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 |
---|---|
18565 | Now do n''t you think,I pursued,"that it would be better to spend it for little cakes?" |
18565 | What would you do,I asked the children,"if I gave you a piece of twenty- five centimes?" |
18565 | Does the hate you bear them come from difference or likeness? |
18565 | He came back very gayly; when they saw him so joyous,"What news?" |
18565 | Shall I own that while this effect was not the fiery gorgeousness of our autumn leaves, it was something tenderer, richer, more tastefully lovely? |
18565 | You burn to reform our Church; certainly it needs it; but how can you reform it, deformed as you are? |
12404 | And what manner of man was he who lived in this house that nestles beneath the ancient castle? |
12404 | Confused recollections of them arose in my memory; could I have been in Hamburg without being aware of it? |
12404 | Does it speak of the revolt of 1160, or of the war between Mayence and Frankfort in 1332? |
12404 | Have I preserved the impression made by some picture, some photograph? |
12404 | He immediately replies, after reckoning up in his head,"How much have I then? |
12404 | Is it Barbarossa? |
12404 | Is it Louis of Bavaria? |
12404 | These halls are worthy to hold such treasures, and what more could be said of them? |
12404 | Why not build in brick frankly, since its water- coloring and capacity for ingeniously varied arrangement furnish so many resources? |
11179 | And Geneva? |
11179 | But what is it called? |
11179 | But what mountain is that far away to the south? |
11179 | Eh,he repeated, with a puzzled look,"who knows? |
11179 | What are they saying, Peter? |
11179 | Which mountain, Signora? |
11179 | Again I asked myself"Can it be done?" |
11179 | Could there be then an opening at the bottom of the funnel into which he had fallen? |
11179 | He meant, who would believe that Croz could fall? |
11179 | If sixty steps cost an hour, what would be the cost of two hundred? |
11179 | Old Peter rent the air with exclamations of"Chamounix!--oh, what will Chamounix say?" |
11179 | Seiler met me at his door, and followed in silence to my room:"What is the matter?" |
11179 | Should we still find an impassable system of crevasses above us, or were we close to the top? |
11179 | What are we to say to the modern rival of Venice, the upstart rebel, one is tempted to say, against the supremacy of the Hadriatic Queen? |
11179 | Why then is this so? |
46074 | ''Mademoiselle,''he wrote,''must you be for ever pressing upon me a happiness which sound reason compels me to decline? |
46074 | ''What can I do for you?'' |
46074 | ''What,''he asked,''do you expect the Pope to live on? |
46074 | But what is the sober truth about those educational advantages? |
46074 | He fled to Lausanne, but--''What was the good of coming here? |
46074 | Of what else? |
46074 | Shall I ever get out of it all alive? |
46074 | The question then arose, Which Pope would be recognized by the other European Principalities and Powers? |
46074 | The question which is left is, How do the Swiss systems of education compare with ours? |
46074 | What are we to make of it all? |
46074 | What the devil is the meaning of it? |
46074 | Why did n''t I break it off long ago? |
46074 | Would she forgive me if she knew where I am and what I am doing? |
46074 | are they still turning out novels at Lausanne?'' |
46074 | or''Can there be friendship between a man and a woman in the same sense as between two women or two men?'' |
46074 | what am I to do? |
39651 | Tell me,she said to Napoleon once,"whom do you think is the greatest woman in France to- day?" |
39651 | And another Swiss doctor( Tissot) who dared to tell well- to- do people that their chief cause of ill- health was overfeeding? |
39651 | Before such enthusiasm who dares to urge that the Alpine dawn may be as well seen from a point to which the railway will take you? |
39651 | But now, can you tell me were those poets and wise men themselves generally of mountain peoples? |
39651 | But what the use, or the justice of it? |
39651 | Can you show me that it is a fact that mountain races are as you say? |
39651 | Does that not seem to you a rational argument? |
39651 | Has he lost the faculty of delight? |
39651 | Have his eyes grown dim? |
39651 | Is he growing old? |
39651 | The exaltation of the keen high air? |
39651 | The joy of the scenery? |
39651 | What is the chief charm of this mountain- climbing? |
39651 | What is the matter? |
39651 | Why did n''t I break it off long ago? |
