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
28021And what induced you to run away?
28021But, mother, if I do get asleep, you wo n''t let him get me?
28021Crossed on the ice?
28021Do n''t know?
28021Is it possible?
28021Ma''am,she said, suddenly,"have you ever lost a child?"
28021Mamma,said one of the boys, gently touching her arm,"are you going to give away those things?"
28021Shall we take off the cloak, mas''r?
28021So, Uncle Tom, where are you going?
28021To- night,said Mrs. Bird,"how is it possible-- and where to?"
28021Well, I wo n''t, then, for your sake; but only to think of it-- isn''t it a shame? 28021 What''s little missy''s name?"
28021Where are you going, mother?
28021Who-- who shall separate us from the love of Christ?
28021You''re_ sure_, an''t you, mother?
28021After a short pause, Mrs. Bird asked:--"And where do you mean to go to, my poor woman?"
28021Do n''t you know me?"
28021In all the world what brings you here?"
28021Is it very far off ma''am?"
28021Mr. Bird turned round and walked to the window, and Mrs. Bird burst into tears; but, recovering her voice, she said--"Why do you ask that?
28021Now, what''s your name?"
28021So, now, you hold on to her, and grow up, and be a comfort to her, thar''s my own good boy-- you will, now, wo n''t ye?"
28021Tell me where you came from, and what you want?"
28021Would you now turn away a poor, shivering, hungry creature from your door because he was a runaway?
28021Would you, now?"
28021Ye an''t offended, Mas''r George?"
28021have you got him?"
11171''And Eliza, Sam?''
11171''And when will my trouble be over?''
11171''Art thee sure?''
11171''Burnt up?
11171''But you love your father and mother?''
11171''But, mother, if I do get asleep, you wo n''t let the bad man take me?''
11171''Can you drive horses, Tom?''
11171''Cousin, what in the world have you brought that thing here for?''
11171''Do n''t I make a pretty young fellow?''
11171''Do n''t know?''
11171''Do n''t you see how much Miss Ophelia has done for you?
11171''Do n''t you think so?''
11171''Do you know who made you?''
11171''For you to teach, did n''t I tell you?''
11171''Get it?
11171''Halloa, there, Simeon,''he shouted,''what news?
11171''Have you ever heard anything about God, Topsy?''
11171''How can she?''
11171''How can you let her do that?''
11171''How did you come?''
11171''How long have you lived with your master and mistress, then?''
11171''How old are you, Topsy?''
11171''Is it a great way off?''
11171''Is it a year, or more, or less?''
11171''Is n''t it nice?''
11171''Is that you, Sam?''
11171''Is there a boat that takes people across the river now?''
11171''Law, you niggers,''she would go on,''does you know you''s all sinners?
11171''Laws, now, is it?''
11171''Mas''r George?
11171''Mother, I do n''t need to keep awake, do I?''
11171''Not while I am in trouble, Tom?''
11171''Now cousin, what is this for?
11171''Poor Topsy,''said Eva,''why need you steal?
11171''So, Uncle Tom, where are you going?''
11171''Sold him?''
11171''There,''said Miss Ophelia,''will you tell me now you did n''t steal the ribbon?''
11171''Tom,''said Aunt Chloe,''why do n''t you go too?
11171''Topsy,''Miss Ophelia would say, when her patience was at an end,''what makes you behave so badly?''
11171''Topsy,''said Miss Ophelia,''do n''t you know it is wicked to tell lies?''
11171''Was your master unkind to you?''
11171''Was your mistress unkind to you?''
11171''Well, now, tell me,''said Miss Ophelia,''have you taken anything else since you have been in the house?
11171''Were you a slave?''
11171''What can you do?
11171''What could make you leave a good home, then, and run away, and go through such danger?''
11171''What did you burn them up for?''
11171''What for, pussy?
11171''What has Tom done that master should sell him?''
11171''What has she been doing now?''
11171''What in the world made you tell me you took those things, Topsy?''
11171''What is it?''
11171''What is it?''
11171''What is missy''s name?''
11171''What is the matter now?''
