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 |
---|---|
10884 | .... Have you any fancy to dash off an article on''Emma''? 10884 P.S.--Ford''s book not out yet?" |
10884 | Tell me fairly, did you show the MS. to some of your corps? |
10884 | The Opposition? 10884 Was ever"impecunious author"so trusted before"? |
10884 | What are people saying about that fellow Hazlitt attempting to prosecute? 10884 What do you think,"said Mr. Disraeli,"of the''Psychological Memoir''? |
10884 | Who are now the People''s men? 10884 ''I believe you are acquainted with my friend William Gifford?'' 10884 ''Miss Milbanke-- do you know her?'' 10884 ''What is it?'' 10884 ''Who are these?'' 10884 ''Who is the lady who is to do me this injury?'' 10884 ''Why, you would not join against me?'' 10884 : how I took to study and became a_ lav- engro._ What do you think of this for a bill of fare? 10884 ?_ Certainly nothing new; it has not yet invaded the country. 10884 An expostulation came from Croker to Murray( January 23, 1824):Have you made up_ your mind_ about an editor? |
10884 | And how can you continue to destroy every speculation by entering upon new ones before the previous ones are properly completed?... |
10884 | And how could any sort of system or plan be carried on or attempted amongst them? |
10884 | Are there any memoirs about the date of 1743, or later, beside Bubb''s? |
10884 | But should you not see Rogers? |
10884 | But to the question: What are your intentions with respect to"The Bible in Spain"? |
10884 | But what can I say at this distance? |
10884 | But what is to be the end of all this rigmarole of mine? |
10884 | But who are your other foemen?'' |
10884 | But why do I trouble you with_ my_ opinions, when I can give you Mr. Scott''s? |
10884 | But_ now_ what can be done? |
10884 | Ca n''t you get a more active and vigilant Editor? |
10884 | Can I not procure you a score of blue- caps who would rather write for us than for the_ Edinburgh Review_ if they got as much pay by it? |
10884 | Can you get me"Gaytoun''s Festivous Notes on Don Quixote"? |
10884 | Could you find out who they are? |
10884 | Could you not get me a gay light article or two? |
10884 | Dinez- vous chez- vous? |
10884 | Do you intend to have any portraits? |
10884 | Do you know any one? |
10884 | Do you know anything about it?" |
10884 | Do you think it impossible? |
10884 | Does he know what that review has done? |
10884 | Does he think to put me down with his_ Canting_, not being able to do it with his poetry? |
10884 | Has anybody put you out of conceit with the book? |
10884 | Has he none then? |
10884 | Has he yet returned from Scotland, and is he at all improved?" |
10884 | Have we not yourself and your cousin, the Roses, Malthus, Matthias, Gifford, Heber, and his brother? |
10884 | Have you come to this passage in''Waverley''yet? |
10884 | Have you determined on a title? |
10884 | Have you, therefore, any objection to advance me a sum on the anticipated profits of the edition, not exceeding two hundred pounds? |
10884 | Here is a long letter-- can you read it? |
10884 | How came you to advertise''Domestic Anecdotes''? |
10884 | How can you imagine that a bookseller can afford to pay eternal advances upon almost every work in which he takes a share with you? |
10884 | How can you, my good sirs, act in this way? |
10884 | How could you give so trite an image as in the last two lines? |
10884 | How do you keep without their reach The watch without your fobby O?" |
10884 | How would you arrange with him? |
10884 | I ask why for? |
10884 | I could not help quizzing Mr. Robert Miller, who asked me in an odd sort of way, as I thought, why it was not out? |
10884 | I have just received an invitation to join the Ethnological Society( who are they? |
10884 | I naturally asked him, was it by the author of"Waverley"? |
10884 | I say why for take so much trouble? |
10884 | I say why he not go inside? |
10884 | I shall have no poem this winter then?'' |
10884 | In conversation a few days since, I heard a gentleman ask him,''Pray, sir, do you think the_ Quarterly Review_ will be equal to the_ Edinburgh_?'' |