39651 | Will you, if you have time, explain to me why that is so? |
39651 | Yet surely the peoples who produce most plentifully great men, poets and philosophers, are the greatest peoples? |
39651 | _ T._ On that point, surely, there is no difference of opinion at all? |
35068 | Are the trains going to be stopped? |
35068 | Has Germany declared yet? |
35068 | How about money? 35068 How can I send a letter to my husband in Germany?" |
35068 | Is England going into it? |
35068 | Is there going to be a war? |
35068 | Let me in this, will you? |
35068 | Will all Americans be ordered home? |
35068 | Will we be safe in Switzerland? |
35068 | Will we have to have passports? |
35068 | _ Encore?_I said. |
35068 | And the Swiss prosperity, and the medical practice, and the sciences? |
35068 | And the old car-- that to us had always seemed to have a personality and sentience-- had it been dreaming, too? |
35068 | And what of the rest of Europe? |
35068 | And what of their positions in America? |
35068 | And why a dog? |
35068 | Any questions, please? |
35068 | Are the Swiss banks going to stop payment on letters of credit?" |
35068 | But what would be done with them later? |
35068 | Could they ship all those cherries north and sell them? |
35068 | Do their occupants have traditional rights from some vague time without date? |
35068 | Do they pay rent, and to whom? |
35068 | Furthermore, concerning the color chosen for profane use-- why blue? |
35068 | He looked intelligent, too, and as a last resort I said:"''Could you, by any chance, tell me the name of the Swiss President?'' |
35068 | How can the French afford those roads-- how can they pay for them and keep them in condition? |
35068 | How can they afford to keep it here? |
35068 | How can they afford to maintain such a road through that sterile land? |
35068 | How could Bonny, a mere village, ever have built a church like that-- a church that to- day would cost a million dollars? |
35068 | How could they give a dinner like that, and a good bed, and coffee and rolls with jam next morning, all for four francs-- that is, eighty cents, each? |
35068 | Keats( I think it was Keats, or was it Carolyn Wells?) |
35068 | Mistral[ sa mère] eut une idée._"''_ Si nous faisons tapisser et plafonner ta chambre?'' |
35068 | Narcissa asked,"How would you get the car up there?" |
35068 | Often we said as we drove along,"What little hotel do you suppose is waiting for us to- night?" |
35068 | So I picked out a bright- looking subject, and said:"''What is the name of the Swiss President?'' |
35068 | What did the barbarians do there-- those hordes that swarmed in and trampled Rome? |
35068 | What would you do then?" |
35068 | Will the ships be running then?" |
35068 | Would I go again, under the same conditions? |
35068 | [ 11] The German Kaiser, once reviewing the Swiss troops, remarked, casually, to a sub- officer,"You say you could muster half a million soldiers?" |
45097 | And do you believe that the soul of man will live hereafter? |
45097 | And what shall we find at Winterberg? |
45097 | And where are your children? |
45097 | But what if one of those who has come to the holy sacrament falls into some sin, as stealing, or profane swearing? |
45097 | But what is that? |
45097 | But will it not vanish if we look away? |
45097 | Can a woman come to that? |
45097 | Do you speak English? |
45097 | How do you know that you shall meet? |
45097 | O Lord God of Hosts, who is a strong Lord like unto thee? 45097 What do you think of it? |
45097 | What means this? |
45097 | Which is the best hotel for us in Ichandau? |
45097 | Will you,said she,"have the goodness to give me your name in writing?" |
45097 | And now tell me, with all your studies have you yet learned how to die? |
45097 | And who commanded,( and the silence came,)"Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest?" |
45097 | Are the virtues of social life held in honor among them, and are the children of these mountain homes trained up in the way they should go? |
45097 | But what are the morals of such a people? |
45097 | Does not my country know, and does it not delight to honor a man whose philanthropy and genius are alike deserving the admiration of the world? |
45097 | I said to him,"Are these yours?" |
45097 | I_ know_ that in another land we shall meet?" |
45097 | Is it not fine: very fine?" |
45097 | Must we mothers nurse beggars at our breasts, and bring up our daughters to be maid- servants to foreign lords? |
45097 | She at last ventured to come toward the point by asking,"In what part of England do you reside, Sir?" |