11171''What is the matter, mother?''
11171''What is this?''
11171''What is to be done with her, then?''
11171''What makes you behave so?''
11171''What makes you so naughty, Topsy?''
11171''What makes you so sober?''
11171''What''s this?''
11171''When?''
11171''Where are they?''
11171''Where is he?''
11171''Why are you in such a hurry?''
11171''Why do n''t you try to be good?
11171''Why not?''
11171''Why not?''
11171''Why, Eva, where did you get your necklace?''
11171''Why, Tom, do n''t you think that you are really better off as you are?''
11171''Why, that''s Miss Feely''s ribbon, an''t it?
11171''Why, what''s the matter?''
11171''Why?
11171''You''re going to be good, Topsy, you understand?''
11171''You''re sure, an''t you, mother?''
11171Are they coming?''
11171Are you going to use him for a rattle- box, or a rocking- horse, or what?''
11171Besides, what does he want with his freedom?
11171But I want to ask you, whose is she-- yours or mine?''
11171But, O Lord, how can I?
11171Could n''t you go all around and try and persuade people to do right about this?
11171Did nobody ever tell you?
11171Do n''t you know me?''
11171Do n''t you love anybody, Topsy?''
11171Do you see?''
11171How could it a got into my sleeve?''
11171Is it very far off, is Canada''?
11171Is n''t there any way to have all slaves made free?''
11171Now, what''s your name?''
11171She sprang up saying,''Oh, my Harry, have they got him?''
11171Suddenly their old black man- of- all- work put his head in at the door and said,''Will missis come into the kitchen?''
11171Well, what else?''
11171What did you do for your master and mistress?''
11171What do you mean?
11171What makes you so sad?''
11171What on earth did you want to bring this one for?''
11171What was to be done with Topsy?
11171Where were you born?''
11171Who was your mother?''
11171Will thee tell her?''
11171Will you remember?''
11171[ Illustration]''Do you know how to sew?''
11171[ Illustration]''Where do you mean to go to, poor woman?''
11171what shall we do?''
15698Art thou called being a servant? 15698 By whom begot?"
15698Can it be possible,( said we to ourselves),"that there are human beings living, who have been guilty of more abominable crimes?"
15698Can the Ethiopian change his skin?
15698He that hath of this worlds goods, and seeth his brother have need, how dwelleth the love of God in him?
15698Massa must die, and must he die unprepared? 15698 Show me the company you keep, and I will tell you who you are,"Are there no laws to protect slaves?
15698We know that we are vile and depraved, but are not those slaveholders, a little worse than we are?
15698What could be more detestable?
15698What could render a human being more obnoxious to eternal vengeance?
15698What is more odious?
15698Where is it,( said we),"that the Bible denounces these slaveholders, as the chief of sinners?"
15698Which side of the question is it on?
15698A Southerner is more likely to inquire, is it honorable or dishonorable, than is it morally right or wrong?
15698A gentleman called on business, and observing the books, inquired what kind of books they were?
15698And Governor Randolph informs us,"That the Southern States conceived their property in slaves to be secured by this arrangement?"
15698And did you see brother Paul, exclaimed Philemon?
15698And he said, Hagar, Sarai''s maid, whence comest thou?
15698And is dear brother Paul well?
15698And they that have believing masters, let them not despise them, because they are brethren?
15698And what are they doing for the suffering poor of their own color?
15698And what is it that recommends them, or enhances their value in market?
15698And what said Dr. Durbin a few years ago of the British nation?
15698And what says Allison the English historian of wretched Ireland?
15698And what was the result?
15698And where are our own immortal poets and prose writers?
15698And ye apostles of modern reform, from whence did ye derive your authority to speak evil of rulers?
15698And ye dukes and lords, ye pinks of mortality, professing to be Christians, have ye forgotten the words of Divine inspiration?
15698Are they ever ready to relieve the poor, the needy and distressed?
15698Are they husbands to the widows; and fathers to the fatherless?
15698Ask him if all is right; if all is well within you?
15698But if he is at a loss as to what are his obligations to the orphan, let him ask himself what are his obligations to a son or a daughter?
