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 |
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A66357 | Could not the same Sunne and Dew which enripened them, refine and purifie them there? |
A66357 | Have they wanted the Sunne and Dew when upon the stalke? |
A66357 | I am not ignorant that Criticks will laugh at this; much good doe it them, and why so many Moneths for the same seed? |
A66357 | My Exceptionist forgets that wee not onely covet to have things early, but their continuance: Will it offend him that wee have Artichokes in May? |
A66357 | What Riches may not the Silke- worme, Vine, Olive, and Almond afford us? |
A66357 | Why so many Repetitions? |
A66357 | and July both? |
A66357 | or increase our miseries wi ● hout any addition to ou ● happin ● sse? |
A66359 | Besides what a small summe of money will buy your Cattell, and Swine in Virginia? |
A66359 | What Fleets come yeerely upon the coasts of New found Land, and New England for Fish, with an incredible returne? |
A66359 | What Fowles can she make ostentation of, in which Virginia can be esteemed inferiour? |
A66359 | What discover without a power of Appropriation? |
A66359 | What multitude of flowers have our late Gardens in England seen non native to this soyle or Climate? |
A66359 | What opulency do ● s China teeme with which shall not be made our owne by the Midwifry, by the Juno Lucina of this virtuall passage? |
A66359 | Which if it should faile, why may not Virginia in her future felicity of silke be a new China and Persia to Europe? |
A66359 | Why being capable to crowne her browes with Garlands of Roses and plenty, she sate desolate amongst the Willowes of neglect and poverty? |
A66359 | already can Virginia boast of Cinamon, which if transplanted might not be inferiour unto any? |
A66359 | and why may not the intralls of this Minerall be Gold, since the skinne and crust of it is Copper? |
A66359 | why may not all the spicery of the East flourish with an equall successe in this our most justly tempered Climate? |
A45759 | ( for did they not, they would swarm all the Land over in a very few yeers); if any thing besides birds be hurtfull to them? |
A45759 | And all Callings too; for if Saint Paul made Tents, who can plead exemption from tending Silk- worms? |
A45759 | And by the ponderousness or weight of earths, you may know if Minerals or not? |
A45759 | And shall Virginia not yield a drop of good Liquour or Colour? |
A45759 | And shall there not I say then now be found a zealous Patriot, that will stand up for his Countrey, and procure these things to be done out of hand? |
A45759 | And what can any of you now wish, for more incouragement? |
A45759 | And whether it would not be the sweeter, and therefore the better, if the Corn( whether Beanes or any other) were well maulted? |
A45759 | For these in the old World never eat after they once begin to spin: how large in bigness and compass are commonly their bottoms? |
A45759 | How long they live after that time? |
A45759 | Imparting his Experiments about Silk- worms and how to wind off the Silk from the Bottoms, when the Worms have done spinning? |
A45759 | In what part of the Countrey are most of them seen and found? |
A45759 | Let it be known also, if you have not Waters of more than ordinary qualities; for taste, colours, smell, weight, hotness, or coldness? |
A45759 | Now what quantities of Spirits are spent among the Fishing Companies in New and Old England? |
A45759 | Secondly, How encreased? |
A45759 | What is Brasil, Fustick, Logwood, and many more kinde of Dies, but Woods? |
A45759 | What is Indico but a Weed, so Woad and Madder? |
A45759 | What then remains? |
A45759 | Whether any other Flower or Meal will not serve? |
A45759 | a year, which might accrew to the Nation from this little Creature? |
A45759 | and thirdly, How inriched with Wax and Honey? |
A45759 | if all of one colour, or divers? |
A45759 | what Coucheneal the rich Scarlet die, but a Fly, or the excrements of the Indian Fig- tree? |
A45759 | what do the Savages call them, or know any use of them; what birds are they that most devoure them? |
A45759 | what may the County? |
A45759 | what the Nation? |
A46234 | And if stones will burn that have a Bituminous matter in them, what shall we conclude of a Ros ● ● ous kind of wood? |
A46234 | And what are the names of the Emims, and Zamzummims; but titles of Gyants? |
A46234 | At the beginning of that, happened the dispersing of the Jews; what if about the end of it, the calling of them again may be? |
A46234 | Ausonius speaks of one thus: Thy Father Geno ● es, thy Mother Graecian blood, Born in a Ship at Sea, can that Son ere be good? |