45097 | What are the men of the mountain good for? |
45097 | What indeed is wealth, and title, and power, to a fool? |
45097 | What shall I do?" |
45097 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
45097 | Who can be afraid of a storm when the rainbow appears? |
45097 | Who can tell the sufferings, who can tell the joys that the people of God have known in these high places? |
45097 | Who filled thy countenance with rosy light? |
45097 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy, Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam? |
45097 | Who made thee parent of perpetual streams? |
45097 | Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon? |
45097 | Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth? |
45097 | Who, with living flowers Of loveliest hue, spread garlands at your feet? |
45097 | Would it be an_ indiscretion_ for me to ask you what is your name, Sir?" |
45097 | _ Lady._--"Bless me, and of what country are you, pray?" |
45097 | _ Lady._--"O you are, are you? |
45097 | _ Lady._--"When do you return, Sir?" |
45097 | _ Lady._--"Where do you spend the winter?" |
12990 | And the answer? |
12990 | But you have been wounded in the leg, monsieur? |
12990 | By the way,he suddenly asked me,"where was the idea of Harvey Birch, in the Spy, found?" |
12990 | Could I tell him which was the window of his room? |
12990 | Does Mein Herr see it? |
12990 | Duke!--what Duke? |
12990 | Madame goes to Paris? |
12990 | Not left France!--Was he not carried into Switzerland? |
12990 | Oh,said he,"it is a disease that only kills the rabble: I feel no concern-- do you?" |
12990 | Sire, how would you like to be an honorary king? |
12990 | That convent,I called out to the postilion,"is still inhabited?" |
12990 | Wie ist diesen fluschen? |
12990 | Would I try a bottle? |
12990 | _ Et, il vino, signore; quale è il prezzo del vino?_demanded the_ padrone_. |
12990 | --"And can we cross with your horses?" |
12990 | Are rights thus to be purchased by concessions so unworthy and base? |
12990 | Are they necessarily inseparable? |
12990 | But why name a solitary instance? |
12990 | Did you know him?" |
12990 | How is it with, us? |
12990 | How long would an English tide- waiter, for instance, keep his place should he vote against the ministerial candidate? |
12990 | I asked him if he had ever known a true liberal in politics, who had been educated in the school of Napoleon? |
12990 | I asked him why he remained in Paris, having no family, nor any sufficient inducement? |
12990 | It may appear presumptuous in a foreigner to give an opinion against such high authority; but,"what can we reason but from what we know?" |
12990 | Master Harry,"exclaimed the latter,"you are here, are you?" |
12990 | My companion now looked at me as hard as a well- bred man might, and said earnestly,"Where did you learn to speak English so well?" |
12990 | The family of Talleyrand- Perigord is so ancient, that, in the middle ages, when a King demanded of its head,"Who made you Count de Perigord?" |
12990 | The"Par quelle route, monsieur?" |
12990 | This he would not admit, for what man is ever willing to confess that his own opinions are prejudiced? |
12990 | This is all that the throne does in England, and why need it do more in France? |
12990 | Tieck?" |
12990 | We got"_ monsieur sait-- monsieur pense-- monsieur fera_"--for"_ que voulez- vous, monsieur?_"We had no more to do with mountains. |
12990 | We have some extraordinary words, too: who, but a Philadelphian, for instance, would think of calling his mother a_ mare_? |
12990 | [ 42][ Footnote 42: Has it not? |
12990 | [ Footnote 11: Was Mr. Jefferson himself free from a similar charge?] |
12990 | ship ahoy!--what cheer, what cheer?" |
12990 | ship ahoy!--what cheer, what cheer?" |
12990 | you are not a Scotchman?" |
22377 | Ah,said Rollo, seating himself upon the soft cushion on one of the seats,"is not this superb? |
22377 | An avalanche? |
22377 | And a glacier,said Rollo;"what is that?" |
22377 | And after you get into the valley,said Rollo,"shall you go across it, and go over the mountains on the other side, into Italy?" |
22377 | And carry them over the Wengern Alp? |
22377 | And did they succeed at last? |
22377 | And how high must we go up in Switzerland? |
22377 | And how much do you suppose it will cost you? |
22377 | And shall you pay them? |
22377 | And then where does it go? |
22377 | And what shall we come to then? |
22377 | And where did it go to? |
22377 | And where do you suppose mine is? |
22377 | Are we going to ride or walk? |