15698But they are gone, and shall we now confide the interests of this great nation, to the keeping of a few sickly sentimentalists?
15698But what has now become of the institution of slavery in the South?
15698By what agency?
15698By what means can slavery be abolished in the United States?
15698By what means can slavery be abolished?
15698By what means or agency?
15698By what means were the posterity of Shem and Japheth enabled to enslave the posterity of Ham?
15698Can moral obligation, a sense of duty, the dictates of conscience, overcome that instinctive passion of the human soul, the love of gain?
15698Dangers of agitation, Is there no remedy?
15698Did St. Paul conceal him, or did he advise him to flee still farther from his master, in order to elude pursuit and apprehension?
15698Do they feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and visit the sick?
15698Does it commend itself to your judgment?
15698From whence did it spring?
15698Has the agitation and discussion of the question of African slavery, in the free States, resulted in any good, or is it ever likely to result in any?
15698Have they ever read Paul''s letter to Timothy?
15698Have we ever counted the cost?
15698He gets all their labor, and what do they receive in return?
15698He had scarcely seated himself, before he inquired,"What book are you reading, Sir?"
15698How dare they professing Christianity to fly in the face of the laws of their country?
15698How dare they resist the execution of those laws?
15698How dares Mrs. Stowe inculcate disobedience and open resistance to her country''s laws?
15698How does he do?
15698How does it happen that the African population are so little benefitted or influenced by them?
15698How is it that one nation acquires dominion over another?
15698How many widows that they have defrauded, and orphans they have robbed, will confront them at the bar of God?
15698How, my dear, says the good lady; by dressing our daughters in silks, and our sons in broadcloth?
15698I appeal to those among whom they live; to those who know them best; as citizens, as neighbors; are they humane, generous and just?
15698I inquired what would become of my dependant family, should I relinquish the practice of my profession and engage in other pursuits?
15698If freedom was tendered to these aged slaves, what think you, would they accept it?
15698If she is really philanthropic, why refuse to do any thing for her own suffering poor throughout her vast dominions?
15698If slaves are emancipated where are they to go?
15698If you have sold us property which we have no right to hold as property, refund our money?
15698In the name of God, are we prepared for all this?
15698In the name of all that is sacred, how long is this state of things to continue?
15698In what consists the merit of Uncle Tom''s Cabin?
15698Is it not almost enough to make a Christian swear?
15698Is it practicable, safe, or proper?
15698Is it practicable?
15698Is it practicable?
15698Is it safe?
15698Is it suitable, proper and right?
15698Is it the duty of American slaveholders to liberate their slaves?
15698Is it the duty of American slaveholders to liberate their slaves?
15698Is not this a remarkable fact?
15698Is the African allowed the ordinary privileges of the white man any where in all the liberty loving North?
15698Is the happiness of individuals under all circumstances diminished, by depriving them of liberty?
15698Is the negro free any where in the Northern States?
15698Is this abolitionism?
15698Is universal emancipation safe or practicable?
15698It is here, it is gone, and we know not from"whence it cometh, or whither it goeth?"
15698It is probable that an objector will point to the African colonization society, and ask, what has it accomplished towards the abolition of slavery?
15698It is therefore incumbent on me to reply to the interrogatory, what can be done?
15698Let him ask himself, what are his obligations to the orphan?
15698Not in the North?
15698Or else flee from its hydra- headed ghost in dismay?
15698Others may impiously ask if it is an evil, why did the Almighty permit it, or why does he tolerate it?
15698Philemon then proceeds to open the letter, and what does he read therein?
15698Reader, what do you suppose is the value of twenty years''labor in dollars and cents?
15698Reader, what do you suppose that they have found?
15698Reader, what say you to the above proposition?
15698Search your hearts ye whited sepulchers, and tell me what was your leading object when you became church members?
15698Shall I hold you up, naked and deformed as ye are, or shall I forbear?
15698Shall our country ever be freed from the curse of curses, religious ultraism, bigotry, and delusion?
15698Shocking doctrines and incendiary publications, Who was it that crashed in embryo the reform that was in progress thirty- five years ago?