10884 | In his reply Gifford, expostulating,"Why, my dear Sir, will you do these things?" |
10884 | Is 450 guineas too dear for a new barouche? |
10884 | Is his book out? |
10884 | Is not this very possible? |
10884 | It ran to the tune of"My Boy Tammy? |
10884 | It really seems a respectable number, but what then? |
10884 | It wants incident and romance, does it not? |
10884 | Jeffrey is, to be sure, a man of the most uncommon versatility of talent, but what then? |
10884 | Lady Mackintosh also wrote to Mr. Murray:"Did you hear who this_ new_ author of''Waverley''and''Guy Mannering''is? |
10884 | Lord Holland said, when I asked his opinion:"Opinion? |
10884 | MY DEAR MURRAY, Can you oblige me by letting me have a third volume of"Wilberforce"? |
10884 | Miller? |
10884 | Murray again wrote to Blackwood( February 15, 1817):"What is your theory as to the author of''Harold the Dauntless''? |
10884 | My DEAR SIR, What can I say in return for your interesting and amusing letter? |
10884 | Now in thy parlour feasting me, Now scribbling at me from your garret,-- Till,''twixt the two, in doubt I be, Which sourest is, thy wit or claret? |
10884 | Or, wo n''t something about the ancient North and its literature be more acceptable? |
10884 | Pray is it yet to be purchased? |
10884 | Says he,''Can you keep a secret?'' |
10884 | Shall I appoint the consultation? |
10884 | Shall I get it appointed as soon as he comes to town? |
10884 | Suppose you were to sew, etc., your own publications? |
10884 | Their cuisine is bad, and their port wine execrable, and as for their cigars!--I say, do you remember those precious ones of the Sanctuary? |
10884 | Then can your Lordship tell me the reason why the Opposition are so unpopular in England?" |
10884 | Thus the Chevalier is Sir Walter Scott; M. is Mr. Lockhart; X. is Mr. Canning; O. is the political Puck( could this be himself? |
10884 | What can have happened to you that you will not write? |
10884 | What can it be? |
10884 | What can you afford to give me for the exclusive right of printing them in France upon condition that you receive them before any other bookseller? |
10884 | What do you think of making a confidant of Wilmot H[orton]? |
10884 | What has moved Miller to retire? |
10884 | What interest can Lord Byron have in being the poet of a party in politics?... |
10884 | What resemblance do ye find among all or any of these men? |
10884 | What shape will you adopt? |
10884 | What think you of"A Cure for the Ministerial Gallomania,"and advertise, dedicated to Lord Grey? |
10884 | What will they be when that of Dryden appears?" |
10884 | What would the Institution expect me to write? |
10884 | When will the next come? |
10884 | Where is the bravery of treading on a worm or crushing a poor fly? |
10884 | Where the honour?" |
10884 | Where the utility? |
10884 | Who are the_ Quarterly Reviewers_? |
10884 | Who is the author of the review of"Childe Harold"in the_ Quarterly_? |
10884 | Who? |
10884 | Why for take so much trouble? |
10884 | Why not go on with and complete the series of De Foe?... |
10884 | Why this delay? |
10884 | Why will your young friend fling away talent which might so honourably distinguish him? |
10884 | Why, with your influence, will you not urge the completion of the''Minstrelsy''? |
10884 | Will not this affect his mind and purify his pen? |
10884 | Will you be so kind as to write me in answer what you think of this proposal? |
10884 | Will you dine at Kensington on Sunday at 6?" |
10884 | Will you do this? |
10884 | Will you have the goodness to return an answer in course of post, as, failing your benevolent aid, I must look about elsewhere? |
10884 | Would that suit you? |
10884 | Would you like to divide your work in_ Shares_? |
10884 | _ Nelson_:''Well, Jack, what''s the matter with you?'' |
10884 | a prig, Sir?'' |
10884 | and must I close the list With thee, my Lockhart of the_ Quarterly?_ So kind, with bumper in thy fist,-- With pen, so very gruff and tartarly. |
10884 | are you too a brother Cyclops?" |
10884 | my old enemy, how do you do?" |