22377 | Are we going to take dinner here? |
22377 | Are you all going to ride in the coupà ©? |
22377 | Are you going in this diligence? |
22377 | Are you going to Berne? |
22377 | But how can we get our carriage? |
22377 | But how do we take seats in it? 22377 But, uncle George where are we to get our tickets?" |
22377 | But, uncle George,said Rollo,"why did not you get me a ticket when you got yours?" |
22377 | Can we get up to the Wengern Alp from either valley? |
22377 | Can we get up to the top of it? |
22377 | Can we go there and see them? |
22377 | Can you put our trunk on a horse? |
22377 | Can you speak English? |
22377 | Come, uncle George,said Rollo,"is not it time for us to get up to our places?" |
22377 | Did you ever study English, Henry? |
22377 | Do the women work in the fields every where in Switzerland, Henry? |
22377 | Do we go by a railway? |
22377 | Do you think any body can get up there? |
22377 | Does the lake reach to the end of the valley? |
22377 | Have you any objection? |
22377 | Have you any thing to declare? |
22377 | Have you found Paris? |
22377 | Henry,said Rollo, looking up to the guide,"what is the French for_ head over heels_?" |
22377 | How did you get over? |
22377 | How do we get there? |
22377 | How do you know that there will be any boat there? |
22377 | How far is it that we have got to walk? |
22377 | How far is it? |
22377 | How long do you think you will be gone? |
22377 | How long will it take you to pack your trunk? |
22377 | How long? |
22377 | How much must I pay? |
22377 | How much should we have saved,asked Rollo,"in going to Strasbourg, if we had taken a second- class car?" |
22377 | How will you find out what to do? |
22377 | I wonder whether I could climb up to the top of it,he continued, still talking to himself,"if I could only find some way to get across the river? |
22377 | If one man does not pay his duty,rejoined Rollo,"do the others have to pay more?" |
22377 | Is it so every where? |
22377 | Is that the way the lakes are formed? |
22377 | Is that yours? |
22377 | Is there a road along the shore? |
22377 | Is there a village there? |
22377 | Is there no_ possible_ way? |
22377 | Never? |
22377 | None at all? |
22377 | Now, uncle George,said Rollo,"wo n''t we have a magnificent ride?" |
22377 | Rollo,said Mr. George, after a short pause,"do you wish to travel in Switzerland intelligently or blindly?" |
22377 | Rollo,said he, as they were standing together in front of the hotel after breakfast,"how would you like to go up with me to the top of that hill?" |
22377 | Should I? |
22377 | That great icy mountain? |
22377 | To the Staubach? 22377 To the Staubach? |
22377 | To the Staubach? |
22377 | Uncle George,said he,"when are you going down to breakfast?" |
22377 | Want a guide? 22377 We are going along that lake,"said Rollo"are we not?" |
22377 | We are going in one of the steamboats that are lying at the pier, are we not? |
22377 | Well, uncle George,said Rollo,"are you planning our journey?" |
22377 | Well,said Rollo,"I will; only how shall I do it? |
22377 | Well,said Rollo,"do you think it_ is_ a good carriage?" |
22377 | What are they? |
22377 | What can that be, I wonder? |
22377 | What did he say? |
22377 | What do they do, then,asked Henry,"to spend their time?" |
22377 | What do you mean by that? |
22377 | What do you suppose those girls are going to do? |
22377 | What does she say? |
22377 | What does that mean? |
22377 | What is a moraine? |
22377 | What is he going to do with that cannon? |
22377 | What is he going to do? |
22377 | What is he going to do? |
22377 | What is it? |
22377 | What kind of a boat? |
22377 | What shall I order? |
22377 | What shall we come to when we get to the end of the lake? |
22377 | What should I do then? |
22377 | What would you do with it,asked Mr. George,"if you had it?" |
22377 | What would you like to have? |
22377 | What''s the reason he wo n''t take your passports? |
22377 | Where do you suppose we are to go, Carlos? |
22377 | Where have they been? |
22377 | Where is the American legation? |
22377 | Where is your father? |
22377 | Which is the best way? |
22377 | Which would you rather have,said Mr. George to Rollo, as they resumed their march,"this pair, or some new ones?" |
22377 | Why ca n''t we see it all the way? |
22377 | Why did n''t they? 22377 Why do they not go all the way by land?" |
22377 | Why does n''t it melt? |
22377 | Why, what is the difficulty? |
22377 | Why? |
22377 | Would it if I were to send the kite up in America? |
22377 | _ Up_ to them? |