A46234 | Being so fit and faithfull for thy turn, As no Beast else can do thee half such good? |
A46234 | But alas poor man, why so? |
A46234 | But because we see nothing moved in it confusedly, nor any thing set without it, whither shall we go out of it? |
A46234 | But that is ascribed to the great running of Rivers into it; and how small is this in respect of the other Sea? |
A46234 | But the question now is, how that faculty is imprinted on the seeds, and from whence? |
A46234 | But what speak I of old things? |
A46234 | Do''s he think the world incorruptible? |
A46234 | Doth any man determin God to be a Body? |
A46234 | For how should a vegetable, produce a flying Creature like a Goose? |
A46234 | For there is no cause for its tossing, and wherefore then should it not at length stand levell? |
A46234 | For who can see how the heart in the generation of living Creatures is first formed? |
A46234 | For who knowes not but we are troubled in our sleep? |
A46234 | From the Ocean? |
A46234 | From whence? |
A46234 | How do I know whether this or that wind may bring Warr? |
A46234 | How should he digest them, for a Lion that is hotter can not? |
A46234 | If a contrary wind can not do so much in any water, what then can the wind do here? |
A46234 | If they should attract, it were for that purpose that they might have the fruition of it, but from whence are there such Rivers? |
A46234 | Is it better think you to perish by discontent of Mind, or by Thunder? |
A46234 | It is but one, and where is there room for more in so great a magnitude? |
A46234 | It may be asked how they get their food? |
A46234 | It so fell out that Isenbard met the woman that was carrying the little infants to their death, and asking her, whither she went with her paile? |
A46234 | Or barre him from such poor and simple food? |
A46234 | Or why doth this power reside in that body rather than in another, and perisheth presently afterwards? |
A46234 | Plutarch makes mention of the same bird, in a Treatise that begins, Whether an Egge were first or a Hen? |
A46234 | That it shall be burnt by degrees? |
A46234 | That which Albertus saw was a hand breadth and a half thick, ten foot long, without any spirall lines, and like to a Stags Horn? |
A46234 | The Learned make a question, whether the Jews Manna was the same with ours? |
A46234 | The cause is the compacted matter, Lemnius, l. c. What shall we say of Pyrrhus, on whose great joynt of his right foot, fire could not prevail? |
A46234 | WHat is the chief thing in humane affairs? |
A46234 | WHat then? |
A46234 | What followed? |
A46234 | What shall I say more? |
A46234 | What shall I say of Clodius Albinus the Emperour? |
A46234 | What shall I say of Elizabeth Queen of England? |
A46234 | What shall I say of Gunthram King of the Francks? |
A46234 | What shall I say of Thomas Schweikerus? |
A46234 | What shall we say for touching? |
A46234 | What shall we say to these things? |
A46234 | What shall we say to this? |
A46234 | What then shall be left for the vast winds? |
A46234 | What therefore can that be but God? |
A46234 | What will this do in the body of man? |
A46234 | When it flowes in one hemisphear, and both the Luminaries are in the other, what is the cause of that? |
A46234 | Whence shall this burning be, but that moysture must fail? |
A46234 | Whence then? |
A46234 | Where hath Nature placed so many senses in the Gnat? |
A46234 | Where hath she made that horrid and great Voyce, considering its proportion of body? |
A46234 | Where hath she set her eyes? |
A46234 | Wherefore do we go to Mountaines? |
A46234 | Whether he may not provide ships to attempt places unknown? |
A46234 | Who knows not but that the knowledge of God is the principall end of Sciences? |
A46234 | Who sees not the sublunary part of the World, expressed in the lower belly? |
A46234 | Why doth the Purple Bowe Rain- water drink? |
A46234 | Why is not the same done in a little water in a bason? |
A46234 | and made it thirsty after blood, especially mans blood? |
A46234 | but by what art hath she whe ● ● ed the snowt of it to make it penetrate into the skin? |
A46234 | hath disposed a hollow place instead of a belly? |
A46234 | how hath she cunningly fastned the wings? |
A46234 | lengthned the legs? |
A46234 | might I not hide this other halfe with the rest, in the same place of safetie? |
A46234 | or how can he salve the many defects thereof, and constitute Axioms that are introductive to action, and search out the forms,& c? |
A46234 | or must the cause be imputed to the Ocean? |
A46234 | where her smelling? |
A46234 | whether from nature? |