoked you? |
33080 | Well, Sir, and am not I very well off, if you have nothing worse to say of me? |
33080 | Were these both wanting, as they both abound, Where could so firm integrity be found? |
33080 | What a merry mixt Mortal has Nature made you? |
33080 | What ought I to expect less, than that you would knock me down for it? |
33080 | What then must be the Consequence? |
33080 | Where could they find another formed so fit, To poise, with solid sense, a sprightly wit? |
33080 | Why then might it not be suppos''d an equal Truth, that Both our Assertions were equally false? |
33080 | Why then should I give myself the trouble to prove, what you, and the World are already convinc''d of? |
33080 | _ Are these Things So?_( 1740), and_ The Great Man''s Answer to Are these Things So?_( 1740). |
33080 | _ Are these Things So?_( 1740), and_ The Great Man''s Answer to Are these Things So?_( 1740). |
33080 | because, like you Dear_ Pope,_ too Bold in shewing it._ And so, if I am the King''s Fool; now, Sir, pray whose Fool are you? |
33080 | has Poet yet, or Peer, Lost the arched Eye- brow, or_ Parnassian_ Sneer? |
33080 | how could a Man of your stinging Capacity let so tame, so low a Reflexion escape him? |
33080 | or could it have lessen''d the Honour of your Understanding, to have taken this quiet Resentment of your frequent ill Usage in good part? |
33080 | or in private Company? |
33080 | or so vainly uncharitable as to value yourself for laughing at my Folly, in supposing you never had any real malicious Intention against me? |
33080 | or, admitting, that my deceived Opinion of your Goodness was so much real Simplicity and Ignorance, was not even That, at least, pardonable? |
33080 | then_ why_ so, good Mr._ Pope_? |
33080 | unless the happy Weakness of my Person might be my Protection? |
33080 | why may not you as well turn this pleasant Epigram into an involuntary Compliment? |
33080 | would his high Heart be contented, in his having the Choice of his Acquaintance so limited? |
6314 | And was this his only observation? 6314 And what was it?" |
6314 | Capable, for instance, of suing and being sued? |
6314 | Do you conceive Dumpkins to have been a thing or a person? |
6314 | How so? 6314 What is your secret opinion of Dumpkins?" |
6314 | What was it? |
6314 | --was not he an elevated character? |
6314 | A French heart it must be, or how should it follow with its sympathies a French movement? |
6314 | A favorite of nature, so eminent in some directions, by what right could he complain that her bounties were not indiscriminate? |
6314 | And how did he surmount this unhappy self- distrust? |
6314 | And in all Christendom, who, let us ask, who, who but Shakspeare has found the power for effectually working this mysterious mode of being? |
6314 | And of what consequence in whose hands were the reins which were never needed? |
6314 | And to whom was the Bible an indispensable resource, if not to Lamb? |
6314 | And was it upon Shakspeare only, or upon him chiefly, that he lavished his pedantry? |
6314 | And where was such an education to be sought? |
6314 | At this moment, for instance, how could geology be treated otherwise than childishly by one who should rely upon the encyclopaedias of 1800? |
6314 | But on this arose the suggestion-- Why not execute an insurance of this nature twenty times over? |
6314 | But perhaps Voltaire might dislike Pope? |
6314 | But then revolves the question, why must we laugh? |
6314 | But waiving this, let us ask, what is meant by"correctness?" |
6314 | But was this, as Steevens most disingenuously pretends, to be taken as an exponent of the public feeling towards Shakspeare? |
6314 | But were they undisputed masters? |
6314 | But which? |
6314 | But why not have printed it intelligibly as 1741? |
6314 | But why should W. wear boots in Westmoreland? |
6314 | But why? |
6314 | But why? |
6314 | Correctness in what? |
6314 | Did Mr. Lamb not strengthen this remark by some other of the same nature?" |
6314 | Do we mean, then, that a childish error could permanently master his understanding? |
6314 | Do we mean, then, to compare Addison with an idiot? |
6314 | Does a man at Paris expect to see Moliere reproduced in proportion to his admitted precedency in the French drama? |