22377 | At the same time he rose from his seat, saying,--"Well, Rollo, which is the way?" |
22377 | But would you rather it would be in the coupà ©, or in the banquette?" |
22377 | Do n''t you think it will?" |
22377 | Do you feel afraid?" |
22377 | Do you think it will clear up before we go away?" |
22377 | Do you think you can find it?" |
22377 | Do you understand this?" |
22377 | Is there a book for us to write our names in, with the place where they are to call for us?" |
22377 | May I go out and walk over on that bridge after breakfast?" |
22377 | Rollo turned round and saw a boy look up to him with a smile, saying again at the same time,--"How do you do?" |
22377 | So he began to teach the guide to say"How do you do?" |
22377 | The English"How do you do?" |
22377 | To make it sure, he pointed to the left- hand road and said to Henry,--"To Grindelwald?" |
22377 | To the Staubach?" |
22377 | Want a guide? |
22377 | Want a guide?" |
22377 | Want a guide?" |
22377 | What do they mean?" |
22377 | What do you think it is?" |
22377 | What have you got for us?" |
22377 | Where shall I go?" |
22377 | Where to go to get them stamped?" |
22377 | Which way do you think we had better go?" |
22377 | While Rollo was paying for his toys he felt a small hand taking hold of his own, and heard a voice say, in English,--"How do you do?" |
22377 | Will you go with me? |
7373 | '';_ for''what is the road to?'' |
7373 | ''Anything else?'' |
7373 | ''Can not you see for yourself that it is open?'' |
7373 | ''Can you in an hour,''said I,''give me a meal to my order, then a bed, though it is early day?'' |
7373 | ''How many Jews have you in your town?'' |
7373 | ''Men?'' |
7373 | ''The Earth?'' |
7373 | ''The poor in our great towns, Sir Charles''( for the Learned Man had been made a Baronet),''the condition, I say, of the-- Don''t I feel a draught?'' |
7373 | ''Tourist- e?'' |
7373 | ''What do you mean?'' |
7373 | ''What have you?'' |
7373 | ''Why then?'' |
7373 | ''Yes, of course,''I said,''but what is its name?'' |
7373 | ''_ meaning''Dare you ask fivepence?'' |
7373 | --Where was I? |
7373 | ...?... |
7373 | And I say to them, what about the distribution of the ownership of the concentrated means of production? |
7373 | And did you see nothing of Piacenza? |
7373 | And how far on was that? |
7373 | And if you are so worn- out and bereft of all emotions, how can you tell a story? |
7373 | And it rained all the time, and there was mud? |
7373 | And so I was forced to consider and to be anxious, for how would this money hold out? |
7373 | And was it not his loneliness that enabled him to see it? |
7373 | And what art or songs have you? |
7373 | And what do you think he did at that? |
7373 | And what is there else but pleasure, and to what else does beauty move on? |
7373 | And what of that? |
7373 | And when you have arrested him, can you do more than let him go without proof, on his own word? |
7373 | And where are you?'' |
7373 | And who is a penny the better for it? |
7373 | And why do you suppose I got it? |
7373 | And why( you will say) is all this put by itself in what Anglo- Saxons call a Foreword, but gentlemen a Preface? |
7373 | And, by the way, would you like to know why universities suffer from this curse of nervous disease? |
7373 | And, tell me-- what can it profit you to know these geographical details? |
7373 | As_ La Croix_ said in a famous leading article:_''La Presse? |
7373 | But Mr_( deleted by the Censor)_ does not think so? |
7373 | But all that does not excuse an intolerable prolixity? |
7373 | But all this is by the way; the point is, why was the eight francs and ten centimes of such importance just there and then? |
7373 | But could it be done? |
7373 | But do you intend to tell us nothing of Rome? |
7373 | But perhaps you have been reading little brown books on Evolution, and you do n''t believe in Catastrophes, or Climaxes, or Definitions? |
7373 | But what is it? |
7373 | But what rule governs all this? |
7373 | But why did_ this_ tenth milestone from_ this_ Roman town keep its name? |
7373 | But, frankly, do you suppose I came all this way over so many hills to talk economics? |
7373 | Can the sun be said truly to rise or set, and is there any exact meaning in the phrase,''Done to a turn''as applied to omelettes? |
7373 | Che sono forestiere? |
7373 | Che vole? |
7373 | Che? |
7373 | Come, let me do so... Where are you? |
7373 | Could you give me a little red wine?'' |
7373 | Could you give me a little red wine?'' |
7373 | Did something in my accent suggest wealth? |
7373 | Did you suppose that I thought it was called Decimo because the people had ten toes? |