15698Should they succeed in dissolving the Union, what would they accomplish thereby?
15698Slave labor unproductive-- the reason why?
15698Slaves content and happy, Why is it, that the African race are happy, in a state of servitude?
15698Some are no doubt ready to ask, Why was it, that the abolition excitement in the North, produced such a panic in the South?
15698Some are, no doubt, ready to ask, how is it that Africans became slaves to their own race?
15698Suppose the South should manumit their slaves, will the North receive and educate them?
15698Tell me, was it to serve God?
15698The Southern planters accept their offer and purchase their slaves, and what next?
15698The argument then resolves itself into this; is the happiness of individuals, under all circumstances, diminished by depriving them of their liberty?
15698The great work is before us; who is competent to the task?
15698The question present itself, how?
15698To oppose the execution of the laws of your country?
15698To whom was this gospel committed?
15698Was a more barefaced, palpable, glaring and malicious falsehood ever fabricated?
15698We know that it is an evil-- a deplorable evil; but what shall we do with it?
15698We may observe His dealings with man, but we can not in all cases say why he acts thus; nor have we any right to ask him, why hast them done thus?
15698We said among ourselves,"What now shall we do?"
15698What are the motives of such persons when they attach themselves to the different branches of Christ''s church?
15698What are they doing for the thousands of ignorant, ill- clad, half starved free negroes now in their midst?
15698What can be expected from it?
15698What can be expected of those on whom such unhallowed means are brought to bear?
15698What can the free blacks do?
15698What does all this mean?
15698What has become of our well written and instructive histories and biographies?
15698What is it that enhances the value of negroes in the estimation of the negro trader?
15698What is it?
15698What is the Southern man to do with his brood of mulatto children?
15698What is their object?
15698What next?
15698What patriot, what philanthropist, does not respond a hearty Amen?
15698What right have they to enjoy the fruits of my labor?
15698What right then, have the citizens of free states, to intermeddle with it?
15698What says Southy, the English poet, of the great mass of the English poor?
15698What then became of this fugitive slave?
15698What then did he say to Onesimus?
15698What then is their object?
15698What then shall we do?
15698What was it?
15698What was the consequence?
15698What were they in search of?
15698What would be the consequences?
15698What would be the consequences?
15698Where are Shakespeare and Milton, and Addison and Johnson?
15698Where can they go?
15698Where is Webster?
15698Where is it?
15698Where is the Bible?
15698Where shall we find worse sinners than ourselves?"
15698Where then, are their lords and masters, who have grown wealthy from the proceeds of their labor?
15698Where will they find an asylum?
15698Where?
15698Which side of the question are you on, Sir?
15698Who reads the chaste and beautiful writings of Washington Irvin?
15698Who that loves his country, can keep cool, while reflecting on these things?
15698Who was it that crushed in embryo, the reform which was in progress thirty- five years ago?
15698Why is it that a filthy negro novel is found in every body''s hand?
15698Why is it, that the free blacks, North, derive so little benefit from the Christian ministry?
15698Why, then, will abolitionists persist in a course so inconsistent; so contrary to reason; so opposed to truth, righteousness, and justice?
15698Why?
15698Will it improve the manners, the morals, or the literary tastes of our country- men, and fair country- women?
15698Would the condition of the slaves in the United States be ameliorated by emancipation, under existing circumstances?
15698Would they by dissolving the Union emancipate a solitary slave in the South?
15698Wretched as the condition of slaves may be in this country, what is American, to African slavery?
15698and whither wilt thou go?
15698shall our country ever be freed from the dark and damnable deeds of religious fanatics?
15698stop, they have found it at last?
15698that one nation falls a prey to another?
15698that one nation makes slaves of another?
15698to foment strife?
15698to sow the seeds of discontent and rebellion among the slaves, and thereby incite masters to acts of cruelty and oppression?
15698when will we arouse to a sense of our vast responsibilities to God, and our obligations to the African race?
15698where is thy blush?"
15698where, shall we find a remedy?
15698ye overseers of the flock of Christ?