6314 | Else how came Spenser''s life and fortunes to be so utterly overwhelmed in oblivion? |
6314 | For instance, it was then always said that Charles I had suffered on the 30th of January 1648/9, and why? |
6314 | For instance,"Can you tell pork from veal in the dark, or distinguish Sherries from pure Malaga? |
6314 | How are we to account, then, for that deluge, as if from Lethe, which has swept away so entirely the traditional memorials of one so illustrious? |
6314 | How is all this to be explained? |
6314 | How will he comfort himself after her death? |
6314 | If so, whence came Rowe''s edition, Pope''s, Theobald''s, Sir Thomas Hanmer''s, Bishop Warburton''s, all upon the heels of one another? |
6314 | If the public indeed were universally duped by the paper, what motive had Philips for resentment? |
6314 | If this were accident, how marvellous that the same insanity should possess the two great capitals of Christendom in the same year? |
6314 | If, again, it were not accident, but due to some common cause, why is not that cause explained? |
6314 | In connecting it, or effecting the transitions? |
6314 | In developing the thought? |
6314 | In the grammar? |
6314 | In the metre? |
6314 | In the use of words? |
6314 | Is it no happiness to escape the hands of scoundrel reviewers? |
6314 | Is this coat- of- arms, then, Sir Thomas Lucy''s? |
6314 | Is_ that_ nothing? |
6314 | Lamb?" |
6314 | Let us put a case; suppose that Goethe''s death had occurred fifty years ago, that is, in the year 1785, what would have been the general impression? |
6314 | Like the general rules of justice,& c., in ethics, to which every man assents; but when the question comes about any practical case,_ is_ it just? |
6314 | Milton only,--and why? |
6314 | Napoleon started when he beheld her,_ Qui etes vous_? |
6314 | Now what proof has Mr. Malone adduced, that the acres of Asbies were not as valuable as those of Tugton? |
6314 | Now, if the child died naturally, all was right; but how, if the child did_ not_ die? |
6314 | Or, in any case, what plea had he for attacking Pope, who had not come forward as the author of the essay? |
6314 | Our translation is this:"Here lies Piron; who was-- nothing; or, if_ that_ could be, was less: How!--nothing? |
6314 | Singly, what am I to do? |
6314 | Some readers will inquire, who paid for the printing and paper,& c.? |
6314 | These calls upon the moral powers, which in music so stormy, many a life is doomed to hear, how were they faced? |
6314 | This heart, with this double capacity-- where should he seek it? |
6314 | This will be admitted; but would it not have been better to draw the income without the toil? |
6314 | This would take leave of the reader with effect; but how was it to be introduced? |
6314 | Very well; but why then must we weep? |
6314 | Was Addison''s neglect representative of a general neglect? |
6314 | Was Mr. Hazlitt then of that class? |
6314 | Was he a Frenchman, or was he not? |
6314 | Was this man, so memorably good by life- long sacrifice of himself, in any profound sense a Christian? |
6314 | Wesley--[have you read his life?] |
6314 | What are we to think of this document? |
6314 | What did he mean by that? |
6314 | What energies did it task? |
6314 | What if he does? |
6314 | What kind of woman is''t? |
6314 | What may we assume to have been the value of its fee- simple? |
6314 | What peace is possible under the curse which even now is gathering against your heads? |
6314 | What temptations did it unfold? |
6314 | What trials did it impose? |
6314 | What years? |
6314 | What_ was_ that wickedness? |
6314 | Whither, indeed, could he fly for comfort, if not to his Bible? |
6314 | Why must we laugh? |
6314 | With such prospects, what need of an elaborate education? |
6314 | Would Europe have been sensible even of the event? |
6314 | Would Europe have felt a shock? |
6314 | Yet the editors of Pope, as well as many other writers, have confused their readers by this double date; and why? |
6314 | Yet,_ as_ a part of futurity, how is it connected with our present times? |
6314 | at what era? |
6314 | is it possible to obtain your attention?" |
6314 | under what exciting cause? |