7373 | Did you think I missed you, hiding and lurking there?) |
7373 | Do I make myself clear? |
7373 | Do you follow? |
7373 | Do you know those books and stories in which parts of the dialogues often have no words at all? |
7373 | Do you want it made plainer than that? |
7373 | Eh? |
7373 | Eh? |
7373 | Eh? |
7373 | Eh? |
7373 | For who, having noise around him, can strike the table with pleasure at reading the Misanthrope, or in mere thirst or in fatigue praise Chinon wine? |
7373 | Had he opinions? |
7373 | Have you a priest in Calestano, and does he know Latin?'' |
7373 | Have you not read in books how men when they see even divine visions are terrified? |
7373 | Have you seen anything moving on the heights?'' |
7373 | He said,''What do you want?'' |
7373 | How came I at such an hour on foot? |
7373 | How can a man draw pain in the foot and knee? |
7373 | How does their opinion flourish?'' |
7373 | How many more interior brackets are we to have? |
7373 | How much more interesting must Old Lodi be which is the mothertown of Lodi?'' |
7373 | How much more is it the duty of a Christian man to pity the rich who can not ever get into prison? |
7373 | How then would you write such a book if you had the writing of it? |
7373 | How''German''? |
7373 | I approached a priest and said to him:_''Pater, quando vel a quella hora e la prossimma Missa? |
7373 | I caught him up, and, doubting much whether he would understand a word, I said to him repeatedly--_''La granda via? |
7373 | I know that; but what am I to do? |
7373 | I put my head in at the door and said--''Am I in Switzerland?'' |
7373 | I said''_ Molinar_?'''' |
7373 | I said,''Have you any beans?'' |
7373 | I should very much like to know what those who have an answer to everything can say about the food requisite to breakfast? |
7373 | I spoke to the woman, and pointing at the tin cans, said--''Is this what you call open wine?'' |
7373 | I thought you said you were not going to talk economics? |
7373 | I wonder what the people are paid for it? |
7373 | II san Gottardo? |
7373 | If it did, I think there is a little question on''why should habit turn sacred?'' |
7373 | In the name of all decent, common, and homely things, why not begin and have done with it? |
7373 | Indeed? |
7373 | Is it not art? |
7373 | Is it not much wiser to arrest such a man? |
7373 | Is this algebra? |
7373 | It is worth eight''scutcheons the hectolitre, that is, eight sols the litre; what do I say? |
7373 | It is years ago now... Michael, what are those little things swarming up and down all over it?'' |
7373 | Just as I neared them, hobbling, I met a man driving two cows, and said to him the word,''Guest- house?'' |
7373 | La via a Piacenza? |
7373 | May he not cut off it, as his due, twenty- five miserable little miles in the train?'' |
7373 | Non se vede che non parlar vestra lingua? |
7373 | Now, why did he say this and grin happily like a gargoyle appeased? |
7373 | Only dots and dashes and asterisks and interrogations? |
7373 | Pray are we to have any more of that fine writing? |
7373 | Pray, sir, will you not look at other maps for a moment?'' |
7373 | Shall I detail all that afternoon? |
7373 | Shall a man march through Europe dragging an artist on a cord? |
7373 | Shall an artist write a book? |
7373 | She was moreover not exactly of- what shall I say? |
7373 | So I, very narrowly watching him out of half- closed eyes, held up my five fingers interrogatively, and said,_''Cinquante? |
7373 | So you think one can say a plain thing in a plain way? |
7373 | Tell me at least one thing; did you see the Coliseum? |
7373 | Tell me, Lector, had this man any adventures? |
7373 | Tell me, do you believe in the peak of the Matterhorn, and have you doubts on the points of needles? |
7373 | Tell me, why is not every place ten miles out of a Roman town called by such a name? |
7373 | The woman as sulkily said to me, not looking me in the eyes--''How much will you pay?'' |
7373 | Then I added,''Can you make omelettes?'' |
7373 | Then I gave a lira to the molinar, and to his companion on stilts 50 c., who said,''What is this for?'' |
7373 | Then I said to the molinar,_''Quanta? |
7373 | Then I said,_''Soixante Dix? |
7373 | Then I thought,''Shall I take a favour from such a man?'' |
7373 | Then tell me, how would you treat of common things? |
7373 | Then the soldiers began calling out to him singly,''Where are you off to, Father, with that battery?'' |
7373 | Then they say to me, what about the concentration of the means of production? |
7373 | Then they talked a great deal together, while I shouted,_''Quid vis? |
7373 | Then what emotions have you had, unimprisonable rich; or what do you know of active living and of adventure? |
7373 | Then you will say, if I felt all this, why do I draw it, and put it in my book, seeing that my drawings are only for fun? |
7373 | Then, to make conversation, I said,_''Diaconus es? |
7373 | This comfort I ascribe to four causes( just above you will find it written that I could not tell why this should be so, but what of that? |
7373 | Thus he told me the name for a knife was_ cultello;_ for a room,_ camera par domire;_ for''what is it called?'' |
7373 | Thus she would say:''Perhaps the joint would taste better if it were carved on the table; or do the gentlemen prefer it carved aside?'' |
7373 | To the man who had brought me I gave 50 c., and so innocent and good are these people that he said_''Pourquoi? |
7373 | To what emotion shall I compare this astonishment? |
7373 | Tu ris? |
7373 | Vis ne me assassinare? |
7373 | Visne mi dare traductionem in istam linguam Toscanam non nullorum verborum? |
7373 | Was it in so small a space that all the legends of one''s childhood were acted? |
7373 | Was the defence of the bridge against so neighbouring and petty an alliance? |
7373 | Well, it was a short play and modern, was it not? |
7373 | What I want to know is, why a duchess? |
7373 | What about him? |
7373 | What about that great work on The National Debt? |
7373 | What about that little lyric on Winchelsea that you thought of writing six years ago? |
7373 | What about the Brigand of Radicofani of whom you spoke in Lorraine, and of whom I am waiting to hear? |
7373 | What could prevent me? |
7373 | What did I at Lodi Vecchio? |
7373 | What did the old sailor say to the young fool? |
7373 | What do you think, then, was the consequence? |
7373 | What do you turn out, you higglers and sticklers? |
7373 | What else is Venice? |
7373 | What is all this? |
7373 | What is it, do you think, that causes the return? |
7373 | What is ninety miles? |
7373 | What is that in a Book? |
7373 | What is that in the mind which, after( it may be) a slight disappointment or a petty accident, causes it to suffer on the scale of grave things? |
7373 | What is the Grand Climacteric? |
7373 | What is the meaning of that?'' |
7373 | What rhodomontade and pedantry is this talk about the shape of a window? |
7373 | What road could it be? |
7373 | What was it I saw? |
7373 | What will you do for fame? |
7373 | Where are they? |
7373 | Where could such a road lead, and why did it follow right along the highest edge of the mountains? |
7373 | Where had I come from? |
7373 | Where( if I was honest) had I intended to sleep? |
7373 | Who began it? |
7373 | Who but Germans would so feel the mystery of the hills, and so fit their town to the mountains? |
7373 | Who but Germans would so preserve-- would so rebuild the past? |
7373 | Who can not live on four francs a day? |
7373 | Who does not need for either of these perfect things Recollection, a variety of according conditions, and a certain easy Plenitude of the Mind? |
7373 | Who else can give benedictions if people can not when they are on pilgrimage? |
7373 | Who knows? |
7373 | Who would change( says Aristippus of Pslinthon) the moon and all the stars for so much wine as can be held in the cup of a bottle upturned? |
7373 | Why are the few lines still in your head and not on paper? |
7373 | Why could it not be crossed? |
7373 | Why do you use phrases like_''possible exception''?_ AUCTOR. |
7373 | Why not? |
7373 | Why on earth did you write this book? |
7373 | Why should I? |
7373 | Why should the less gracious part of a pilgrimage be specially remembered? |
7373 | Why was I there? |
7373 | Why was the guardian a duchess? |
7373 | Why your benediction? |
7373 | Why, what was the next point in the pilgrimage that was even tolerably noteworthy? |
7373 | Why? |
7373 | Why? |
7373 | Why? |
7373 | Why? |
7373 | You follow? |
7373 | You think that, do you? |
7373 | You would simply say what you had to say? |
7373 | _''come si chiama? |
7373 | _''quella e la via a...? |
7373 | _( For who but critics could complain Of''riding''in a railway train?) |
7373 | and''Why carry cold water to Commercy? |
7373 | eh? |
7373 | my jolly Lector? |
7373 | or was he naturally kindly? |
7373 | said the Padre Eterno, a little puzzled...''The Earth? |
7373 | sneered the Devil,''are you an anti- vaccinationist as well? |
7373 | without a ghost of an idea what you are talking about, do you know what is meant by the god? |